Journal
CELL BIOLOGY AND TOXICOLOGY
Volume 24, Issue 1, Pages 55-62Publisher
SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10565-007-9015-0
Keywords
apoptosis; cadmium; human hepatocytes; mitochondria
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The heavy metal cadmium, an environmental pollutant, has been widely demonstrated to be toxic, in particular for liver. In murines, cadmium induces apoptosis of hepatocytes and hepatomas. In human cells, apoptosis induced by cadmium has been exclusively demonstrated in tumoral cell lines. Nothing was known in normal liver, in vitro or in vivo. In the present study, we examined the effects of cadmium in nonmalignant human hepatocytes. For that purpose, we investigated whether cadmium was able to induce apoptosis of normal human hepatocytes (NHH) in primary culture and of a SV40-immortalized human hepatocyte (IHH) cell line. Treatment of IHH and NHH with cadmium induced the presence of a sub-G(1) population at 10 and 100 mu mol/L, respectively. DAPI staining of both cell types treated with cadmium 100 mu mol/L revealed the induction of nuclear apoptotic bodies, supporting the hypothesis of apoptosis. In IHH and NHH, cadmium 100 mu mol/L induced PARP cleavage into a 85 kDa fragment. In order to investigate the involvement of mitochondria in cadmium-induced apoptosis, we measured the mitochondrial membrane potential (Delta(Psi m)). We observed that in IHH and NHH, cadmium 100 mu mol/L induced a decrease of Delta(Psi m). As expected, cadmium under the same conditions enhanced caspase-9 and caspase-3 activities. In addition, cadmium from 1 to 100 mu mol/L induced the expression of p53 and phosphorylation of its Ser15 in IHH and NHH. In conclusion, we showed in this study that human hepatocytes were sensitive to cadmium and apoptosis induced at concentrations suggested in the literature to inhibit p53 DNA-binding and DNA repair.
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