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. 1985:23:277-90.
doi: 10.1016/0065-2571(85)90052-4.

Effects of nitrogen mustard on potassium transport systems and membrane structure of Ehrlich ascites tumor cells

Effects of nitrogen mustard on potassium transport systems and membrane structure of Ehrlich ascites tumor cells

H Grunicke et al. Adv Enzyme Regul. 1985.

Abstract

By Ehrlich ascites tumor cells 86Rb+ has been shown to be a suitable tracer for K+-transport. Sixty percent of the total 86Rb-uptake into these cells is ouabain-inhibitable, 30% is sensitive to furosemide and 10% enters the cells by ouabain and furosemide-insensitive systems. N-Mustard inhibits both the ouabain-sensitive and the furosemide-inhibitable systems. The uptake which is resistant to both inhibitors is not affected by the alkylating drug. At N-mustard concentrations below 10 microM, the reduction of the Rb-uptake is predominantly due to the inhibition of the furosemide-sensitive transport. Higher concentrations are required before a significant inhibition of the ouabain-sensitive transport can be observed. The dose response curve of the furosemide-sensitive transport--not, however, of the ouabain inhibitable pump--corresponds to the dose response curve for the antiproliferative activity of N-mustard. The recovery of the furosemide-sensitive transport after a single exposure to N-mustard is relatively slow and--in contrast to the repair of DNA cross-links--is characterized by an initial 4-hr lag period. Furosemide alone does not interfere with cell multiplication. The inhibition of the transport system alone does, therefore, not explain the antitumor activity of N-mustard. The effect is discussed as a marker for membrane lesions after exposure to alkylating agents. In order to investigate the influence of N-mustard on membrane structure, membranes were labelled with diiodofluoresceiniodoacetamide. Anisotropy curves obtained from time-dependent depolarization of delayed fluorescence indicated a mustard induced immobilization of membrane constituents. Lateral diffusion of lipophilic probes was determined by following the quenching of fluorescence of pyrene by cetylpyridinium. The latter studies yielded no evidence for a change in membrane lipid fluidity. The data are interpreted as the results of cross-links of membrane proteins by the bifunctional alkylating agent.

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