4.6 Article

Tumor cytotoxicity by endothelial cells -: Impairment of the mitochondrial system for glutathione uptake in mouse B16 melanoma cells that survive after in vitro interaction with the hepatic sinusoidal endothelium

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JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 278, Issue 16, Pages 13888-13897

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M207140200

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High GSH content associates with high metastatic activity in B16-F10 melanoma cells cultured to low density (LD B16M). GSH homeostasis was investigated in LD B16M cells that survive after adhesion to the hepatic sinusoidal endothelium (HSE). Invasive B16M (iB16M) cells were isolated using anti-Met-72 monoclonal antibodies and flow cytometry-coupled cell sorting. HSE-derived NO and H2O2 caused GSH depletion and a decrease in gamma-glutamyleysteine synthetase activity in iB16M cells. Overexpression of y-glutamyleysteine synthetase heavy and light subunits led to a rapid recovery of cytosolic GSH, whereas mitochondrial GSH (mtGSH) further decreased during the first 18 h of culture. NO and H2O2 damaged the mitochondrial system for GSH uptake (rates in iB16M were approximately 75% lower than in LD B16M cells). iB16M cells also showed a decreased activity of mitochondrial complexes II,III, and IV, less O-2 consumption, lower ATP levels, higher O-2(.-) and H2O2 production, and lower mitochondrial Membrane potential. In vitro growing iB16M cells maintained high viability (>98%) and repaired HSE-induced mitochondrial damages within 48 h. However, iB16M cells with low mtGSH levels were highly susceptible to TNF-alpha-induced oxidative stress and death. Therefore depletion of mtGSH levels may represent a critical target to challenge survival of invasive cancer cells.

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