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  • Title: Polyamines secreted by cancer cells possibly account for the impairment of the human erythrocyte sodium pump activity.
    Author: Villano PJ, Gallice PM, Nicoara AE, Honore SG, Owczarczak K, Favre RG, Briand CM.
    Journal: Cell Mol Biol (Noisy-le-grand); 2001 Mar; 47(2):305-12. PubMed ID: 11355005.
    Abstract:
    Using an original microcalorimetric method, we previously showed that in erythrocytes from cancer patients, the sodium pump activity was decreased and returned to normal in patient in remission. In addition we suggested that a plasma-borne factor probably secreted by cancer cells accounted for this impairment of the sodium transporter. In the present study we sought to identify this factor as well as its mechanism of action. First we determined the effect of culture media from undifferentiated and differentiated colon cancer cell lines (Caco-2 and HT29-D4) on the sodium pump activity of normal human erythrocytes. The inhibitory powers of culture media from undifferentiated cells were higher than those of differentiated cells (38.6 +/- 3.5% vs 6.9 +/- 4.6%, p<0.05 for Caco-2 and 45.8 +/- 6.2% vs 9.0 +/- 5.0%, <0.05 for HT29-D4). The use of alpha difluoro-methylomithine (2 mM) to inhibit ornithine decarboxylase, the rate-limiting enzyme for polyamine biosynthesis, dramatically reduced the sodium pump inhibition induced by the two undifferentiated cell lines (75% for Caco-2 and 89% for HT29-D4). Polyamines secreted by undifferentiated cells and then taken up by human erythrocytes thus appeared as inhibitors of sodium pump of these red blood cells. Putrescine, spermidine, and spermine (the main polyamines) exerted a similar inhibitory effect (33 +/- 2%). Tested in vitro on Na,KATPase, these polyamines (3 mM) were inhibitors (putrescine = 23 +/- 2%; spermidine= 48 +/- 3%; spermine= 55 +/- 2%) when assay condition for the ATPase reaction was suboptimal (Na+ = 10 mM; K+ = 1 mM). The inhibitory effect appeared to be related to their charge and their aliphatic chain length. The effect of spermidine and spermine on the ionic substrates and ATP-Mg showed that molecules decreased the affinity (Km) of the Na,K-ATPase for Na+ (11.24 +/- 0.49 mM for control vs 23.51 +/- 1.53 mM for spermine and 18.86 +/- 0.98 mM for spermidine), indicating that polyamines exerted their inhibitory effect in a competitive manner.
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