402 research outputs found

    Altered Proliferation, Synthetic Activity, and Differentiation of Cultured Human sebocytes in the Absence of Vitamin A and Their Modulation by Synthetic Retinoids

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    Human sebocytes maintained in medium containing delipidized serum were studied for ultrastructural characteristics, cell proliferation, lipid synthesis, immunophenotype, and keratin expression before and after the addition of the synthetic retinoids isotretinoin and acitretin (10-8 - 10-5 M).Compared to the properties of sebocytes cultured in normal sebocyte medium (1–2 × 10-7 M vitamin A), the use of delipidized serum (undetectable amounts of vitamin A) resulted in prominent decrease of i) proliferation; ii) number of intracellular lipid droplets and synthesis of total lipids, especially triglycerides, squalene, and wax esters; and iii) labeling with monoclonal antibodies identifying progressive and late-stage sebocyte differentiation. Intercellular spaces narrowed and cell-to-cell contacts were established by abundant desmosomes. Lanosterol was induced. Keratins 14, 16, 17, and 18 were upregulated and the keratin 16: keratin 4 ratio, negatively correlating with sebocyte differentiation, increased.Addition of isotretinoin and acitretin exerted a biphasic effect. At concentrations ≤ 10-7 M, both compounds enhanced sebocyte proliferation and synthesis of total lipids, especially triglycerides and cholesterol, and decreased Ianosterol, keratin 16, and the keratin 16: keratin 4 ratio. In contrast, retinoid concentrations > 10-7 M inhibited sebocyte proliferation in a dose-dependent manner.Our findings indicate that vitamin A is essential for proliferation, synthetic activity, and differentiation of human sebocytes in vitro. Synthetic retinoids partially reinstate the altered functions of sebocytes maintained in medium containing delipidized serum. In contrast to the previously shown isotretinoin-specific response of cultured sebocytes in the presence of vitamin A, similar effects of isotretinoin and acitretin were obtained in its absence. This suggests different interactions of synthetic retinoids with vitamin A, possibly influencing their efficacy on the sebacceous gland

    Selective Induction of Apoptosis in Melanoma Cells by Tyrosinase Promoter-Controlled CD95 Ligand Overexpression

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    Induction of apoptosis has been demonstrated previously by overexpression of CD95 ligand (CD95L) in cultured human melanoma cells. For in vivo approaches based on CD95L, however, targeted expression is a prerequisite and tyrosinase promoters have been considered for selection. Luciferase reporter gene assays performed for a representative panel of melanoma cell lines characterized by strong (SK-Mel-19), moderate (SK-Mel-13, MeWo), weak (A-375), and missing expression (M-5) of endogenous tyrosinase revealed high tyrosinase promoter activities in SK-Mel-19, SK-Mel-13, and MeWo, but only weak activities in A-375 and M-5 as well as in non-melanoma cell lines. After transfection of a CMV promoter CD95L expression construct, melanoma cells were found highly sensitive, as compared with non-melanoma cells. By applying a tyrosinase promoter CD95L construct, apoptosis was selectively induced in SK-Mel-19, SK-Mel-13, MeWo as well as in A-375, which was characterized by high CD95 surface expression and high sensitivity to agonistic CD95 activation. M5 and non-melanoma cell lines remained uninfluenced. Also, resistance to agonistic CD95 activation seen in MeWo characterized by weak CD95 surface expression was overcome by overexpression of CD95L. Our investigations provide evidence that tyrosinase promoter CD95L constructs may be of value for selective induction of apoptosis in therapeutic strategies for melanoma

    The Bax/Bcl-2 Ratio Determines the Susceptibility of Human Melanoma Cells to CD95/Fas-Mediated Apoptosis

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    Defective cytochrome c release and the resulting loss of caspase-3 activation was recently shown to be essential for the susceptibility of human melanoma cells to CD95/Fas-induced apoptosis. Cytochrome c release from mitochondria is regulated by the relative amounts of apoptosis-promoting and apoptosis-inhibiting Bcl-2 proteins in the outer membrane of these organelles. The assignment of Bax/Bcl-2 ratios by quantitative Western blotting in 11 melanoma cell populations revealed a relation to the susceptibility to CD95-mediated apoptosis. We could show that a low Bax/Bcl-2 ratio was characteristic for resistant cells and a high Bax/Bcl-2 ratio was characteristic for sensitive cells. Low Bax expression was not a consequence of mutations in the p53 coding sequence. The Bax/Bcl-2 ratio was also in clear correlation with sensitivity to another cell death inducer, N-acetylsphingosine. Furthermore, Bcl-2 overexpression abolished apoptosis triggered by both apoptotic stimuli, confirming the critical role of the Bax/Bcl-2 ratio as a rheostat that determines the susceptibility to apoptosis in melanoma cells by regulating mitochondrial function. Interestingly, some chemotherapeutics lead to the activation of death pathways by CD95L upregulation, ceramide generation, direct activation of upstream caspases, or upregulation of proapoptotic genes. Taken together, these signals enter the apoptotic pathway upstream of mitochondria, resulting in activation of this central checkpoint. We therefore assumed that apoptosis deficiency of malignant melanoma can be circumvented by drugs directly influencing mitochondrial functions. For this purpose we used betulinic acid, a cytotoxic agent selective for melanoma, straightly perturbing mitochondrial functions. In fact, betulinic acid induced mitochondrial cytochrome c release and DNA fragmentation in both CD95-resistant and CD95-sensitive melanoma cell populations, independent of the Bax/Bcl-2 ratio

    Bcl-2 antagonizes apoptotic cell death induced by two new ceramide analogues

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    AbstractCeramides which arise in part from the breakdown of sphingomyelin comprise a class of antiproliferative lipids and have been implicated in the regulation of programmed cell death better known as apoptosis. In the present study, two new synthetic ceramide analogues, N-thioacetylsphingosine and FS-5, were used in Molt4 cells to induce cell death. Besides their cytotoxic effects at concentrations ≥14 μM the data obtained clearly show that both analogues induced apoptosis at concentrations below this critical concentration as assessed by trypan blue exclusion and cleavage of the death substrate poly-(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP). Additional experiments in bcl-2-transfected Molt4 cells revealed that the apoptotic but not the lytic effects of the analogues were antagonized by the apoptosis inhibitor Bcl-2. Furthermore, neither N-thio-acetylsphingosine nor FS-5 induced PARP cleavage in bcl-2-transfected Molt4 cells indicating that the induction of apoptotic cell death by cell permeable ceramides is not due to unspecific disturbance of the cell membrane

    Multiple ionization of argon via multi-XUV-photon absorption induced by 20-GW high-order harmonic laser pulses

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    We report the observation of multiple ionization of argon through multi-XUV-photon absorption induced by an unprecedentedly powerful laser driven high-order harmonic generation source. Comparing the measured intensity dependence of the yield of the different argon charge states with numerical calculations we can infer the different channels—direct and sequential—underlying the interaction. While such studies were feasible so far only with free electron laser (FEL) sources, this paper connects highly nonlinear XUV processes with the ultrashort time scales inherent to the harmonic pulses and highlights the advanced perspectives of emerging large scale laser research infrastructures
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