Cytotoxic and apoptotic effects of cobalt and chromium ions on J774 macrophages - Implication of caspase-3 in the apoptotic pathway
- PMID: 15348346
- DOI: 10.1023/a:1012800813662
Cytotoxic and apoptotic effects of cobalt and chromium ions on J774 macrophages - Implication of caspase-3 in the apoptotic pathway
Abstract
The aim of this study was to evaluate the cytotoxic and apoptotic effects of cobalt and chromium ions on macrophages in vitro, and analyze the implication of caspase-3 in the apoptotic pathway. J774 mouse macrophages (5 x 10(5) cells/ml) were exposed for up to 24 h to 0-10 ppm Co2+ and 0-500 ppm Cr3+. The cytotoxic effect of ions was measured by Trypan blue exclusion. DNA analysis on agarose gel was used as a specific test for detection of DNA fragmentation into oligonucleosomes that occurs in apoptotic cells. The proteolytic cleavage of poly(ADP-ribose)polymerase (PARP), closely associated with the induction of apoptosis, was also analyzed along with the appearance of the active fragment of caspase-3, implicated in several apoptosis pathways. Results demonstrated that both Co2+ and Cr3+ ions induce macrophage mortality in a dose-dependent manner. However, Co2+ is more toxic inducing a cell mortality up to 28% with only 10 ppm vs. 37% with 500 ppm of Cr3+. DNA analysis demonstrated that both Co2+ and Cr3+ ions induce DNA fragmentation, between 6-10 ppm Co2+ and 250-500 ppm Cr3+ after 24 h incubation. PARP cleavage and the appearance of caspase-3 active fragment were observed after 6 h with both Co+ and Cr3+ ions, with a stronger signal after 24 h and 10 ppm of Co2+ or 500 ppm of Cr3+. In conclusion, this study demonstrates that after 24 h incubation, both Co2+ and Cr3+ ions can induce macrophage mortality, and more specifically apoptosis. The results also suggest that apoptosis occurs via a caspase-3 pathway. However, the relative importance of necrosis and apoptosis and the effects of longer exposure times on the induction of macrophage death by these metal ions remain to be investigated.
Copyright 2001 Kluwer Academic Publishers
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