Abstract

Sulfur-containing tyrosine analogs such as 4-S-cysteaminylphenol (4-S-CAP) and its N-acetyl derivative, N-acetyl-4-S-CAP, are tyrosinase substrates and can cause selective cytotoxicity or cell death of melanocytes and melanoma cells. It is not clear, however, if the cytotoxicity derives from a cytostatic or cytocidal effect. The latter can also be either apoptotic or necrotic. This paper summarizes our attempt to clarify the nature of melanocytotoxicity and cell death by using a new derivative of 4-S-CAP, N-propionyl-4-S-CAP (NPr-CAP). The i.p. administration of NPr-CAP caused marked depigmentation of black hair follicles in C57 mice. At 12 h postadministration of NPr-CAP, follicular melanocytes showed histochemical and morphologic features indicative of apoptosis by TdT-mediated dUTP-biotin nick end labeling (TUNEL) staining and electron microscopy. The agarose gel electrophoresis of DNA from drug-treated melan a2 cells, an immortal melanocyte line of C57 black mice, showed the nucleosomal DNA ladder pattern. NPr-CAP caused irreversible cytotoxicity in melan a2 and the effect was inhibited by a tyrosinase inhibitor, phenylthiocarbamide. The tyrosinase-mediated cytotoxicity of NPr-CAP was further confirmed by the decreased viability of COS 7 monkey-kidney cells, which expressed a level of high tyrosinase activity through transfection of human tyrosinase cDNA. NPr-CAP, however, also transiently inhibited the proliferation of melan c cells, a control tyrosinase-negative albino melanocyte line, and vector-transfected COS 7 cells. Thus, the major process of NPr-CAP-mediated melanocytotoxicity involves cytocidal apoptosis associated with active tyrosinase. In addition, there is transient, nontyrosinase-mediated cytostatic cytotoxicity.

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