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. 1999 Feb 15;57(4):375-82.
doi: 10.1016/s0006-2952(98)00323-2.

Peroxidase-catalyzed effects of indole-3-acetic acid and analogues on lipid membranes, DNA, and mammalian cells in vitro

Affiliations

Peroxidase-catalyzed effects of indole-3-acetic acid and analogues on lipid membranes, DNA, and mammalian cells in vitro

L K Folkes et al. Biochem Pharmacol. .

Abstract

This study aimed to explore the mechanisms and molecular parameters which control the cytotoxicity of derivatives of indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) when oxidatively activated by horseradish peroxidase (HRP). Lipid peroxidation was measured in liposomes, damage to supercoiled plasmid DNA assessed by gel electrophoresis, free radical intermediates detected by EPR following spin trapping, binding of IAA-derived products demonstrated by 3H labelling, stable products measured by HPLC, and cytotoxicity in hamster fibroblasts measured by clonogenic survival. IAA, and nine analogues more easily oxidized by HRP, caused lipid peroxidation in liposomes, but not detectably in membranes of hamster fibroblasts, and were cytotoxic after HRP activation to varying degrees. Cytotoxicity was not correlated with activation rate. The hydrophilic vitamin E analogue, Trolox, inhibited cytotoxicity, whereas loading fibroblasts with vitamin E was ineffective, consistent with an oxidative mechanism in which radical precursors to damage are intercepted by Trolox in the aqueous phase. However, two known oxidation products were nontoxic (the 3-carbinol and 3-aldehyde, both probably produced from 3-CH2OO* peroxyl radicals via the 3-CH*2 [skatolyl] radical following decarboxylation of the radical cation). The skatolyl radical from IAA was shown by EPR with spin trapping to react with DNA; electrophoresis showed binding to occur. Treatment of hamster fibroblasts with 5-3H-IAA/HRP resulted in intracellular bound 3H. Together with earlier results, the new data point to unknown electrophilic oxidation products, reactive towards intracellular targets, being involved in cytotoxicity of the IAA/HRP combination, rather than direct attack of free radicals, excited states, or membrane lipid peroxidation.

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