4.5 Article

Cell death induced by Bothrops asper snake venom metalloproteinase on endothelial and other cell lines

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL AND MOLECULAR PATHOLOGY
Volume 88, Issue 3, Pages 424-432

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.yexmp.2010.02.002

Keywords

Metalloproteinase; Anoikis; Apoptosis; Autophagy; Snake venom

Categories

Funding

  1. Vicerrectoria de Investigacion, Universidad de Costa Rica [741-A6-027]

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Two adherent cell lines, BAEC and HeLa, and non-adherent Jurkat, were treated with snake venom metalloproteinase BaP1 to determine whether cytotoxicity, previously reported for this toxin, could be mediated by the process of anoikis. It was observed that there was no correlation between the ability of this toxin to induce loss of adherence, and the cytotoxic effect, since concentrations that do not induce loss of adherence (3-6 mu g/mL), were able to trigger 50% of cytotoxicity in BAEC In the case of HeLa, where toxicity was very low (less than 20% at maximun concentrations and times of exposure), significant detachment and no toxicity was observed at concentrations of 1.5 mu g/ml, showing also no correlation between both events. We also observed differences between BAEC toxicity measured by XTT reduction and DNA fragmentation determined by flow cytometry (as an indicator of apoptosis), since concentrations that induce 100% of cytotoxicity barely showed any DNA fragmentation (12% at 24 h), suggesting that if apoptosis was involved, DNA damage is still not present, although chromatin condensation, another indicator of apoptosis, is observed in 40% of the cells. Inhibition of BAEC cytotoxicity by caspase inhibitors indicate that apoptosis is playing a role in this process, but other mechanisms of cell death could be participating also. Another way to determine whether the mechanism of cell death was related to anoikis was using a non-adherent cell line, which should show substrate independence. We determined by TUNEL that at 50 mu g/ml BaP1 triggered 50% of apoptosis at 96 h, an effect that was seen earlier, suggesting also that if this toxin was inducing apoptosis in a non-adherent cell line, the mechanism could not be related to loss of attachment. Cell cycle arrest in S phase was also observed in Jurkat cells, an effect that could be leading to apoptosis. In conclusion, since there was no correlation between cell detachment and cytotoxicity (and apoptosis) in adherent cell lines and due to the ability of BaP1 to induce a poptosis in a non-adherent cell line, we suggest that this enzyme is toxic by a mechanism not related to anoikis, and that in the case of Jurkat cells, it is likely to be related to its ability to induce cell cycle arrest. Processes other than apoptosis could be also involved in the cell death mechanism mediated by BaP1 on BAEC. (C) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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