Abstract

. Exposure to the thiolamine radioprotector N (2-mercaptoethyl)-1,3-propanediamine (WR-1065) induced apoptosis in the mouse TB8.3 hybridoma after a 60-min (LD50 =4.5 mm) or during a 20-h (LD50=0.15 mm) exposure. In contrast, a 20-h exposure to 17 mm l-cysteine or 10 mm cysteamine was required to induce 50% apoptosis within 20 h. Apoptosis was not induced by either a 60-min or 20-h exposure to 10 mm of the thiazolidine prodrugs ribose-cysteine (RibCys) or ribosecysteamine (RibCyst). Thiolamine-induced apoptosis appeared to be a p53-independent process since it was induced by WR-1065 exposure in human HL60 cells. Exposure to WR-1065 (4 mm for 15 min) or cysteine (10 mm for 60 min) before and during irradiation protected cells against the induction of both DNA double-strand breaks and apoptosis, while exposure to RibCys (10 mm for 3 h) did not. Treatment with either WR-1065, cysteine, RibCys or RibCyst for 60 min beginning 60 min after irradiation did not affect the level of radiation-induced apoptosis. In contrast, treatment with either cysteine, cysteamine or RibCys for 20 h beginning 60 min after irradiation enhanced radiationinduced apoptosis. Similar experiments could not be conducted with WR-1065 because of its extreme toxicity. Our results indicate that thiolamine enhancement of radiation-induced apoptosis is not involved in their previously reported capacity to reduce radiation-induced mutations.

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