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  • Title: Promotion of photodynamic therapy-induced apoptosis by stress kinases.
    Author: Xue Ly, He J, Oleinick NL.
    Journal: Cell Death Differ; 1999 Sep; 6(9):855-64. PubMed ID: 10510467.
    Abstract:
    Photodynamic therapy (PDT), a cancer treatment that employs a photosensitizer and visible light, induces apoptosis in murine LY-R leukemic lymphoblasts and in CHO cells, but the rate and extent of apoptosis are much greater in LY-R cells. Three MAPK family members, ERK1/ERK2, SAPK/JNK, and p38/HOG, are important intermediates in signal transduction pathways. To ascertain whether activation of one or more MAPKs could mediate PDT-induced apoptosis, Western blot analysis has been performed on the proteins of LY-R and CHO cells at various times following lethal (90 - 99% cell kill) doses of PDT photosensitized by the phthalocyanine Pc 4. The blots were probed with antibodies to each of the proteins as well as antibodies specific for the activated (phosphorylated) forms of each kinase. Of the three MAPK types, only the p46 and p54 SAPK/JNKs were found to be activated by PDT in LY-R cells, with a maximum approximately threefold increase in the content of the phosphorylated forms reached in 30 - 60 min. An even larger relative activation was observed in CHO cells. PDT did not affect ERK and p38/HOG activation in LY-R cells. In the case of CHO cells, however, ERK2 was slightly activated at 5 min post-PDT, then declined, and p38/HOG was strongly activated from 5 to 60 min post-PDT. A specific inhibitor (PD98059) of MEK1, the kinase that activates ERK, had little or no effect on PDT-induced apoptosis in either LY-R or CHO cells. In contrast, a specific inhibitor of p38/HOG (SB202190) blocked PDT-induced apoptosis in LY-R cells with a lesser effect in CHO cells. The results suggest that both the SAPK and p38/HOG cascades can be stimulated by PDT and that the latter participates in both rapid and slow PDT-induced apoptosis. Furthermore, the high level of constitutively active p38/HOG in LY-R cells may poise those cells for rapid activation of apoptosis following PDT.
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