Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2603490 | Toxicology in Vitro | 2008 | 10 Pages |
When tobacco BY-2 cells were treated with 60 μg/mL MC-RR for 5 d, time-dependent effects of MC-RR on the cells were observed. Morphological changes such as abnormal elongation, evident chromatin condensation and margination, fragmentation of nucleus and formation of apoptotic-like bodies suggest that 60 μg/mL MC-RR induced rapid apoptosis in tobacco BY-2 cells. Moreover, there was a significant and rapid increase of ROS level before the loss of mitochondrial membrane potential (ΔΨm) and the onset of cell apoptosis. Ascorbic acid (AsA), a major primary antioxidant, prevented the increase of ROS generation, blocked the decrease in ΔΨm and subsequent cell apoptosis, indicating a critical role of ROS in serving as an important signaling molecule by causing a reduction of ΔΨm and MC-RR-induced tobacco BY-2 cell apoptosis. In addition, a specific mitochondrial permeability transition pores (PTP) inhibitor, cyclosporin A (CsA), significantly blocked the MC-RR-induced ROS formation, loss of ΔΨm, as well as cell apoptosis when the cells were MC-RR stressed for 3 d, suggesting that PTP is involved in 60 μg/mL MC-RR-induced tobacco cell apoptosis signalling process. Thus, we concluded that the mechanism of MC-RR-induced apoptosis signalling pathways in tobacco BY-2 cells involves not only the excess generation of ROS and oxidative stress, but also the opening of PTP inducing loss of mitochondrial membrane potential.