The pathogenesis of heat-induced cell death is controversial. Categorizing the death occurring after various heat loads as either apoptosis or necrosis might help to elucidate this problem, since it has been shown that these two processes differ in their mode of initiation as well as in their morphological and biochemical features. Log-phase cultures of mastocytoma P-815 x 2.1 were heated at temperatures ranging from 42 to 47 degrees C for 30 min. After 42 degrees C heating a slight increase in apoptosis was observed morphologically. However, after heating at 43, 43.5 and 44 degrees C, there was marked enhancement of apoptosis, and electrophoresis of DNA showed characteristic internucleosomal cleavage. With heating at 45 degrees C both apoptosis and necrosis were enhanced, whereas at 46 and 47 degrees C only necrosis was produced. DNA extracted from the 46 and 47 degrees C cultures showed virtually no degradation, which contrasts with the random DNA breakdown observed in necrosis produced by other types of injury; lysosomal enzymes released during heat-induced necrosis may be inactivated at the higher temperatures. It is suggested that apoptosis following heating may be triggered either by a limited increase in cytosolic calcium levels resulting from mild membrane changes or by DNA damage. Necrosis, on the other hand, is likely to be a consequence of severe membrane disruption.
In this study we examined the possibility that regular or circadian fluctuations occur in the frequency of spontaneous spermatogonial apoptosis. Apoptosis of A2, A3 and A4 type spermatogonia occurring spontaneously in the normal rat testis was studied by light and electron microscopy. Normal and apoptotic A3 spermatogonia were quantified in 36 animals killed at two-hourly intervals over a 24 h period. Three sequential phases of spermatogonial apoptosis were defined and quantified separately: (i) an early phase in which cells showed margination of nuclear chromatin, (ii) an intermediate phase in which phagocytosed apoptotic bodies were partly degraded and (iii) a late phase in which only debris of degraded apoptotic bodies was evident. Groups of spermatogonia linked by intercellular bridges underwent apoptosis synchronously. Normal and apoptotic A3 spermatogonia occurred at a mean frequency of 33.4 and 9.6 per 10 seminiferous tubule profiles respectively; there was a large variation in these frequencies between animals, but no peaks or circadian periodicity were detected. Progressive degradation of apoptotic bodies was evident, the average ratios of intermediate and late bodies to early bodies being 1.5 and 3.5, respectively. Absence of a circadian rhythm in these data does not exclude the possibility that initiation of apoptosis in susceptible spermatogonial clones is synchronous, and that affected clones undergo lag periods of differing duration before expressing morphological apoptosis.
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