Published in Volume
98, Issue 5 (September 1, 1996)
J Clin Invest. 1996;98(5):1165–1173.
doi:10.1172/JCI118900.
Copyright ©
1996, The American Society for
Clinical Investigation.
Research Article
Lonidamine induces apoptosis in drug-resistant cells independently of the p53 gene.
D Del Bufalo, A Biroccio, S Soddu, N Laudonio, C D'Angelo, A Sacchi and G Zupi
Experimental Chemotherapy Laboratory, Regina Elena Cancer Institute, Rome, Italy.
Published September 1, 1996
Lonidamine, a dichlorinated derivative of indazole-3-carboxylic acid, was shown to play a significant role in reversing or overcoming multidrug resistance. Here, we show that exposure to 50 microg/ml of lonidamine induces apoptosis in adriamycin and nitrosourea-resistant cells (MCF-7 ADR(r) human breast cancer cell line, and LB9 glioblastoma multiform cell line), as demonstrated by sub-G1 peaks in DNA content histograms, condensation of nuclear chromatin, and internucleosomal DNA fragmentation. Moreover, we find that apoptosis is preceded by accumulation of the cells in the G0/G1 phase of the cell cycle. Interestingly, lonidamine fails to activate the apoptotic program in the corresponding sensitive parental cell lines (ADR-sensitive MCF-7 WT, and nitrosourea-sensitive LI cells) even after long exposure times. The evaluation of bcl-2 protein expression suggests that this different effect of lonidamine treatment in drug-resistant and -sensitive cell lines might not simply be due to dissimilar expression levels of bcl-2 protein. To determine whether the lonidamine-induced apoptosis is mediated by p53 protein, we used cells lacking endogenous p53 and overexpressing either wild-type p53 or dominant-negative p53 mutant. We find that apoptosis by lonidamine is independent of the p53 gene.