Zagon Ian S, McLaughlin Patricia J
Department of Neural and Behavioral Sciences, The Pennsylvania State University, College of Medicine, M.S. Hershey Medical Center, 500 University Drive, H109, Hershey, PA 17033, United States.
Neuropeptides. 2005 Oct;39(5):495-505. doi: 10.1016/j.npep.2005.07.001. Epub 2005 Sep 15.
This study was designed to examine the role of opioids on cell differentiation, with an emphasis on the mechanism of opioid growth factor (OGF, [Met5]-enkephalin)-dependent growth inhibition. Three human cancer cell lines (SK-N-SH neuroblastoma and SCC-1 and CAL-27 squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck), along with OGF and the opioid antagonist naltrexone (NTX) at a dosage (10(-6) M) known to repress or increase, respectively, cell replication, were utilized. The effects on differentiation (neurite formation, process lengths, betaIII-tubulin, involucrin) were investigated in cells exposed to OGF or NTX for up to 6 days. In addition, the influence of a variety of other natural and synthetic opioids on differentiation was examined. OGF, NTX, naloxone, [D-Pen2,5]-enkephalin, dynorphin A1-8, beta-endorphin, endomorphin-1 and -2, [D-Ala2, MePhe4, Glycol5]-enkephalin (DAMGO), morphine, and U69,593 at concentrations of 10(-6) M did not alter cell differentiation of any cancer cell line. In NTX-treated SK-N-SH cells, cellular area was increased 23%, and nuclear area was decreased 17%, from control levels; no changes in cell or nuclear area were recorded in OGF-exposed cells. F-actin concentration was increased 40% from control values in SK-N-SH cells subjected to NTX, whereas alpha-tubulin was decreased 53% in OGF-treated cells. These results indicate that the inhibitory or stimulatory actions of OGF and NTX, respectively, on cell growth in tissue culture are not due to alterations in differentiation pathways. However, exposure to OGF and NTX modified some aspects of cell structure, but this was independent of differentiation. The absence of effects on cancer cell differentiation by a variety of other opioids supports the previously reported lack of growth effects of these compounds.
本研究旨在探讨阿片类药物在细胞分化中的作用,重点关注阿片生长因子(OGF,[Met5]-脑啡肽)依赖性生长抑制的机制。使用了三种人类癌细胞系(SK-N-SH神经母细胞瘤以及头颈部的SCC-1和CAL-27鳞状细胞癌),同时使用了OGF和阿片拮抗剂纳曲酮(NTX),其剂量(10(-6) M)已知分别可抑制或增加细胞复制。对暴露于OGF或NTX长达6天的细胞的分化(神经突形成、突起长度、βIII-微管蛋白、内披蛋白)进行了研究。此外,还研究了多种其他天然和合成阿片类药物对分化的影响。浓度为10(-6) M的OGF、NTX、纳洛酮、[D-Pen2,5]-脑啡肽、强啡肽A1-8、β-内啡肽、内吗啡肽-1和-2、[D-Ala2, MePhe4, Glycol5]-脑啡肽(DAMGO)、吗啡和U69,593均未改变任何癌细胞系的细胞分化。在经NTX处理的SK-N-SH细胞中,细胞面积比对照水平增加了23%,核面积减少了17%;在暴露于OGF的细胞中,未记录到细胞或核面积的变化。在经NTX处理的SK-N-SH细胞中,F-肌动蛋白浓度比对照值增加了40%,而在经OGF处理的细胞中,α-微管蛋白减少了53%。这些结果表明,OGF和NTX分别对组织培养中细胞生长的抑制或刺激作用并非由于分化途径的改变。然而,暴露于OGF和NTX会改变细胞结构的某些方面,但这与分化无关。多种其他阿片类药物对癌细胞分化无影响,这支持了先前报道的这些化合物缺乏生长效应。