Citation

  • Authors: Huang, S. W., Wu, C. Y., Wang, Y. T., Kao, J. K., Lin, C. C., Chang, C. C., Mu, S. W., Chen, Y. Y., Chiu, H. W., Chang, C. H., Liang, S. M., Chen, Y. J., Huang, J. L., Shieh, J. J.
  • Year: 2013
  • Journal: Toxicol Appl Pharmacol 267 113-24
  • Applications: in vitro / DNA / jetPEI
  • Cell type: Human basal carcinoma cells
    Description: Human basal cell carcinoma cell line.
    Known as:
    BCC.

Abstract

Compound C, a well-known inhibitor of the intracellular energy sensor AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK), has been reported to cause apoptotic cell death in myeloma, breast cancer cells and glioma cells. In this study, we have demonstrated that compound C not only induced autophagy in all tested skin cancer cell lines but also caused more apoptosis in p53 wildtype skin cancer cells than in p53-mutant skin cancer cells. Compound C can induce upregulation, phosphorylation and nuclear translocalization of the p53 protein and upregulate expression of p53 target genes in wildtype p53-expressing skin basal cell carcinoma (BCC) cells. The changes of p53 status were dependent on DNA damage which was caused by compound C induced reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation and associated with activated ataxia-telangiectasia mutated (ATM) protein. Using the wildtype p53-expressing BCC cells versus stable p53-knockdown BCC sublines, we present evidence that p53-knockdown cancer cells were much less sensitive to compound C treatment with significant G2/M cell cycle arrest and attenuated the compound C-induced apoptosis but not autophagy. The compound C induced G2/M arrest in p53-knockdown BCC cells was associated with the sustained inactive Tyr15 phosphor-Cdc2 expression. Overall, our results established that compound C-induced apoptosis in skin cancer cells was dependent on the cell's p53 status.

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