Induction of 5,6-ring-saturated thymine bases in NIH-3T3 cells by phorbol ester-stimulated macrophages: role of reactive oxygen intermediates.
Ключові слова
Анотація
Because oxygen intermediates secreted by inflammatory leukocytes are postulated to play a role in potentiating carcinogenesis, we investigated the ability of macrophages to induce oxidative DNA damage in eukaryotic cells. Murine macrophages, obtained from sites of inflammation and stimulated with 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-15-acetate, induced the formation of 5,6-ring-saturated thymine bases in the DNA of cocultured NIH-3T3 cells; macrophages or 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-15-acetate alone did not induce such alterations. Reagent H2O2, at concentrations produced by macrophages in the ambient medium (i.e., approximately 10(-5) M), induced saturated thymines in the target cells in a dose-dependent manner. The reaction between reagent H2O2 and cellular DNA was rapid, reaching maximum levels in 30 min, and similar amounts of saturated thymines were induced at 4 degrees or 37 degrees. The 3T3 targets were able to repair the saturated thymines rapidly (i.e., over 70% of the lesion was removed in 2 hr). Catalase completely inhibited macrophage-mediated induction of saturated thymines, although superoxide dismutase enhanced induction. Taken together, the data indicate that macrophages exposed to phorbol diesters can induce a specific, quantifiable lesion in the DNA of bystander eukaryotic cells and that reactive oxygen species from the macrophages participate in producing the lesion.