Abstract

Highly metastatic B16 melanoma (B16M)-F10 cells, as compared with the low metastatic B16M-F1 line, have higher GSH content and preferentially overexpress BCL-2. In addition to its anti-apoptotic properties, BCL-2 inhibits efflux of GSH from B16M-F10 cells and thereby may facilitate metastatic cell resistance against endothelium-induced oxidative/nitrosative stress. Thus, we investigated in B16M-F10 cells which molecular mechanisms channel GSH release and whether their modulation may influence metastatic activity. GSH efflux was abolished in multidrug resistance protein 1 knock-out (MRP-/-1) B16M-F10 transfected with the Bcl-2 gene or in MRP-/-1 B16M-F10 cells incubated with l-methionine, which indicates that GSH release from B16M-F10 cells is channeled through MRP1 and a BCL-2-dependent system (likely related to an l-methionine-sensitive GSH carrier previously detected in hepatocytes). The BCL-2-dependent system was identified as the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator, since monoclonal antibodies against this ion channel or H-89 (a protein kinase A-selective inhibitor)-induced inhibition of cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator gene expression completely blocked the BCL-2-sensitive GSH release. By using a perifusion system that mimics in vivo conditions, we found that GSH depletion in metastatic cells can be achieved by using Bcl-2 antisense oligodeoxynucleotide- and verapamil (an MRP1 activator)-induced acceleration of GSH efflux, in combination with acivicin-induced inhibition of gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase (which limits GSH synthesis by preventing cysteine generation from extracellular GSH). When applied under in vivo conditions, this strategy increased tumor cytotoxicity (up to approximately 90%) during B16M-F10 cell adhesion to the hepatic sinusoidal endothelium.

Highlights

  • Multidrug and/or radiation resistance, which are characteristic features of malignant tumors, frequently associate with high GSH content in the cancer cells [6]

  • GSH efflux was abolished in multidrug resistance protein 1 knock-out (MRP؊/؊1) B16 melanoma (B16M)-F10 transfected with the Bcl-2 gene or in multidrug resistance proteins (MRP)؊/؊1 B16M-F10 cells incubated with L-methionine, which indicates that GSH release from B16M-F10 cells is channeled through MRP1 and a BCL-2dependent system

  • By using a perifusion system that mimics in vivo conditions, we found that GSH depletion in metastatic cells can be achieved by using Bcl-2 antisense oligodeoxynucleotide- and verapamilinduced acceleration of GSH efflux, in combination with acivicin-induced inhibition of ␥-glutamyltranspeptidase

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Summary

Introduction

Multidrug and/or radiation resistance, which are characteristic features of malignant tumors, frequently associate with high GSH content in the cancer cells [6]. GSH depletion induced by L-buthionine-(SR)-sulfoximine (BSO), a specific inhibitor of ␥-glutamylcysteine synthetase (the rate-limiting step in GSH biosynthesis) [12], resulted in a complete reversal of resistance to anticancer drugs of different cell lines overexpressing MRP1 but had no effect on P-glycoprotein-mediated multidrug resistance [13]. In a recent study we demonstrated that B16M-F10 cells with a high metastatic potential overexpress BCL-2, show an increase in intracellular GSH content, show no change in the GSH synthesis rate, but show a decrease in GSH efflux [5]. This study provides evidence that BCL-2 can directly inhibit GSH export, thereby accounting for the increase in intracellular GSH It demonstrates that GSH depletion and BCL-2 antisense therapy can sensitize cells to TNF-. Because GSH efflux from B16M cells can be increased by using Bcl-2 antisense oligodeoxynucleotides (Bcl-2-AS) [5], and possibly by using different MRP1 regulators, the aim of the present report was to investigate whether the rate of efflux may become an important factor regulating intracellular GSH content and thereby metastatic cell survival

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