Publication | Open Access
Endogenous endonuclease-induced DNA fragmentation: an early event in cell-mediated cytolysis.
616
Citations
23
References
1983
Year
Dna DamageApoptosisImmunologyMolecular BiologyCell DeathImmunophenotypingImmunotherapyEndocytic PathwayEarly EventNuclear DnaGenome InstabilityBiochemistryDna ReplicationTarget CellsCell BiologyZinc IonsChromatinNatural SciencesCellular BiochemistryMedicine
Within minutes of exposure of target cells to cytotoxic T lymphocytes, their nuclear DNA begins to be fragmented. This phenomenon precedes 51Cr release by at least an hour. DNA fragmentation occurs only when appropriately sensitized cytotoxic T cells are used and is not merely a result of cell death because killing of target cells by heating, freeze/thawing, or lysing with antibody and complement did not yield DNA fragments. Agarose gel electrophoresis of target cell DNA showed discrete multiples of an approximately 200-base-pair subunit, suggesting that fragmentation was the result of activation of a specific endonuclease. A similar pattern of DNA fragments is observed during glucocorticoid-induced killing of mouse thymocytes. The endonuclease in that case is inhibited by zinc ions, and we find that Zn2+ also inhibits DNA fragmentation and 51Cr release induced by cytotoxic T cells, suggesting a final common biochemical pathway for both types of cell death.
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