Endogenously generated protoporphyrin IX (PpIX) from exogenous ALA can be an effective photosensitizer. PpIX accumulation is inversely dependent on available intracellular iron, which is required for the conversion of PpIX to heme. Iron also is necessary for cell replication. Since iron can be toxic, intracellular iron levels are tightly controlled. Activated and proliferating cells respond to the demand for intracellular iron by upregulating membrane expression of the transferrin receptor (CD71) which is needed for iron uptake. We predicted that activated lymphocytes (CD71+) would preferentially accumulate PpIX because of their lower intracellular iron levels and because of competition for iron between ALA-induced heme production and cellular growth processes. Thus, the CD71+ cells could serve as PDT targets. Stimulation of human peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) with the mitogens, phytohemagglutinin A, concanavalin A and pokeweed prior to incubation with ALA results in PpIX accumulation correlating with level of activation. Activated lymphocytes expressing high levels of surface CD71 transferrin receptors generated more PpIX than those with low CD71 expression. Incubating activated cells in transferrin depleted medium (thereby decreasing the iron availability) further increased PpIX levels. Malignant, CD71+ T lymphocytes from a patient with cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL)/Sezary syndrome also accumulated increased PpIX levels in comparison to normal lymphocytes. PDT of activated lymphocytes and Sezary cells after ALA incubation demonstrated preferential killing compared to normal, unstimulated PBL. These findings suggest a possible mechanism for the selectivity of ALA PDT for activated CD71+ cells. They also indicate a clinical use for ALA-PDT in therapy directed towards the malignant lymphocytes in leukemias and lymphomas, and as animmunomodulatory agent.
Multidrug-resistant cells contain a plasma membrane efflux pump, the multidrug transporter, which actively expels certain hydrophobic drugs from the cytosol to the cell exterior. These drugs are usually positively charged at physiological pH. Because one might predict that this efflux of positively charged molecules might deplete the cytosol of protons, raising the cytosolic pH, we examined the cytosolic pH of multidrug-resistant cells directly using a pH-sensitive dye coupled to a membrane-impermeable molecule. The dye (SNARF), covalently coupled to 10,000 MW dextran, was mechanically microinjected into the cytosol of cultured multidrug-resistant mouse NIH3T3 cells which express the human multidrug transporter. The fluorescence emission of the dye in living cells was measured using epifluorescence microscopy at different wavelengths to provide a measure of the pH of the cytosolic environment. Multidrug-resistant cells had a higher cytosolic pH than drug-sensitive normal parental cells. As the pH of the culture medium was increased, normal cells maintained their cytosolic pH below 7.0, whereas the cytosolic pH of multidrug resistant cells rose. The difference in cytosolic pH between the two cell types was more than 0.2 pH units at an external culture medium pH of 8.2. Treatment with agents that inhibit multidrug transporter-mediated efflux, such as verapamil and vinblastine, essentially eliminated the elevation of cytosolic pH, presumably because they are good substrates for the pump which overwhelm its capacity to pump other materials. These results suggest that the multidrug transporter is indirectly a proton pump, and that cells may contain an endogenous substrate or substrates for this transporter in the absence of added drugs.
The role of beliefs, personality variables, and demographic factors in the sentencing of juvenile offenders was investigated. The subjects (1,030 members of the juvenile justice system) judged hypothetical juvenile perpetrators. Various personality, belief, and demographic variables were found to be related to sentencing severity; these relationships differed based on the type of crime judged. Further, relations among these variables and sentencing behavior indicated three coherent patterns or resonances. A liberal group of individuals, believing in rehabilitation, external causality of crime, a positive prognosis for the perpetrator, and nontraditional views of women, sentenced moderately. Two types of conservative individuals were defined. Both groups were punitive, and believed in internal causality of crime; however, they differed on attitudes toward women, needs for cognition, and beliefs about seriousness and harm. One group sentenced the most severely and the other the most leniently. Implications for the sentencing of juvenile offenders are discussed.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.