Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (leukemia)
93,477 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Photodynamic therapy with the lipophilic sensitizing dye merocyanine 540 (MC540) is a promising new approach for extracorporeal purging of neoplastic cells from autologous remission bone marrow grafts. Resistance-conferring cellular defenses against the cytotoxic effects of MC540/photodynamic therapy have not been well characterized. This study focuses on the cytoprotective effects of the glutathione-dependent selenoperoxidases GPX and PHGPX, which can detoxify a wide variety of hydroperoxides, including lipid-derived species (LOOHs). Murine leukemia L1210 cells were grown in 1% serum media without [L.Se(-)] and with [L.Se(+)] selenium supplementation. L.Se(-) cells expressed 10- to 20-fold lower GPX and PHGPX activities than L.Se(+) controls and were markedly more sensitive to MC540-mediated photoperoxidation (LOOH formation) and clonally assessed photokilling. Susceptibility of L.Se(-) cells to photoperoxidation and photokilling could be fully reversed to L.Se(+) levels by replenishing Se, and partially reversed by treating with Ebselen, a selenoperoxidase mimetic. Altered lipid composition, greater uptake of MC540, and defective catabolism of H2O2 were all ruled out as possible factors in the elevated photosensitivity of L.Se(-) cells. Human leukemia K562 cells (capable of expressing PHGPX but not GPX) exhibited 5- to 10-fold lower PHGPX activity under Se-deficient relative to Se-sufficient conditions. Although MC540 uptake (nmol/mg lipid) by K562 and L1210 cells was essentially the same, the former were more resistant to photoinactivation. However, like murine counterparts, Se-deficient cells were more susceptible to photoperoxidation and photokilling than Se-sufficient controls. These results clearly demonstrate that GPX and/or PHGPX in L1210 cells and PHGPX in K562 cells play an important cytoprotective role during photooxidative stress. Whether membrane damage due to lipid photoperoxidation is causally related to cell death is not certain; however, the parallel effects of Se deficiency on LOOH formation and cell killing are at least consistent with this possibility.
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PMID:Selenoperoxidase-mediated cytoprotection against merocyanine 540-sensitized photoperoxidation and photokilling of leukemia cells. 139 32

Murine leukemia L1210 cells rendered deficient in glutathione peroxidase (GPX) and phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase (PHGPX) by Se deprivation (L.Se(-) cells) were found to be more sensitive to tert-butyl hydroperoxide (t-BuOOH) cytotoxicity than Se-replete controls (L.Se(+) cells). Human K562 cells, which express PHGPX, but not GPX, were also more sensitive to t-BuOOH in the Se-deficient (K.Se(-)) than Se-satisfied (K.Se(+)) condition. In examining the metabolic basis for selenoperoxidase-dependent resistance, we found that glucose-replete Se(-) cells reduce t-BuOOH to t-butanol far more slowly than Se(+) cells, the ratio of the first-order rate constants approximating that of the GPX activities (L1210 cells) or PHGPX activities (K562 cells). Monitoring peroxide-induced changes in GSH and GSSG gave consistent results; e.g., glucose-depleted L.Se(+) cells exhibited a first order loss of GSH that was substantially faster than that of glucose-depleted L.Se(-) cells. Under the conditions used, peroxide-induced conversion of GSH to GSSG could be stoichiometrically reversed by resupplying D-glucose, indicating that no significant lysis or GSSG efflux and/or interchange had taken place. The apparent first-order rate constant for GSH decay increased progressively for L1210 cells expressing a range of GPX activities from approximately 5% to 100%, demonstrating that peroxide detoxification is strictly dependent on enzyme content. The initial rate of 14CO2 release from D-[1-14C]glucose supplied in the medium was much greater for L.Se(+) or K.Se(+) cells than for their respective Se(-) counterparts, consistent with greater hexose monophosphate shunt activity in the former. These results highlight the importance of selenoperoxidase action in the glutathione cycle as a means by which tumor cells cope with hydroperoxide stress.
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PMID:Selenoperoxidase-dependent glutathione cycle activity in peroxide-challenged leukemia cells. 777 66

A new technique, high-performance liquid chromatography with reductive mode electrochemical detection on a mercury drop (HPLC-EC), has been used for analyzing lipid hydroperoxide (LOOH) formation in photooxidatively stressed L1210 leukemia cells. Highly specific and sensitive for peroxides (detection limits < 0.5 pmol for cholesterol hydroperoxides and < 50 pmol for phospholipid hydroperoxides), this approach allows different classes of LOOH to be separated and determined in minimally damaged cells. L1210 cells in serum-containing growth medium were irradiated in the presence of merocyanine 540 (MC540), a lipophilic photosensitizing dye. Lipid extracts from cells exposed to a light fluence of 0.11 J/cm2 (which reduced clonally assessed survival by 30%) showed 12-15 well-defined peaks in HPLC-EC. None of these peaks was observed when cells were irradiated without MC540 or when dye/light-treated samples were reduced with triphenylphosphine prior to analysis. Three peaks of relatively low retention time (< 12 min) were assigned to the following species by virtue of comigration with authentic standards: 3 beta-hydroxy-5 alpha-cholest-6-ene-5-hydroperoxide (5 alpha-OOH), 3 beta-hydroxycholest-4-ene-6 beta-hydroperoxide (6 beta-OOH), and 3 beta-hydroxycholest-5-ene-7 alpha/7 beta-hydroperoxide (7 alpha/7 beta-OOH). Formation of 5 alpha-OOH and 6 beta-OOH (single oxygen adducts) was confirmed by subjecting [14C]cholesterol-labeled cells to relatively high levels of photooxidation and analyzing extracted lipids by HPLC with radiochemical detection. Material represented in a major peak at 18-22 min on HPLC-EC was isolated in relatively large amounts by semipreparative HPLC and shown to contain phospholipid hydroperoxides (predominantly phosphatidylcholine species, PCOOH) according to the following criteria: (i) decay of 18-22 min peak during Ca2+/phospholipase A2 treatment, with reciprocal appearance of fatty acid hydroperoxides; (ii) reduction of peroxide during treatment with reduced glutathione and phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase, but not glutathione peroxidase; and (iii) comigration with PCOOH standards in thin-layer chromatography. HPLC-EC analysis revealed quantifiable amounts of PCOOH and ChOOH at a light fluence that clonally inactivated < 10% of the cells, which allows for the possibility that photoperoxidative damage plays a causal role in cell killing.
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PMID:Characterization of lipid hydroperoxides generated by photodynamic treatment of leukemia cells. 796 65

Murine leukemia L1210 cells grown for 2-3 weeks in the presence of 1% serum without selenium supplementation [L.Se(-) cells] typically exhibited < 10% of the glutathione peroxidase (GPX) and phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase (PHGPX) activity of selenium-satisfied controls [L.Se(+) cells]. Concomitant with diminished GPX and PHGPX activity was a 1.5- to 2.0-fold increase in catalase (CAT) activity, which reverted to control levels when L.Se(-) cells were given sufficient Se for full expression of selenoperoxidase activity. Selenium manipulation affected total glutathione content similarly, but had no effect on glutathione-S-transferase or superoxide dismutase activity. Long-term growth under Se-deficient conditions resulted in a progressive additional increase in CAT activity, which maximized after ca. 5 months. These cells [referred to as L'.Se(-)] attained CAT activity levels at least 100-times greater than those of Se-supplemented [L'.Se(+)] controls, whereas their glutathione content remained elevated by approximately 70%. Supplying L'.Se(-) cells with Se resulted in a rapid elevation to full GPX activity; however, CAT failed to decline in this case, suggesting that a selection for stable CAT hyperexpressing variants had been accomplished. Quantitative immunoblot analysis indicated that the high CAT activity of L'.Se(-) cells is accounted for by an elevated level of enzyme protein. Induction of CAT and selection for CAT-rich phenotypes, as apparent for Se-starved L1210 cells, was not observed in human K562 counterparts, which lack GPX and express only a low level of PHGPX. L.Se(-) cells were found to be more sensitive to H2O2-induced killing than L.Se(+) controls, whereas L'.Se(-) cells were exceedingly more resistant to H2O2 than L'.Se(+) counterparts. By contrast, L.Se(-) and L'.Se(-) cells were both more sensitive to t-butyl hydroperoxide than Se(+) controls, consistent with CAT being unimportant in the detoxification of this peroxide compared with GPX. This appears to be the first reported evidence for CAT hyperexpression in response to selenium deprivation.
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PMID:Hyperexpression of catalase in selenium-deprived murine L1210 cells. 834 49

Cytochrome c (cyt. c) is a proapoptotic factor that binds preferentially to cardiolipin (CL), a mitochondrial lipid, but not to cardiolipin hydroperoxide (CL-OOH). Cyt. c that had bound to CL liposomes was liberated on peroxidation of the liposomes by a radical. The generation of CL-OOH in mitochondria occurred before the release of cyt. c in rat basophile leukaemia (RBL)2H3 cells that had been induced to undergo apoptosis by exposure to hypoglycaemia with 2-deoxyglucose (2DG). The amount of cyt. c bound to CL prepared from the mitochondria of 2DG-treated cells was lower than that of untreated cells. The release of cyt. c was completely suppressed when the production of CL-OOH in mitochondria was inhibited by the overexpression of mitochondrial phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase (PHGPx). The fluorescence from CL-labelling dye (10-N-nonyl Acridine Orange) decreased on the induction of apoptosis by 2DG. However, no decrease in fluorescence was observed in PHGPx-overexpressing cells. Cyt. c was released from mitochondria that had been isolated from control cells on peroxidation by t-butylhydroperoxide, but no similar liberation of cyt. c from mitochondria isolated from mitochondrial PHGPx-overexpressing cells was observed. These findings suggest that the generation of CL-OOH in mitochondria might be a primary event that triggers the release of cyt. c from mitochondria in the apoptotic process in which mitochondrial PHGPx participates as an anti-apoptotic factor by preventing the formation of CL-OOH.
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PMID:Mitochondrial phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase inhibits the release of cytochrome c from mitochondria by suppressing the peroxidation of cardiolipin in hypoglycaemia-induced apoptosis. 1099 61

We demonstrated that mitochondrial phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase (PHGPx) first suppressed the dissociation of cytochrome c (cyt c) from cardiolipin (CL) in mitochondrial inner membranes and then apoptosis caused by the hypoglycaemia by the prevention of peroxidation of CL [Nomura, Imai, Koumura, Arai and Nakagawa (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 29294-29302; Nomura, Imai, Koumura, Kobayashi and Nakagawa (2000) Biochem. J. 351, 183-193]. The present study shows the involvement of peroxidation of CL in the inactivation of adenine nucleotide translocator (ANT) and the opening of permeability transition pores by using the system of ANT-reconstituted liposome and isolated mitochondria. ANT activity appeared in dioleoyl phosphatidylcholine proteoliposome containing 10% (mol/mol) CL or phosphatidylglycerol (PG), but not other classes of phospholipids. ANT activity was competitively inhibited by the addition of cardiolipin hydroperoxide (CLOOH) in reconstituted liposomes containing CL. However, phosphatidylcholine hydroperoxide failed to inactivate the activity of ANT. The activity of ANT in reconstituted liposomes, including CLOOH, recovered when CLOOH in reconstituted liposome was reduced to hydroxycardiolipin by incubation with PHGPx. The activity of ANT was determined in rat basophil leukaemia RBL2H3 cells after their exposure to 2-deoxyglucose. ANT activity decreased to 50% of the control level by 4 h in response to apoptosis. In parallel, cyt c and apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF) were released from mitochondria. Suppression of the accumulation of CLOOH by overexpression of PHGPx in mitochondria effectively prevented the inactivation of ANT, the opening of permeability transition pores and the release of cyt c and AIF from mitochondria in hypoglycaemia-induced apoptotic cells. These findings suggest that mitochondrial PHGPx might be involved in the modulation of the activity of ANT and the opening of pores for the release of cyt c via the modulation of levels of CLOOH in the mitochondria.
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PMID:Protection from inactivation of the adenine nucleotide translocator during hypoglycaemia-induced apoptosis by mitochondrial phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase. 1253 48

To determine the effect on gene expression of trace levels of reactive oxygen species from mitochondria, we used the mRNA differential display technique to compare gene expression in two cell lines: M15, which overexpresses mitochondrial phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase (mtPHGPx), in rat basophilic leukemia RBL-2H3 cells, and a control cell line, S1. We isolated 27 differentially expressed genes, including 10 previously unreported sequences. These genes included cytoskeletal proteins (beta-tubulin, nonmuscle myosin alkali light chain, and vimentin), growth or proliferation regulators [growth differentiation factor 1 (Gdf-1), Rap1a, and inhibitor of growth 3 (Ing3)], and others. Although the expression of most of the isolated genes did not respond to ROS (hydrogen peroxide) or antioxidant (pyrolidine dithiocarbamate) treatment, the expression of Gdf-1 was downregulated by hydrogen peroxide treatment. Thus, low levels of ROS produced in mitochondria during normal cellular metabolism can modulate gene expression.
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PMID:Alteration of gene expressions by the overexpression of mitochondrial phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase (mtPHGPx). 1283 38

Eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) induced apoptosis of rat basophilic leukemia cells (RBL2H3 cells), whereas 100 microM linoleic acid (LA) had no significant effect. Cytochrome c was released at 4 h. Apoptosis was detected at 6 h after exposure to EPA and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), and preceded the activation of caspase-3. Liberation of apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF) from mitochondria and its translocation into the nucleus were observed at 4 h. A broad-specificity caspase inhibitor, z-VAD-fmk, failed to suppress the apoptosis, suggesting that EPA induced caspase-independent apoptosis. On other hand, a poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase-1 (PARP-1) inhibitor that blocks AIF translocation to the nucleus suppressed EPA-induced apoptosis. The level of hydroperoxide in the cells and mitochondria increased at the early phase of apoptosis within 2 h. On the contrary, elevation of hydroperoxide in mitochondria was not observed after treatment with LA. The EPA-induced apoptosis was abolished by prevention of the hydroperoxide elevation in mitochondria via overexpression of mitochondrial phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase (PHGPx). Neither cytochrome c nor AIF were released from mitochondria in the mitochondrial PHGPx-overexpressing cells. EPA also induced apoptosis in HeLa cells, but not in L929 or RAW264.7 cells. Enhancement of the hydroperoxide level in mitochondria was found in the EPA-sensitive HeLa cells after treatment with EPA, whereas no such enhancement was observed in the apoptosis-resistant L929 and RAW264.7 cells. These results suggest that the generation of hydroperoxide in mitochondria induced by EPA is associated with AIF release from mitochondria and the induction of apoptosis.
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PMID:Involvement of hydroperoxide in mitochondria in the induction of apoptosis by the eicosapentaenoic acid. 1578 27

Singlet oxygen causes the cytotoxic process of tumour cells in photodynamic therapy. The mechanism by which singlet oxygen damages cells is, however, not fully understood. To address this issue, we synthesized and used two types of endoperoxides, MNPE (1-methylnaphthalene-4-propionate endoperoxide) and NDPE (naphthalene-1,4-dipropionate endoperoxide), that generate defined amounts of singlet oxygen at 37 degrees C with similar half lives. MNPE, which is more hydrophobic than NDPE, induced the release of cytochrome c from mitochondria into the cytosol and exhibited cytotoxicity, but NDPE did not. RBL cells, a rat basophil leukaemia-derived line, that overexpress phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase in mitochondria were found to be highly resistant to the cytotoxic effect of MNPE. MNPE treatment induced much less DNA ladder formation and nuclear fragmentation in cells than etoposide treatment, even though these treatments induced a similar extent of cellular damage. Singlet oxygen inhibited caspase 9 and 3 activities directly and also suppressed the activation of the caspase cascade. Collectively, these data suggest that singlet oxygen triggers an apoptotic pathway by releasing cytochrome c from mitochondria via the peroxidation of mitochondrial components and results in cell death that is different from typical apoptosis, because of the abortive apoptotic pathway caused by impaired caspase activation.
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PMID:An abortive apoptotic pathway induced by singlet oxygen is due to the suppression of caspase activation. 1579 13

Phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase (PHGPx) is characterized as an important enzyme for protecting cells from oxidative stress-induced apoptosis and regulating the production of leukotrienes and prostanoids in cells overexpressing PHGPx. We studied whether the expression level of PHGPx fluctuates in polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs) which were exposed to reactive oxygen species (ROS) and inflammatory cytokines at an inflammation site. Human peripheral PMNs up-regulated the expression level of PHGPx following culture with TNF-alpha, but not with IL-1beta, IL-8, and GRO. The up-regulated PHGPx expression was also observed in neutrophil-like cells that differentiated from the human leukemia cell line HL60 only after stimulation with TNF-alpha. However, macrophage-like differentiated HL60 cells and other cell lines, A498, ECV304, HeLa, U937, and HEK293, showed no increase in the PHGPx expression. This up-regulation of PHGPx was inhibited by treatment with the anti-oxidants, pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate, and N-acetyl-L-cysteine, and by inhibitors of NFkappaB and Src kinases. The stimulation of neutrophil-like differentiated HL60 cells with TNF-alpha induced activation of NFkappaB and c-Src kinase, and the activation was attenuated by treatment with the anti-oxidants. Up-regulation in neutrophil-like HL60 cells was also observed following exposure to H(2)O(2). These results indicate that activation of NFkappaB and/or Src kinases through ROS signaling may be involved in the up-regulation of the PHGPx in human PMNs stimulated by TNF-alpha.
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PMID:Induction of phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase in human polymorphonuclear neutrophils and HL60 cells stimulated with TNF-alpha. 1622 6


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