Background The critical roles of polyamines in cell growth and differentiation have made polyamJne metabolic pathway a promising target for antitumor therapy. Recent studies have demonstrated in vitro that some antitu...Background The critical roles of polyamines in cell growth and differentiation have made polyamJne metabolic pathway a promising target for antitumor therapy. Recent studies have demonstrated in vitro that some antitumor polyamine analogues could be used as substrates and oxidized by purified recombinant human N^1-acetylpolyamine oxidase (APAO, an enzyme that catabolizes natural poiyamines), indicating a potential role of APAO in determining the sensitivity of cancer cells to specific antitumor analogues. This study evaluated, in vivo, the effect of APAO on cytotoxicity of antitumor polyamine analogue, N^1-cyclopropylmethyl-N^11-ethylnorspermine (CPENS) and its mechanism when highly expressed in human lung cancer line A549. Methods A clone with high expression of APAO was obtained by transfecting A549 lung cancer ceil line with pcDNA3.1/APAO plasmid and selecting with quantitative realtime PCR and APAO activity assay. Cell proliferation was determined by MTT method and apoptosis related events were evaluated by DNA fragmentation, sub-G1/flow cytometric assay, western blotting (for cytochrome C and Bax) and colorimetric assay (for casapse-3 activity). Results A clone highly expressing APAO was obtained. High expression of APAO in A549 cells inhibited accumulation of CPENS, decreased their sensitivity to the toxicity of CPENS and prevented CPENS induced apoptosis. Conclusion These results indicate a new drug resisting, mechanism in the tumor cells. High expression of APAO can greatly decrease the sensitivity of tumor cells to the specific polyamine analogues by detoxifying those analogues and prevent analogue induced apoptosis.展开更多
基金This work was supported by grants from the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 30772590) and Natural Science Foundation of Hubei Department of Education (No. D200713003).
文摘Background The critical roles of polyamines in cell growth and differentiation have made polyamJne metabolic pathway a promising target for antitumor therapy. Recent studies have demonstrated in vitro that some antitumor polyamine analogues could be used as substrates and oxidized by purified recombinant human N^1-acetylpolyamine oxidase (APAO, an enzyme that catabolizes natural poiyamines), indicating a potential role of APAO in determining the sensitivity of cancer cells to specific antitumor analogues. This study evaluated, in vivo, the effect of APAO on cytotoxicity of antitumor polyamine analogue, N^1-cyclopropylmethyl-N^11-ethylnorspermine (CPENS) and its mechanism when highly expressed in human lung cancer line A549. Methods A clone with high expression of APAO was obtained by transfecting A549 lung cancer ceil line with pcDNA3.1/APAO plasmid and selecting with quantitative realtime PCR and APAO activity assay. Cell proliferation was determined by MTT method and apoptosis related events were evaluated by DNA fragmentation, sub-G1/flow cytometric assay, western blotting (for cytochrome C and Bax) and colorimetric assay (for casapse-3 activity). Results A clone highly expressing APAO was obtained. High expression of APAO in A549 cells inhibited accumulation of CPENS, decreased their sensitivity to the toxicity of CPENS and prevented CPENS induced apoptosis. Conclusion These results indicate a new drug resisting, mechanism in the tumor cells. High expression of APAO can greatly decrease the sensitivity of tumor cells to the specific polyamine analogues by detoxifying those analogues and prevent analogue induced apoptosis.