Publication | Open Access
Regulation of γ-glutamyltransferase in cisplatin-resistant and -sensitive colon carcinoma cells after acute cisplatin and oxidative stress exposures
34
Citations
26
References
2000
Year
Reductive StressOncologyChemoprevention StrategyEpigenetic RegulationAcute CisplatinMedicineColorectal CancerCancer Cell BiologyCell LinesCancer BiologyAnti-cancer AgentCellular Glutathione HomeostasisPharmacologyCell BiologyCancer ResearchTumor BiologyOxidative Stress ExposuresOxidative Stress
Glutathione plays an important role in drug resistance of tumor cells and in their ability to resist oxidative stress. Improved salvage of glutathione can be obtained through increased activity of gamma-glutamyltransferase (GGT), which is of importance in the maintenance of cellular glutathione homeostasis. We investigated the regulation of GGT in 2 cisplatin-resistant and 1 cisplatin-sensitive colon carcinoma cell lines. Enzyme activity was induced in all 3 cell lines after acute exposure to cisplatin. The elevation was significantly higher in sensitive cells (3.3-fold) than in resistant (1.6- to 1.7-fold) cells. Exposure of cells to oxidative stress generated by menadione also resulted in enzyme induction but only in cisplatin-sensitive cells. Addition of anti-oxidants had different effects on the 2 inductions: N-acetylcysteine blocked the induction of both cisplatin and menadione, whereas catalase and glutathione-ester blocked only the menadione induction. Glutathione depletion alone was not sufficient to induce GGT in these cells. The data show that GGT is regulated by multiple mechanisms during anti-tumor drug treatment and oxidative stress and that reactive oxygen species were involved in the menadione, but not cisplatin, induction of the enzyme.
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