Abstract

A subline (JT-1) of L1210 mouse leukemia cells that contains elevated levels of a high-affinity folate binding protein is sensitive to growth inhibition by homofolate. Inhibition was observed at nanomolar concentrations of folate or 5-fonnyltetrahydrofolate where the high-affinity binding protein is the predominant uptake route for folate compounds. At 1.0 nM folate, inhibition of growth by 50% occurred at 0.7 nM homofolate, and maximal inhibition exceeded 90% at homofolate concentrations above 10 nM. Homofolate also inhibited the uptake of 1.0 nM [ 3H]folate by L1210/JT-1 cells in 72-hr cultures, and the extent of uptake inhibition by 1.0 and 20 nM homofolate was comparable to the inhibition of cell growth by the same concentrations of homofolate. At a growth-limiting concentration of 5-formyltetrahydrofolate (0.5 nM), half-maximal inhibition of L1210/JT-1 cell growth occurred at 1.0 nM homofolate. When excess concentrations of folate (5 μM) or 5-formyltetrahydrofolate (0.5 μM) were added to the medium, no growth inhibition was observed for homofolate at concentrations up to 100 μM. Parental cells lacking the folate binding protein did not respond to homofolate either at growth-limiting (0.5 μM) or excess (5.0 μM) levels of folate. Binding measurements showed that homofolate has a high affinity for the folate-binding protein ( K i = 0.03 nM) but interacts poorly with the reduced-folate transport system ( K i = 203 μM). These results indicate that homofolate inhibits the growth of L1210 cells when intracellular folates are acquired via the high-affinity folate binding protein. The basis for this inhibition appears to be competition by homofolate for substrate binding and internalization.

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