BCNU [1,3-bis(2-chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea], a bifunctional (alkylating/carbamoylating) anticancer agent, in noncytotoxic doses (12–50 µm) inhibited drug-induced apoptosis in HT58 human lymphoma cells exposed to etoposide (ETO; 50 µm) as well as in mouse thymocytes exposed to dexamethasone (5 µg/ml) in vitro in 4-h cultures. The cytoplasmic extracts of ETO-treated HT58 cells cleaved both purified poly(ADP-ribose)polymerase and Ac-Asp-Glu-Val-Asp-7-amino-4-methylcoumarin fluorogenic caspase substrate, indicating the presence of active caspases, and these effects were inhibited by BCNU concentration dependently. The carbamoylating decomposite, 2-chloroethyl-isocyanate (6–25 µm), also decreased ETO-induced apoptosis in HT58 cells in vitro and their caspase 3-like activity ex vivo, whereas N-(2-chloroethyl)-N-nitrosocarbamoylvalinamide, an alkylating and mainly intramolecularly carbamoylating nitrosourea derivative (400 µm), did not influence these phenomena. Furthermore, the activity of recombinant caspase 3 was also strongly inhibited by BCNU and 2-chloroethyl-isocyanate. These results indicate that BCNU, via its carbamoylating capacity, can inactivate cysteine protease(s) essential for ETO-induced apoptosis. This apoptosis-modulating property of BCNU, in turn, may influence the efficacy of chemotherapeutic protocols in the treatment of cancer.

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Supported by projects of National Scientific Research Foundation, Hungary (OTKA) T107083 and Research Foundation of Welfare Ministry, Hungary (ETT) 559/96 (L. K.), OTKA T023959 (P. I. B.), and OTKA T015709 (H. S-V.).

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