The specific PKC-α inhibitor chelerythrine blunts costunolide-induced eryptosis.
Mehrdad GhashghaeiniaPavla KoralkovaDaniela GiustariniRenata MojzikovaBirgit FehrenbacherPeter DreischerMartin SchallerUlrich MrowietzAntonio Martínez-RuizThomas WiederVladimír DivokýRanieri RossiFlorian LangMartin KöberlePublished in: Apoptosis : an international journal on programmed cell death (2021)
Costunolide, a natural sesquiterpene lactone, has multiple pharmacological activities such as neuroprotection or induction of apoptosis and eryptosis. However, the effects of costunolide on pro-survival factors and enzymes in human erythrocytes, e.g. glutathione and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH) respectively, have not been studied yet. Our aim was to determine the mechanisms underlying costunolide-induced eryptosis and to reverse this process. Phosphatidylserine exposure was estimated from annexin-V-binding, cell volume from forward scatter in flow cytometry, and intracellular glutathione [GSH]i from high performance liquid chromatography. The oxidized status of intracellular glutathione and enzyme activities were measured by spectrophotometry. Treatment of erythrocytes with costunolide dose-dependently enhanced the percentage of annexin-V-binding cells, decreased the cell volume, depleted [GSH]i and completely inhibited G6PDH activity. The effects of costunolide on annexin-V-binding and cell volume were significantly reversed by pre-treatment of erythrocytes with the specific PKC-α inhibitor chelerythrine. The latter, however, had no effect on costunolide-induced GSH depletion. Costunolide induces eryptosis, depletes [GSH]i and inactivates G6PDH activity. Furthermore, our study reveals an inhibitory effect of chelerythrine on costunolide-induced eryptosis, indicating a relationship between costunolide and PKC-α. In addition, chelerythrine acts independently of the GSH depletion. Understanding the mechanisms of G6PDH inhibition accompanied by GSH depletion should be useful for development of anti-malarial therapeutic strategies or for synthetic lethality-based approaches to escalate oxidative stress in cancer cells for their sensitization to chemotherapy and radiotherapy.
Keyphrases
- diabetic rats
- oxidative stress
- high glucose
- fluorescent probe
- endothelial cells
- single cell
- high performance liquid chromatography
- induced apoptosis
- flow cytometry
- cell therapy
- adipose tissue
- squamous cell carcinoma
- radiation therapy
- dna damage
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- mass spectrometry
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- blood pressure
- reactive oxygen species
- binding protein
- insulin resistance
- radiation induced
- solid phase extraction
- dna binding
- blood glucose
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- cerebral ischemia
- heat shock protein