Abstract
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.
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.).