Walker M W, Kinter M T, Roberts R J, Spitz D R
University of Virginia Health Sciences Center, Department of Pediatrics, Charlottesville 22908.
Pediatr Res. 1995 Jan;37(1):41-9. doi: 10.1203/00006450-199501000-00010.
A series of experiments were designed to examine the potential cytotoxicity of nitric oxide (NO), or reactive species derived from NO, in HA1 fibroblasts and H2O2-resistant variants of this cell line, designated OC14 cells. A 1-h exposure at 37 degrees C to a 1.7 mM bolus dose of NO, prepared in N2-gassed medium, significantly reduced clonogenic survival in the HA1 fibroblasts line to 60% of control cells treated with N2-gassed medium alone. The OC14 cells were found to be completely resistant (100% survival) to NO-mediated injury in comparable experiments. A second set of experiments was designed to determine the role of the intracellular antioxidant, glutathione, in protection against NO-mediated injury. Depletion of total glutathione resulted in a significant reduction in HA1 and OC14 clonogenic survival to 8% and 50% when compared with respective control cells. The effect of total glutathione depletion on NO-initiated toxicity in HA1 cells was dose- and cell-density dependent and was observed to occur within 5 min of exposure to NO. Further evidence of cytotoxicity was demonstrated by loss of trypan blue dye exclusion properties in glutathione-depleted HA1 cells after NO exposure. Other experiments demonstrated that nitrate and nitrite exposure produced no cytotoxicity in glutathione-depleted HA1 cells and that coincubation of NO-saturated medium with oxyhemoglobin inhibited NO-induced cytotoxicity in glutathione-depleted HA1 cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)