Involvement of apoptosis in mitomycin C hypersensitivity of Chinese hamster cell mutants

2000 
Abstract To elucidate the mechanisms of the mammalian cell defense against cross-linking agents, we studied previously cellular responses to mitomycin C (MMC) treatment in two MMC-hypersensitive hamster cell mutants’ V-H4 and V-C8, as well as their parental cell line V79. In the present report, we investigated whether alterations in cell cycle checkpoints and induction of apoptosis could be responsible for the MMC hypersensitivity of the V-H4 and V-C8 mutant cell lines. First, we found that parental and mutant cells exhibited similar cell cycle responses to MMC concentrations of equivalent cytotoxicity, arguing against a defective cell cycle checkpoint in hypersensitive cell lines. In contrast, we showed that mutant cells underwent greater levels of apoptosis following MMC treatment than parental cells. These findings indicate that increased induction of apoptosis contributes to the hypersensitivity of V-H4 and V-C8 cells to the growth inhibitory effect of MMC. This differential apoptotic response was observed with both equimolar and equitoxic MMC doses and was specific to the cross-linking agent MMC, suggesting that control of the apoptotic process is altered in both MMC-hypersensitive mutants. The defective genes in V-H4 and V-C8 cells would then function in the regulation of an apoptotic pathway triggered by MMC-induced damage and independent of p53-mediated transcription.
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