Oxidative species and S-glutathionyl conjugates in the apoptosis induction by allyl thiosulfate
2012
Natural allyl sulfur compounds show antiproliferative effects on tumor
cells, but the biochemical mechanisms underlying the antitumorigenic properties
of the organ sulfur compounds are not yet fully understood. Sodium
2-propenyl-thiosulfate is a garlic water-soluble organo-sulfane sulfur compound
able to promote apoptosis in cancer cells, affecting the ‘managing’
of the redox state in the cell. Our studies show that sodium 2-propenylthiosulfate
reacts spontaneously with reduced glutathione at physiological
pH, leading to the formation of S-allyl-mercapto-glutathione, radicals and
peroxyl species, which are able to induce inhibition of enzymes with cysteine
in the catalytic site, such as sulfurtransferases. S-Allyl-mercapto-glutathione
was purified and characterized by NMR and MS, and its cytotoxic
effect at 500 lM on HuT 78 cells was analyzed, showing activation of the
p38–MAPK pathway. Many allyl sulfur compounds are also able to
promote chemoprevention by induction of xenobiotic-metabolizing
enzymes, inducing down-activation or detoxification of the carcinogens.
Thus, the effects of the S-allyl-mercapto-glutathione on proteins involved
in the cellular detoxification system, such as glutathione S-transferase, have
been evaluated both in vitro and in HuT 78 cells. Although the antitumor
properties of water-soluble sulfur compounds may arise from several mechanisms
and it is likely that more cellular events occur simultaneously, a relevant
role is played by the formation of both reduced glutathione
conjugates and radical species that affect the activity of the thiol-proteins
involved in fundamental cellular processes.
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