Abstract

Synthetic triptycene analogs (TT code number) mimic the antitumor effects of daunorubicin (DAU) in vitro, but have the advantage of blocking nucleoside transport, inhibiting both DNA topoisomerase I and II activities, and retaining their efficacy in multidrug-resistant (MDR) tumor cells. Since TT bisquinones induce poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-1 (PARP-1) cleavage at 6 h and internucleosomal DNA fragmentation at 24 h, which are, respectively, early and late markers of apoptosis, these antitumor drugs were tested for their ability to trigger the release of mitochondrial cytochrome c (Cyt c) and the caspase activation cascade in the HL-60 cell system. Based on their ability to reduce the viability of wild-type, drug-sensitive HL-60-S cells in the nanomolar range, six lead antitumor TT bisquinones have been identified so far: TT2, TT13, TT16, TT19, TT24 and TT26. In accord with the fact that effector caspase-3 is responsible for PARP-1 cleavage, 4 microM concentrations of DAU and these TT bisquinones all maximally induce caspase-3 activity at 6 h in HL-60-S cells, an effect which persists when the drugs are removed after a 1-h pulse treatment. Since caspase-3 may be activated by initiator caspase-9 and -8, it is significant to show that such caspase activation cascade is induced by 4 microM DAU and TT bisquinones at 6 h in HL-60-S cells. Although the relationship is not perfect, the ability of TT analogs to induce caspase-3, -8 and -9 activities may be linked to their quinone functionality and cytotoxicity. Interestingly, 4 microM concentrations of TT bisquinones retain their ability to induce caspase-3, -8 and -9 activities at 6 h in the MDR HL-60-RV cell line where 4 microM DAU becomes totally ineffective. The release of mitochondrial Cyt c is also detected within 6 h in HL-60-S cells treated with 4 microM DAU or TT bisquinones, a finding consistent with the fact that Cyt c is the apoptotic trigger that activates caspase-9. Caspase-2 and -8 may both act upstream of mitochondria to promote Cyt c release, but caspase-2 is already maximally activated 6 h after 4 microM DAU or TT13 treatments, whereas DAU- or TT-induced caspase-8 and -9 activities peak at 9 h. Pre-treatments with 15 microM of the caspase-2 inhibitor benzyloxycarbonyl (z)-Val-Asp-Val-Ala-Asp (VDVAD)-fluoromethyl ketone (fmk) totally block DAU- and TT13-induced caspase-2, -8 and -9 activities, whereas pre-treatments with 15 microM of the caspase-8 inhibitor z-Ile-Glu-Thr-Asp (IETD)-fmk prevent DAU and TT13 from inducing caspase-8 activities without affecting their caspase-2- and -9-inducing activities, suggesting that the induction of apical caspase-2 activity by these drugs may be a critical upstream event required for the activation of other downstream caspases, including caspase-9 and the mitochondrial amplification loop through caspase-8. However, the mechanisms by which DAU and TT13 induce the release of mitochondrial Cyt c appear to be caspase-independent since they are both insensitive to similar pre-treatments with 100 microM of these specific caspase-2 and -8 inhibitors. Moreover, pre-treatments with 10 microg/ml of the antagonistic anti-Fas DX2 and ZB4 monoclonal antibodies (mAbs), and the neutralizing anti-Fas ligand (FasL) NOK-1 mAb are all unable to prevent DAU and TT13 from inducing Cyt c release and caspase-2, -8 and -9 activities, suggesting that the Fas-FasL signaling pathway is not involved in the mechanism by which these quinone antitumor drugs trigger apoptosis in HL-60 cells.

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