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  • Mechanism underlying cytotoxicity of thialysine, lysine analog, toward human acute leukemia Jurkat T cells.

Mechanism underlying cytotoxicity of thialysine, lysine analog, toward human acute leukemia Jurkat T cells.

Biochemical pharmacology (2003-11-26)
Do Youn Jun, Seok Woo Rue, Kyu Hyun Han, Dennis Taub, Young Sup Lee, Young Seuk Bae, Young Ho Kim
ABSTRACT

We first report the mechanism for the inhibitory effect of the lysine analog, thialysine on human acute leukemia Jurkat T cells. When Jurkat T cells were treated with thialysine (0.32-2.5 mM), apoptotic cell death along with several biochemical events such as mitochondrial cytochrome c release, caspase-9 activation, caspase-3 activation, degradation of poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase, and DNA fragmentation was induced in a dose- and time-dependent manner. However, these thialysine-induced apoptotic events were significantly abrogated by an ectopic expression of Bcl-xL, which is known to block mitochondrial cytochrome c release. Decylubiquinone, a mitochondrial permeability transition pore inhibitor, also suppressed thialysine-induced apoptotic events. Comparison of the thialysine-induced alterations in the cell cycle distribution between Jurkat T cells transfected with Bcl-xL gene (J/Bcl-xL) and Jurkat T cells transfected with vector (J/Neo) revealed that the apoptotic cells were mainly derived from the cells accumulated in S and G2/M phases following thialysine treatment. The interruption of cell cycle progression in the presence of thialysine was accompanied by a significant decline in the protein level of cdk4, cdk6, cdc2, cyclin A, cyclin B1, and cyclin E. These results demonstrate that the cytotoxic activity of thialysine toward Jurkat T cells is attributable to not only apoptotic cell death mediated by a mitochondria-dependent death signaling pathway, but also interruption of cell cycle progression by a massive down-regulation in the level of cdks and cyclins.