Oxidative DNA damage has been implicated in the aging process and in some of its features such as telomere shortening and replicative senescence. Poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation is involved in many molecular and cellular processes, including DNA damage detection and repair, chromatin modification, transcription, and cell death pathways. We decided to examine the behavior of poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation in centenarians, i.e., those subjects who represent the best example of longevity having reached a very advanced age avoiding the main age-associated diseases. In this study we investigated the relationship between DNA repair capacity and poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase activity in Epstein-Barr virus-immortalized B lymphocyte cell lines from subjects of three different groups of age, including centenarians. Our data show that cells from centenarians have characteristics typical of cells from young people both in their capability of priming the mechanism of repair after H(2)O(2) sublethal oxidative damage and in poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation capacity, while in cells from old subjects these phenomena are delayed or decreased. Moreover, cells from old subjects show a constitutive expression level of both parp 1 and parp 2 genes reduced by a half, together with a reduced presence of modified PARP 1 and other poly(ADP-ribosyl)ated chromatin proteins in comparison to cells from young subjects and centenarians. Our data support the hypothesis that this epigenetic modification is an important regulator of the aging process in humans and it appears to be rather preserved in healthy centenarians, the best example of successful aging.
The recruitment into the cycling state of resting Yoshida AH 130 hepatoma cells was studied with respect to its dependence on respiration in an experimental system wherein the overall energy requirement for this recruitment can be supplied by the glycolytic ATP. The G1-S transition of these cells, unaffected by 2,4-dinitrophenol (DNP) at concentrations which uncouple the respiratory phosphorylation, is impaired either by blocking the electron flow to oxygen by antimycin A or by adding an excess of some oxidizable substrates, chiefly pyruvate and oxalacetate. An experimental analysis, focused on pyruvate activity, showed that the inhibition of cell recruitment into S is not related to the depressing effects of this substrate on aerobic glycolysis of tumor cells, nor is it modified by forcing, in the presence of DNP, pyruvate oxidation through the tricarboxylic acid cycle as well as the overall oxygen consumption. Addition of suitable concentrations of preformed purine bases (mainly adenine), completely removes the block of the G1-S transition produced either by the excess of oxidizable substrates or by antimycin A. These findings indicate the existence of a respiration-linked step in purine metabolism, which restricts the above transition and is equally impaired by blocking the respiratory chain or by saturating it with an excess of reducing equivalents derived from unrelated oxidations. The inhibitory effects of pyruvate and antimycin A can be largely removed by the addition of folate and tetrahydrofolate, suggesting that the respiration-linked restriction point of tumor cell cycling involves the folate metabolism and its connections to purine synthesis.
The capability of PARP activity inhibitors to prevent DNA damage recovery suggested the use of these drugs as chemo- and radio-sensitisers for cancer therapy. Our research, carried out on cultured human M14 melanoma cells, was aimed to examine if PJ-34, a potent PARP activity inhibitor of second generation, was per se able to affect the viability of these cancer cells without any DNA damaging agents. Using time-lapse videomicroscopy, we evidenced that 10 microM PJ-34 treatment induced severe mitotic defects leading to dramatic reduction of cell proliferation and to cell death. PJ-34 cytotoxic effect was further confirmed by analysis of cell viability and clonogenic assay. Absence of canonic apoptosis markers allowed us to exclude this kind of cell death. No single and/or double stranded DNA damage was evidenced. Immunofluorescence analysis showed an aberrant mitotic scenario in several cells and subsequent multinucleation suggesting an atypical way for cells to die: the mitotic catastrophe. The detection of aberrant accumulation of polymerised actin inside the nucleolus was noteworthy. Taken together, our results demonstrate that, targeting PARP activity by PJ-34, cancer cell survival is affected independently of DNA damage repair. Two findings are remarkable: (a) cisplatin concentration can be reduced by three quarters if it is followed by treatment with 10 microM PJ-34 for 24 h to obtain the same cytotoxic effect; (b) effects dependent on PJ-34 treatment are reversible. Our data suggest that, to reduce the harm done to non-tumour cells during chemotherapy with cisplatin, the latter could be coupled with PJ-34 treatment.
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