Effect of Bcl-2 on ionizing radiation and 1-beta-D-arabinofuranosylcytosine-induced internucleosomal DNA fragmentation and cell survival in human myeloid leukemia cells.
Academic Article
Overview
abstract
1-beta-D-Arabinofuranosylcytosine (ara-C) is an anti-leukemic agent that incorporates into cellular DNA leading to inhibition of DNA synthesis and loss of clonogenic survival. In contrast, ionizing radiation induces DNA damage through the generation of reactive oxygen intermediates. Although little is known of the specific determinants of ara-C and ionizing radiation-induced cytotoxicity, recent work has shown that both are capable of inducing internucleosomal DNA fragmentation in a pattern consistent with programmed cell death (apoptosis). In order to assess the importance of apoptosis in drug and ionizing radiation-induced cytotoxicity in the U-937 myelomonocytic cell line, we created cell lines that constitutively express a transfected bcl-2 gene. Bcl-2 was capable of inhibiting 40-50% of the ara-C and ionizing radiation-induced internucleosomal DNA fragmentation at all tested concentrations. However, cell survival following exposure to these agents was only increased in the bcl-2 transfectants at relatively low doses of ara-C and ionizing radiation. These data demonstrate that although bcl-2 is capable of inhibiting ara-C and ionizing radiation-induced DNA fragmentation in myeloid cells, it increases cell survival only at low doses of these agents. This suggests that apoptosis may be a less important mechanism of cytotoxicity at higher doses of ara-C and ionizing radiation than it is at lower doses.