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Stimulation of suicidal erythrocyte death by PRIMA-1.

Authors :
Faggio C
Alzoubi K
CalabrĂ² S
Lang F
Source :
Cellular physiology and biochemistry : international journal of experimental cellular physiology, biochemistry, and pharmacology [Cell Physiol Biochem] 2015; Vol. 35 (2), pp. 529-40. Date of Electronic Publication: 2015 Jan 16.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Background: The anticarcinogenic drug PRIMA-1 (p53 reactivation and induction of massive apoptosis 1) induces suicidal death of tumor cells, an effect in large part attributed to the up-regulation of the proapoptotic transcription factor p53. Erythrocytes are lacking gene transcription but are nevertheless able to enter eryptosis, a suicidal erythrocyte death characterized by cell shrinkage and cell membrane scrambling with phosphatidylserine translocation to the erythrocyte surface. Stimulators of eryptosis include increase of cytosolic Ca(2+)-activity ([Ca(2+)]i) and ceramide formation. The present study tested whether PRIMA-1 stimulates eryptosis.<br />Methods: Phosphatidylserine exposure at the cell surface was estimated from annexin V binding, cell volume from forward scatter, [Ca(2+)]i from Fluo3-fluorescence, ceramide abundance from binding of specific antibodies, and ROS formation from DCFDA fluorescence.<br />Results: A 48 h exposure of human erythrocytes to PRIMA-1 (25 µM) significantly increased the percentage of annexin-V-binding cells without significantly influencing [Ca(2+)]i or forward scatter. PRIMA-1 (100 µM) induced annexin-V-binding was not significantly blunted by removal of extracellular Ca(2+) or by the caspase-3 inhibitor zVAD. PRIMA-1 (100 µM) further increased the ceramide abundance at the cell surface and ROS formation.<br />Conclusions: PRIMA-1 stimulates phosphatidylserine translocation at the erythrocyte cell membrane, an effect at least partially due to up-regulation of ceramide abundance and ROS formation.<br /> (© 2015 S. Karger AG, Basel.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1421-9778
Volume :
35
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Cellular physiology and biochemistry : international journal of experimental cellular physiology, biochemistry, and pharmacology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
25614142
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1159/000369717