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. 2004 May 7;317(3):817-22.
doi: 10.1016/j.bbrc.2004.03.117.

Selective inhibition of bleomycin-induced G2 cell cycle checkpoint by simaomicin alpha

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Selective inhibition of bleomycin-induced G2 cell cycle checkpoint by simaomicin alpha

Masayoshi Arai et al. Biochem Biophys Res Commun. .

Abstract

Human T-cell leukemia-derived Jurkat cells are known to be defective in the G1 checkpoint. DNA-damaging agent bleomycin arrests the cell cycle at G2 phase of Jurkat cells, and microtubule-acting colchicine arrests it at the M phase. Simaomicin alpha, an actinomycete metabolite, itself showed no effect on the cell cycle status of Jurkat cells at least up to 6.0 nM. However, the compound (0.6-6.0 nM) was found to abrogate the bleomycin-induced G2 arrest, yielding a drastic decrease in cells at the G2 phase and increase in cells at the subG1 and G1 phases. On the other hand, the compound did not show any effect on the colchicine-induced M phase arrest in Jurkat cells. Furthermore, the compound showed almost no effect on the cell cycle status of the bleomycin-treated or -untreated normal cell line HUVEC. These data suggested that simaomicin alpha disrupts the cell cycle G2 checkpoint of cancer cells selectively, leading to sensitization of cancer cells to anti-cancer reagents.

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