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Ceramide mimics tumour necrosis factor‐α in the induction of cell cycle arrest in endothelial cells

31

Citations

38

References

2000

Year

Abstract

Tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha induces a transient increase in N-octanoylsphingosine (C8-ceramide) which has been postulated as an intracellular mediator in TNF-alpha signalling. We tested the ability of C8-ceramide to reproduce the TNF-alpha-mediated interference with endothelial cell proliferation and DNA synthesis. TNF-alpha (10 ng.mL-1) and C8-ceramide (20 microM) inhibited the incorporation of [3H]thymidine into DNA and led to an accumulation of cells in the G1 phase of the cell cycle. When the responses of the tumour suppressors p53 and RB were analysed, it was found that TNF-alpha and C8-ceramide induced increased expression of p53. Treatment with TNF-alpha or C8-ceramide lead to a significant decrease in total retinoblastoma protein (RB) content that correlated with high levels of p53. These results suggest that p53 and RB may complement each other in their contribution to cell cycle arrest. TNF-alpha prevented RB phosphorylation whereas C8-ceramide did not interfere with this process, suggesting that it follows a ceramide-independent pathway.

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