Induction of apoptosis in human leukemic cells by the ether lipid 1‐octadecyl‐2‐methyl‐RAC‐glycero‐3‐ phosphocholine. A possible basis for its selective action
1993
Ether-linked glycerophospholipids (ether lipids, EL) are membrane-interactive drugs selectively cytotoxic toward neoplastic cells compared with normal cells. No conclusive explanation has yet been provided for this selectivity. We now present data indicating that the drug 1-octadecyl-2-methyl-rac-glycero-3-phosphocholine (ET-18-OMe) induces apoptosis, or programmed cell death, in human leukemic cells. Apoptotic death is induced selectively by ET-18-OMe in HL60 cells, which are sensitive to the drug's cytotoxic action, but not in the resistant K562 cell line. Enrichment of HL60 cells with cholesterol (HWO-CHOL cells) significantly protects the cells from the cytotoxic effect and from the induction of apoptosis by ET-18-OMe; the percentage of fragmented DNA is only 17% for HL60-CHOL, compared with 50% in native HL60 cells after exposure to 20 μ ET-18-OMe for 24 hr. Our study provides a possible explanation for differences in sensitivity to EL among different cell types and illustrates an indirect interaction of EL with cellular DNA.
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