Effect of Concentration on the Cytotoxic Mechanism of Doxorubicin—Apoptosis and Oxidative DNA Damage
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications 230(2): 254-257
Article 1997 English
Authors
IM
Ingo Müller
AJ
Andrew M. Jenner
GB
Gernot Bruchelt
Abstract
1 min read
Anthracycline derivatives such as doxorubicin are part of many chemotherapeutic regimens and reach peak plasma concentrations of 5 μM. We investigated the cytotoxic mechanisms of various doxorubicin concentrations in MOLT-4 ALL-cells. Concentrations of up to 100 μM doxorubicin achieved similar cytotoxic effects in cultures of MOLT-4 cells, but acted via different mechanisms. Doxorubicin induced apoptosis (maximum effect at 1 μM), which was dependent on RNA synthesis and involved oxidative stress. Concentrations higher than 3 μM did not induce apoptosis, but significantly inhibited RNA synthesis. DNA strand breaks in MOLT-4 cells occurred in the presence of 1 to 5 μM doxorubicin to a similar extent, but showed a dose-dependence at higher concentrations. There was no GC/MS-detectable oxidation of DNA bases in apoptotic cells and only 1 out of 13 DNA base oxidation products, 8-hydroxyguanine, increased significantly in the presence of as much as 100 μM doxorubicin. These results suggest that at pharmacologically relevant concentrations apoptosis and not oxidative DNA damage is the main killing mechanism of doxorubicin against ALL-cells.
Okezie I. Aruoma, Monica Deiana, Andrew M. Jenner, Barry Halliwell, Harparkash Kaur, Sebastiano Banni, Francesco P. Corongiu, Ma Dessì, Robert Aeschbach
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