4.7 Article

Adenosine stimulation of the proliferation of colorectal carcinoma cell lines - Roles of cell density and adenosine metabolism

Journal

BIOCHEMICAL PHARMACOLOGY
Volume 66, Issue 9, Pages 1737-1747

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/S0006-2952(03)00548-3

Keywords

adenosine; AMP; ATP; hypoxia; tumor microenvironment; colorectal cancer; cell proliferation

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Adenosine is a purine nucleoside which is present at micromolar concentrations in the extracellular fluid of solid cancers as a result of tissue hypoxia. Adenosine acts to promote tumor survival by inhibiting the cell-mediated anti-tumor immune response. However, its role in modulating proliferation of the tumor cell population is unclear. Differing results have been obtained using adenosine analogues or by interfering with adenosine metabolism. We examined the effect of adenosine itself on DNA synthesis and cell growth in six different human and mouse colorectal carcinoma cell lines, from different sites and at different stages of differentiation. Adenosine given as a single dose consistently stimulated DNA synthesis and cell proliferation in all cell lines tested, with an EC50 of 3.8-30 muM and a maximum stimulation being reached at 10-100 muM. AMP and ATP also stimulated cell proliferation at similar doses. The stimulation by adenosine varied depending upon the culture cell density, with the greatest mitogenic effect at subconfluent densities. Adenosine was metabolized by cellular adenosine deaminase and adenosine kinase. The half-life (t(1/2)) for the decline in adenosine concentration in the medium following a single addition was between 40 min and 3 hr depending on the cell line and culture conditions. The rate of production of endogenous adenosine was low under normoxic culture conditions. Continuous dosing of cultures with adenosine to provide a steady-state concentration showed that proliferation could be stimulated by low micromolar concentrations of adenosine. We conclude that adenosine is stimulatory to the growth of human colorectal carcinoma cells at concentrations present within the tumor extracellular environment. (C) 2003 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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