Cargando…

Novel Photosensitizers Trigger Rapid Death of Malignant Human Cells and Rodent Tumor Transplants via Lipid Photodamage and Membrane Permeabilization

BACKGROUND: Apoptotic cascades may frequently be impaired in tumor cells; therefore, the approaches to circumvent these obstacles emerge as important therapeutic modalities. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Our novel derivatives of chlorin e(6), that is, its amide (compound 2) and boronated amide (co...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Moisenovich, Mikhail M., Ol'shevskaya, Valentina A., Rokitskaya, Tatyana I., Ramonova, Alla A., Nikitina, Roza G., Savchenko, Arina N., Tatarskiy, Victor V., Kaplan, Mikhail A., Kalinin, Valery N., Kotova, Elena A., Uvarov, Oleg V., Agapov, Igor I., Antonenko, Yuri N., Shtil, Alexander A.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2939899/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20856679
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0012717
_version_ 1782186784681099264
author Moisenovich, Mikhail M.
Ol'shevskaya, Valentina A.
Rokitskaya, Tatyana I.
Ramonova, Alla A.
Nikitina, Roza G.
Savchenko, Arina N.
Tatarskiy, Victor V.
Kaplan, Mikhail A.
Kalinin, Valery N.
Kotova, Elena A.
Uvarov, Oleg V.
Agapov, Igor I.
Antonenko, Yuri N.
Shtil, Alexander A.
author_facet Moisenovich, Mikhail M.
Ol'shevskaya, Valentina A.
Rokitskaya, Tatyana I.
Ramonova, Alla A.
Nikitina, Roza G.
Savchenko, Arina N.
Tatarskiy, Victor V.
Kaplan, Mikhail A.
Kalinin, Valery N.
Kotova, Elena A.
Uvarov, Oleg V.
Agapov, Igor I.
Antonenko, Yuri N.
Shtil, Alexander A.
author_sort Moisenovich, Mikhail M.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Apoptotic cascades may frequently be impaired in tumor cells; therefore, the approaches to circumvent these obstacles emerge as important therapeutic modalities. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Our novel derivatives of chlorin e(6), that is, its amide (compound 2) and boronated amide (compound 5) evoked no dark toxicity and demonstrated a significantly higher photosensitizing efficacy than chlorin e(6) against transplanted aggressive tumors such as B16 melanoma and M-1 sarcoma. Compound 5 showed superior therapeutic potency. Illumination with red light of mammalian tumor cells loaded with 0.1 µM of 5 caused rapid (within the initial minutes) necrosis as determined by propidium iodide staining. The laser confocal microscopy-assisted analysis of cell death revealed the following order of events: prior to illumination, 5 accumulated in Golgi cysternae, endoplasmic reticulum and in some (but not all) lysosomes. In response to light, the reactive oxygen species burst was concomitant with the drop of mitochondrial transmembrane electric potential, the dramatic changes of mitochondrial shape and the loss of integrity of mitochondria and lysosomes. Within 3–4 min post illumination, the plasma membrane became permeable for propidium iodide. Compounds 2 and 5 were one order of magnitude more potent than chlorin e(6) in photodamage of artificial liposomes monitored in a dye release assay. The latter effect depended on the content of non-saturated lipids; in liposomes consisting of saturated lipids no photodamage was detectable. The increased therapeutic efficacy of 5 compared with 2 was attributed to a striking difference in the ability of these photosensitizers to permeate through hydrophobic membrane interior as evidenced by measurements of voltage jump-induced relaxation of transmembrane current on planar lipid bilayers. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The multimembrane photodestruction and cell necrosis induced by photoactivation of 2 and 5 are directly associated with membrane permeabilization caused by lipid photodamage.
format Text
id pubmed-2939899
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2010
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-29398992010-09-20 Novel Photosensitizers Trigger Rapid Death of Malignant Human Cells and Rodent Tumor Transplants via Lipid Photodamage and Membrane Permeabilization Moisenovich, Mikhail M. Ol'shevskaya, Valentina A. Rokitskaya, Tatyana I. Ramonova, Alla A. Nikitina, Roza G. Savchenko, Arina N. Tatarskiy, Victor V. Kaplan, Mikhail A. Kalinin, Valery N. Kotova, Elena A. Uvarov, Oleg V. Agapov, Igor I. Antonenko, Yuri N. Shtil, Alexander A. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Apoptotic cascades may frequently be impaired in tumor cells; therefore, the approaches to circumvent these obstacles emerge as important therapeutic modalities. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Our novel derivatives of chlorin e(6), that is, its amide (compound 2) and boronated amide (compound 5) evoked no dark toxicity and demonstrated a significantly higher photosensitizing efficacy than chlorin e(6) against transplanted aggressive tumors such as B16 melanoma and M-1 sarcoma. Compound 5 showed superior therapeutic potency. Illumination with red light of mammalian tumor cells loaded with 0.1 µM of 5 caused rapid (within the initial minutes) necrosis as determined by propidium iodide staining. The laser confocal microscopy-assisted analysis of cell death revealed the following order of events: prior to illumination, 5 accumulated in Golgi cysternae, endoplasmic reticulum and in some (but not all) lysosomes. In response to light, the reactive oxygen species burst was concomitant with the drop of mitochondrial transmembrane electric potential, the dramatic changes of mitochondrial shape and the loss of integrity of mitochondria and lysosomes. Within 3–4 min post illumination, the plasma membrane became permeable for propidium iodide. Compounds 2 and 5 were one order of magnitude more potent than chlorin e(6) in photodamage of artificial liposomes monitored in a dye release assay. The latter effect depended on the content of non-saturated lipids; in liposomes consisting of saturated lipids no photodamage was detectable. The increased therapeutic efficacy of 5 compared with 2 was attributed to a striking difference in the ability of these photosensitizers to permeate through hydrophobic membrane interior as evidenced by measurements of voltage jump-induced relaxation of transmembrane current on planar lipid bilayers. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The multimembrane photodestruction and cell necrosis induced by photoactivation of 2 and 5 are directly associated with membrane permeabilization caused by lipid photodamage. Public Library of Science 2010-09-15 /pmc/articles/PMC2939899/ /pubmed/20856679 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0012717 Text en Moisenovich et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Moisenovich, Mikhail M.
Ol'shevskaya, Valentina A.
Rokitskaya, Tatyana I.
Ramonova, Alla A.
Nikitina, Roza G.
Savchenko, Arina N.
Tatarskiy, Victor V.
Kaplan, Mikhail A.
Kalinin, Valery N.
Kotova, Elena A.
Uvarov, Oleg V.
Agapov, Igor I.
Antonenko, Yuri N.
Shtil, Alexander A.
Novel Photosensitizers Trigger Rapid Death of Malignant Human Cells and Rodent Tumor Transplants via Lipid Photodamage and Membrane Permeabilization
title Novel Photosensitizers Trigger Rapid Death of Malignant Human Cells and Rodent Tumor Transplants via Lipid Photodamage and Membrane Permeabilization
title_full Novel Photosensitizers Trigger Rapid Death of Malignant Human Cells and Rodent Tumor Transplants via Lipid Photodamage and Membrane Permeabilization
title_fullStr Novel Photosensitizers Trigger Rapid Death of Malignant Human Cells and Rodent Tumor Transplants via Lipid Photodamage and Membrane Permeabilization
title_full_unstemmed Novel Photosensitizers Trigger Rapid Death of Malignant Human Cells and Rodent Tumor Transplants via Lipid Photodamage and Membrane Permeabilization
title_short Novel Photosensitizers Trigger Rapid Death of Malignant Human Cells and Rodent Tumor Transplants via Lipid Photodamage and Membrane Permeabilization
title_sort novel photosensitizers trigger rapid death of malignant human cells and rodent tumor transplants via lipid photodamage and membrane permeabilization
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2939899/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20856679
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0012717
work_keys_str_mv AT moisenovichmikhailm novelphotosensitizerstriggerrapiddeathofmalignanthumancellsandrodenttumortransplantsvialipidphotodamageandmembranepermeabilization
AT olshevskayavalentinaa novelphotosensitizerstriggerrapiddeathofmalignanthumancellsandrodenttumortransplantsvialipidphotodamageandmembranepermeabilization
AT rokitskayatatyanai novelphotosensitizerstriggerrapiddeathofmalignanthumancellsandrodenttumortransplantsvialipidphotodamageandmembranepermeabilization
AT ramonovaallaa novelphotosensitizerstriggerrapiddeathofmalignanthumancellsandrodenttumortransplantsvialipidphotodamageandmembranepermeabilization
AT nikitinarozag novelphotosensitizerstriggerrapiddeathofmalignanthumancellsandrodenttumortransplantsvialipidphotodamageandmembranepermeabilization
AT savchenkoarinan novelphotosensitizerstriggerrapiddeathofmalignanthumancellsandrodenttumortransplantsvialipidphotodamageandmembranepermeabilization
AT tatarskiyvictorv novelphotosensitizerstriggerrapiddeathofmalignanthumancellsandrodenttumortransplantsvialipidphotodamageandmembranepermeabilization
AT kaplanmikhaila novelphotosensitizerstriggerrapiddeathofmalignanthumancellsandrodenttumortransplantsvialipidphotodamageandmembranepermeabilization
AT kalininvaleryn novelphotosensitizerstriggerrapiddeathofmalignanthumancellsandrodenttumortransplantsvialipidphotodamageandmembranepermeabilization
AT kotovaelenaa novelphotosensitizerstriggerrapiddeathofmalignanthumancellsandrodenttumortransplantsvialipidphotodamageandmembranepermeabilization
AT uvarovolegv novelphotosensitizerstriggerrapiddeathofmalignanthumancellsandrodenttumortransplantsvialipidphotodamageandmembranepermeabilization
AT agapovigori novelphotosensitizerstriggerrapiddeathofmalignanthumancellsandrodenttumortransplantsvialipidphotodamageandmembranepermeabilization
AT antonenkoyurin novelphotosensitizerstriggerrapiddeathofmalignanthumancellsandrodenttumortransplantsvialipidphotodamageandmembranepermeabilization
AT shtilalexandera novelphotosensitizerstriggerrapiddeathofmalignanthumancellsandrodenttumortransplantsvialipidphotodamageandmembranepermeabilization