Lee Hwa-Jeong, Guo Han-Young, Lee Sun-Kyung, Jeon Byung-Hun, Jun Chang-Duk, Lee Suk-Keun, Park Myung-Hee, Kim Eun-Cheol
Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology, College of Dentistry, Wonkwang University, Iksan, Korea.
J Oral Pathol Med. 2005 Aug;34(7):436-43. doi: 10.1111/j.1600-0714.2005.00342.x.
Numerous epidemiological studies have reported that tobacco smoking is a major risk factor for oral cancer, but relatively little is known about the effect of nicotine, a major product of cigarette smoking, on immortalized oral keratinocytes and cancer cells.
We investigated the effects of nicotine on the growth and differentiation of immortalized human oral keratinocytes (IHOK), primary oral cancer cells (HN4), metastatic oral cancer cells (HN12), and human skin keratinocytes (HaCaT), in the monolayer and in the three-dimensional (3D) raft cultures using the MTT assay, Western blotting, and cell cycle analysis.
Nicotine inhibited the proliferation of immortalized and malignant keratinocytes in dose- and time-dependent manners as determined by MTT assay. The 3D organotypic culture showed that nicotine at high concentration (300 microM) inhibits epithelial maturation, surface keratinization, and decreased epithelial thickness. Flow cytometry showed that nicotine inhibited cell cycle progression by inducing G(0)/G(1) arrest of HaCaT, IHOK, HN4, and HN12 cells without causing apoptosis. Nicotine treatment increased p21 expression in immortalized cells (HaCaT, IHOK) and oral cancer cells (HN4, HN12), but decreased pRb and p53 expression in oral cancer cells. Moreover, after high-dose nicotine treatment, the involucrin expression increased markedly in immortalized cells, but not in oral cancer cells.
We demonstrated that nicotine inhibits growth through cell cycle arrest at G(0)/G(1) phase probably by increasing the expression of p21(WAF1/CIP1). Nicotine also affects epithelial differentiation in immortalized and malignant oral keratinocytes. Malignant oral keratinocytes appear to be more resistant to the effects of nicotine on epithelial growth and differentiation as compared to the immortalized cells.
众多流行病学研究报告称,吸烟是口腔癌的主要危险因素,但对于香烟主要成分尼古丁对永生化口腔角质形成细胞和癌细胞的影响却知之甚少。
我们使用MTT法、蛋白质印迹法和细胞周期分析法,研究了尼古丁对单层培养及三维(3D)筏式培养的永生化人口腔角质形成细胞(IHOK)、原发性口腔癌细胞(HN4)、转移性口腔癌细胞(HN12)和人皮肤角质形成细胞(HaCaT)生长和分化的影响。
MTT法测定结果显示,尼古丁以剂量和时间依赖性方式抑制永生化和恶性角质形成细胞的增殖。3D器官型培养表明,高浓度(300微摩尔)尼古丁抑制上皮成熟、表面角质化,并使上皮厚度减小。流式细胞术显示,尼古丁通过诱导HaCaT、IHOK、HN4和HN12细胞的G(0)/G(1)期阻滞来抑制细胞周期进程,且不引起细胞凋亡。尼古丁处理可增加永生化细胞(HaCaT、IHOK)和口腔癌细胞(HN4、HN12)中p21的表达,但降低口腔癌细胞中pRb和p53的表达。此外,高剂量尼古丁处理后,永生化细胞中兜甲蛋白的表达显著增加,而口腔癌细胞中则未增加。
我们证明,尼古丁可能通过增加p21(WAF1/CIP1)的表达,使细胞周期阻滞在G(0)/G(1)期,从而抑制生长。尼古丁还影响永生化和恶性口腔角质形成细胞的上皮分化。与永生化细胞相比,恶性口腔角质形成细胞似乎对尼古丁对上皮生长和分化的影响更具抗性。