A Role for Calcium in Regulating Apoptosis in Rat Thymocytes Irradiatedin Vitro
Autor: | S. P. Tomasovic, Michael D. Story, L. C. Stephens, Raymond E. Meyn |
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Rok vydání: | 1992 |
Předmět: |
Male
Programmed cell death Cell Survival T-Lymphocytes In Vitro Techniques Biology Methylprednisolone chemistry.chemical_compound Animals Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging Cycloheximide Fragmentation (cell biology) Egtazic Acid Radiological and Ultrasound Technology Rats Inbred Strains DNA T lymphocyte Molecular biology In vitro Rats Thymocyte chemistry Apoptosis Immunology DNA fragmentation Calcium |
Zdroj: | International Journal of Radiation Biology. 61:243-251 |
ISSN: | 1362-3095 0955-3002 |
DOI: | 10.1080/09553009214550871 |
Popis: | Thymus-derived lymphocytes undergo death after gamma-irradiation via a pathway termed apoptosis, or programmed cell death. An early step in this pathway is the production of nucleosome-sized fragments of DNA. DNA fragmentation was used as the endpoint in these investigations to examine apoptosis in lymphocytes extracted from the rat thymus and irradiated in vitro. In unirradiated thymocytes the level of DNA fragmentation rose to 15% by the first hour of culture, where it remained approximately constant until the fifth hour. In contrast, thymocytes irradiated with a dose of 2.5 Gy exhibited a large and dramatic increase in DNA fragmentation beginning 2 h postirradiation. DNA fragmentation measured 6 h after irradiation was detected after as little as 0.25 Gy and reached a maximum of 90% with 10 Gy. Metabolic control of DNA fragmentation after irradiation was evidenced by the suppression of DNA fragmentation when thymocytes were incubated with cyclohexamide or actinomycin D. When gamma-irradiated thymocytes were incubated with the Ca2+ chelator EGTA, DNA fragmentation was reduced significantly. BAPTA-AM, a highly specific intracellular Ca2+ chelator, essentially eliminated DNA fragmentation in cells irradiated with 2.5 Gy and, unlike EGTA, eliminated the background level of fragmentation in unirradiated samples. Therefore, our data are consistent with the possibility that Ca2+ serves as a second messenger to induce DNA fragmentation in irradiated thymocytes, suggesting a common pathway for cells prompted to enter apoptosis from seemingly dissimilar interval events. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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