Literature DB >> 8554528

Constitutive nuclear NF kappa B/rel DNA-binding activity of rat thymocytes is increased by stimuli that promote apoptosis, but not inhibited by pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate.

A F Slater1, M Kimland, S A Jiang, S Orrenius.   

Abstract

Rat thymocytes spontaneously undergo apoptotic death in cell culture, and are also sensitive to the induction of apoptosis by various stimuli. We show that unstimulated thymocytes constitutively express a p50-containing nuclear factor kappa B (NF kappa B)/rel DNA-binding activity in their nuclei. When the cells were fractionated by density-gradient centrifugation this activity was found to be most pronounced in immature CD4+8+ thymocytes, the cell population that undergoes selection by apoptosis in vivo and that is most sensitive to external inducers of apoptosis in vitro. The intensity of the NF kappa B/rel protein-DNA complex was significantly enhanced 30 min after exposing thymocytes to methylprednisolone or etoposide, two agents well known to induce apoptosis in these cells. Expression of this DNA-binding activity therefore correlates with the subsequent occurrence of apoptosis. By analogy to other systems, it has been suggested that antioxidants such as pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate (PDTC) inhibit thymocyte apoptosis by preventing the activation of an NF kappa B/rel transcription factor. However, we have found that etoposide induces a very similar enhancement of the NF kappa B/rel DNA-binding activity in the presence or absence of PDTC, despite a pronounced inhibition of apoptotic DNA fragmentation in the former situation. Dithiocarbamates therefore do not exert their anti-apoptotic activity in thymocytes by inhibiting the activation of this transcription factor.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 8554528      PMCID: PMC1136190          DOI: 10.1042/bj3120833

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biochem J        ISSN: 0264-6021            Impact factor:   3.857


  45 in total

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