Abstract

We treated rapidly growing Jurkat cells with 40 nmol/l of doxorubicin for 72 h. After 36 h, the G2-arrested cells became larger and some of them started endoreplication. Nuclear staining with Hoechst 33342 combined with propidium iodide (PI) exclusion revealed that about 90% of the cells were necrotic at 72 h, although apoptotic cells accounted for only 8%. Incubation with 40 nmol/l of aclarubicin or cytosine beta-d-arabinofuranoside for 60 h induced necrosis both in Jurkat and ml-1 cells. Pre-necrotic Jurkat cells incubated with 40 nmol/l of doxorubicin had much higher intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels than pre-apoptotic ones. Addition of Tempol or Desferal accelerated doxorubicin-induced necrosis and partially converted it into apoptosis. Both antioxidants reduced surviving colony numbers of prenecrotic Jurkat cells. n-acetyl-l-cysteine had little effect on the apoptotic conversion but profoundly accelerated necrosis. Because an apoptosis-resistant Jurkat subclone was also refractory to doxorubicin-induced necrosis, apoptosis and necrosis might share some common pathways. Low-dose doxorubicin increased micronuclei-positive cell percentages and also suppressed high-dose doxorubicin-induced apoptosis in Jurkat and ml-1 cells. Some of the prenecrotic cells, therefore, might survive and obtain genomic instability. Antioxidants may be useful to suppress, at least to some extent, this vicious consequence.

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