Yasutake H, Tsuchiya H, Tomita K, Matsunaga T, Nikaido O, Mori T
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, School of Medicine, Kanazawa University, Japan.
Anticancer Res. 1995 May-Jun;15(3):831-7.
Human osteosarcoma cells, that were cultured to confluence and maintained under low nutrient conditions, showed potentially lethal damage repair after cisplatin treatment. This repair was inhibited by a non-toxic dose of caffeine. Flow cytometric analysis indicated that cisplatin-treated cells accumulated in the S phase by 24 hr, followed by accumulation in the G2/M phase. Caffeine inhibited the initial accumulation in the S phase and the release of cells from the G2/M block. DNA synthesis was also inhibited by the cisplatin treatment. The addition of caffeine significantly reversed this inhibition. The content of DNA-bound platinum decreased over time after cisplatin treatment. Caffeine did not influence platinum content, nor did it directly affect the DNA excision repair. Cisplatin inhibits DNA synthesis in the S phase, but caffeine reduces this inhibition. Caffeine-treated cells that pass through S phase are incapable of recovery.