Abstract

Flow cytometric analysis of the cellular DNA content and high pressure liquid chromatographic analysis of the cellular concentration of the polyamines putrescine, spermidine and spermine have been performed on exponentially growing populations of rat brain tumor cells following treatment with methylglyoxal-bis(guanylhydrazone) (MeGAG). This drug has previously been found to be a potent inhibitor of S-adenosyl- l -methionine decarboxylase, the enzyme that catalyzes the initial step in spermidine and spermine biosynthesis. MeGAG was found to inhibit cell proliferation within one generation time. During this time it produced an increase in the fraction of cells with a 2C DNA content (cells in the G 1 phase of the cell cycle). Continued accumulation of cells in the G 1 phase occurred with sustained treatment. Drug treatment also resulted in a marked decrease in the cellular spermidine and spermine concentraions. Cells did not emerge from their G 1 -arrest after the addition of spermidine or fresh medium and apparently had become irreversibly blocked by the drug. We suggest that (1) growth inhibition by MeGAG was due to depletion of the cellular pools of spermidine and spermine, and that (2) the cells accumulated in the G 1 phase of the cell cycle because of a possible requirement for spermidine and spermine during the subsequent phases (S, G 2 and M), the period during which polyamine biosynthesis and accumulation take place in continuously dividing mammalian cells.

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