Attenuation of ceramide-induced apoptosis by diglyceride in human myeloid leukemia cells Journal Article


Authors: Jarvis, W. D.; Fornari, F. A. Jr; Browning, J. L.; Gewirtz, D. A.; Kolesnick, R. N.; Grant, S.
Article Title: Attenuation of ceramide-induced apoptosis by diglyceride in human myeloid leukemia cells
Abstract: Prior studies demonstrated that increased intracellular availability of ceramide induces apoptotic DNA degradation and cell death in the human leukemia cell lines HL-60 and U937 (Jarvis, W. D., Kolesnick, R. N., Fornari, F. A., Traylor, R. S., Gewirtz, D. A., and Grant, S. (1994) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 91, 73-77). The present findings show that diglyceride opposes ceramide-related apoptosis in HL-60 and U937 cells. Acute (6-12-h) exposure to sphingomyelinase (100 milliunits/ml) or synthetic ceramide (10 μM) promoted apoptotic degradation of genomic DNA as indicated by (a) the appearance of both ~50-kilobase pair (kbp) DNA fragments and ~0.2-1.2-kbp DNA fragment ladders on agarose gels, (b) formation and release of small double-stranded DNA fragments, and (c) loss of integrity of bulk DNA. DNA damage was associated with reduced clonogenicity and expression of apoptotic morphology. In contrast, exposure to phospholipase C (0.001-100 milliunits/ml) or synthetic diglyceride (10 μM) failed to promote apoptosis and abolished the lethal actions of ceramide as defined by each of the indices outlined above. Ceramide-related apoptosis was also reduced by acute (6-h) exposure to tumor promoters such as phorbol dibutyrate and mezerein and the non-tumor-promoting agent bryostatin 1; conversely, chronic (24-h) pretreatment with these agents failed to modify ceramide-mediated cytotoxicity, but abolished the protective actions of diglyceride. These findings demonstrate that diglyceride and pharmacological protein kinase C activators reduce or abolish ceramide-mediated apoptosis in human leukemia cells and support the concept of a cytoprotective function for protein kinase C in the regulation of leukemic cell survival. In addition, the capacity of diglyceride to prevent very early genomic lesions (e.g., generation of 50- kbp DNA fragments) suggests that acute activation of protein kinase C arrests apoptosis at an initial stage.
Keywords: controlled study; human cell; dna damage; cell survival; apoptosis; enzyme activation; tumor cells, cultured; time factors; double stranded dna; leukemia, myeloid; inhibition kinetics; protein kinase c; bryostatin 1; diacylglycerol; concentration response; clonogenesis; ceramide; ceramides; dna degradation; diglycerides; sphingomyelin phosphodiesterase; dna fragment; etiology; myeloid leukemia; binding kinetics; phospholipase c; humans; human; priority journal; article; phorbol dibutyrate; mezerein
Journal Title: Journal of Biological Chemistry
Volume: 269
Issue: 50
ISSN: 0021-9258
Publisher: American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology  
Date Published: 1994-12-16
Start Page: 31685
End Page: 31692
Language: English
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 7989341
DOI/URL:
Notes: Export Date: 14 January 2019 -- Article -- Source: Scopus
Citation Impact
MSK Authors
  1. Richard N Kolesnick
    299 Kolesnick