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. 1993 May 1;53(9):2133-9.

Effects of cisplatin on the induction of apoptosis in proliferating hepatoma cells and nonproliferating immature thymocytes

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  • PMID: 8481916

Effects of cisplatin on the induction of apoptosis in proliferating hepatoma cells and nonproliferating immature thymocytes

D L Evans et al. Cancer Res. .

Abstract

A 2-h exposure of JB1 rat hepatoma cells in late log phase of growth to 50 microM cis-diamminedichloroplatinum (II) (cisplatin) resulted in the asynchronous detachment of cells from the monolayer over 4 days. Detached but not monolayer cells exhibited condensed chromatin and DNA fragmentation, which is indicative of endonuclease activation, the hallmarks of apoptosis in epithelial cells. The number of cisplatin-treated cells identified as apoptotic at any one time was never > 1% of the total cell number present on addition of drug. Two days after drug addition there was a decrease from 85% to 29% cells in G1 phase of the cell cycle, cells in S phase increased from 9% to 18%, and cells in G2/M phase increased from 6% to 51% with respect to untreated cells. Previous studies by Eastman and colleagues demonstrated that cisplatin-induced apoptosis of Chinese hamster ovary cells occurred in the G2 phase of the cell cycle [A. Eastman, Cancer Cells (Cold Spring Harbor), 2: 275-280, 1990]. Continuous exposure of JB1 cells to cycloheximide (1 microM) during and after exposure to cisplatin prevented both drug-induced changes in cell cycle distribution and the engagement of apoptosis. Freshly isolated immature rat thymocytes are known to be exquisitely sensitive to the induction of apoptosis by multiple stimuli including dexamethasone, etoposide, and irradiation. However, no significant increase in the amount of apoptosis above control levels was observed up to 36 h after a 2-h exposure to 50 microM cisplatin. JB1 cells have a doubling time of 24 h, whereas > 90% of immature rat thymocytes are noncycling. The data presented here provide indirect evidence that initiation of cisplatin-induced apoptosis may need to be coupled to a cell cycle-mediated event.

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