PMID: 8988042Jan 1, 1997Paper

Bcl-2 and Bcl-XL antagonize the mitochondrial dysfunction preceding nuclear apoptosis induced by chemotherapeutic agents

Cancer Research
Didier DecaudinG Kroemer

Abstract

A number of apoptosis-inducing agents used in cancer therapy (etoposide, doxorubicin, 1-beta-D-arabinofuranosylcytosine), as well as the proapoptotic second messenger ceramide, induce a disruption of the mitochondrial transmembrane potential (delta psi m) that precedes nuclear DNA fragmentation. This effect has been observed in tumor cell lines of T-lymphoid, B-lymphoid, and myelomonocytic origin in vitro. Circulating tumor cells from patients receiving chemotherapy in vivo also demonstrate a delta psi m disruption after in vitro culture that precedes nuclear apoptosis. Transfection-enforced hyperexpression of the proto-oncogenes bcl-2 and bcl-XL protects against chemotherapy-induced apoptosis, at both the level of the mitochondrial dysfunction preceding nuclear apoptosis and the level of late nuclear apoptotic events. Bcl-2-mediated inhibition of ceramide-induced delta psi m disruption is observed in normal as well as anucleate cells, indicating that bcl-2 acts on an extranuclear pathway of apoptosis. In contrast to Bcl-2 and Bcl-XL, hyperexpression of the protease inhibitor cytokine response modifier A fails to protect tumor cells against chemotherapy-induced delta psi m disruption and apoptosis, although cytokine response mo...Continue Reading

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