| Literature DB >> 15868924 |
Fumika Suzuki1, Ken Hashimoto, Hirotaka Kikuchi, Hirofumi Nishikawa, Hisatoshi Matsumoto, Jun Shimada, Masami Kawase, Katsuyoshi Sunaga, Tadashi Tsuda, Kazue Satoh, Hiroshi Sakagami.
Abstract
Doxorubicin (adriamycin), an anthracycline antibiotic, showed higher cytotoxic activity against human tumor cell lines (oral squamous cell carcinoma HSC-2, HSC-3, submandibular gland carcinoma HSG, promyelocytic leukemia HL-60) than against normal human cells (gingival fibroblast HGF, pulp cell HPC, periodontal ligament fibroblast HPLF). Doxorubicin activated caspases 3, 8 and 9 in both HSC-2 and HL-60 cells, but induced internucleosomal DNA fragmentation only in HL-60 cells. Western blot analysis showed that doxorubicin did not significantly change the intracellular concentration of Bcl-2, Bax and Bad in HL-60 cells. Real-time PCR analysis showed that HPC cells expressed the highest amount of mdr1 mRNA, followed by HSC-2 > HGF > HSC-3 > HPLF > HSG > HL-60. ESR spectroscopy showed that doxorubicin produced no discernible radical under alkaline conditions (pH 7.4 to 10.5) except at pH 12.5, and it did not scavenge O2-, NO and DPPH radicals. The present study demonstrates that doxorubicin induces the tumor-specific cytotoxicity and some, but not all, apoptosis markers possibly by a radical-independent mechanism, and that mdr1 expression in the tumor cells is not related to the tumor specificity of doxorubicin.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 15868924
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anticancer Res ISSN: 0250-7005 Impact factor: 2.480