20 research outputs found
Potentiation of cytotoxicity and radiosensitization of (E)-2'-deoxy-2' (fluoromethylene) cytidine by pentoxifylline in vitro.
(E)-28-deoxy-28-(fluoromethylene) cytidine (FMdC), a novel
inhibitor of ribonucleotide-diphosphate reductase, has been
shown to have anti-tumor activity against solid tumors and
sensitize tumor cells to ionizing radiation. Pentoxifylline
(PTX) can potentiate the cell killing induced by DNAdamaging
agents through abrogation of DNA-damagedependent
G2 checkpoint. We investigated the cytotoxic,
radiosensitizing and cell-cycle effects of FMdC and PTX in a
human colon-cancer cell line WiDr. PTX at 0.25–1.0 mM
enhanced the cytotoxicity of FMdC and lowered the IC50 of
FMdC from 79 6 0.1 to 31.2 6 2.1 nM, as determined by MTT
assay. Using clonogenic assay, pre-irradiation exposure of
exponentially growing WiDr cells to 30 nM FMdC for 48 hr or
post-irradiation to 0.5 to 1.0 mM PTX alone resulted in an
increase in radiation-induced cytotoxicity. Moreover, there
was a significant change of the radiosensitization if both drugs
were combined as compared with the effect of either drug
alone. Cell-cycle analysis showed that treatment with nanomolar
FMdC resulted in S-phase accumulation and that such
an S-phase arrest can be abrogated by PTX. Treatment with
FMdC prior to radiation increased post-irradiation-induced
G2 arrest, and such G2 accumulation was also abrogated by
PTX. These results suggest that pharmacological abrogation
of S and G2 checkpoints by PTX may provide an effective
strategy for enhancing the cytotoxic and radiosensitizing
effects of FMdC. Int. J. Cancer 80:155–160, 1999
An antigenic peptide produced by reverse splicing and double asparagine deamidation
A variety of unconventional translational and posttranslational mechanisms contribute to the production of antigenic peptides, thereby increasing the diversity of the peptide repertoire presented by MHC class I molecules. Here, we describe a class I-restricted peptide that combines several posttranslational modifications. It is derived from tyrosinase and recognized by tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes isolated from a melanoma patient. This unusual antigenic peptide is made of two noncontiguous tyrosinase fragments that are spliced together in the reverse order. In addition, it contains two aspartate residues that replace the asparagines encoded in the tyrosinase sequence. We confirmed that this peptide is naturally presented at the surface of melanoma cells, and we showed that its processing sequentially requires translation of tyrosinase into the endoplasmic reticulum and its retrotranslocation into the cytosol, where deglycosylation of the two asparagines by peptide-N-glycanase turns them into aspartates by deamidation. This process is followed by cleavage and splicing of the appropriate fragments by the standard proteasome and additional transport of the resulting peptide into the endoplasmic reticulum through the transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP)