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Vol. 296, Issue 2, 276-283, February 2001
Menarini Ricerche S.p.A., Department of Pharmacology, Pomezia,
Roma, Italy
Cytotoxic drugs commonly used in cancer therapy promote tumor cell
death by inducing apoptosis, but the cell death pathway(s) is likely
dependent on the mechanism of drug action. In the present study, we
investigated the mechanisms of cell death induced by doxorubicin (DXR)
and the novel disaccharide anthracycline MEN 10755, in a human ovarian
cancer cell line (A2780). Exposure to either anthracycline induced the
up-regulation of several genes known to promote cell cycle arrest and
DNA repair (WAF1/p21, GADD45) or apoptosis (bax, Fas). Although the
expression of Fas was increased, an antagonistic anti-Fas antibody ZB4
did not inhibit anthracycline-induced apoptosis, suggesting that the
stimulation of the Fas receptor did not play a critical role in the
induction of apoptosis in this cell line. We also observed that neither
MEN 10755 nor DXR were able to induce apoptosis in A2780 cells deprived
of the nucleus but retaining an intact mitochondrial function
(cytoplasts) and that apoptosis induced by either anthracycline was
inhibited by cycloheximide, indicating that it is an active process
requiring new protein synthesis. Both the caspases inhibitors, ZVAD-fmk and DEVD-cho, inhibited at similar extent apoptosis induced by either
DXR or MEN 10755, suggesting an involvement of caspase-3 in this
response. We conclude that, in a tumor cell line of epithelial origin,
the apoptosis following exposure to anthracyclines is an active process
requiring protein synthesis and drug interaction with nuclear
structures. The pathway was Fas-independent but likely involved bax and
caspase-3 as effectors of the cascade culminating in apoptosis.
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