The anti-cancer drug doxorubicin induces substantial epigenetic changes in cultured cardiomyocytes.


Journal

Chemico-biological interactions
ISSN: 1872-7786
Titre abrégé: Chem Biol Interact
Pays: Ireland
ID NLM: 0227276

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
01 Nov 2019
Historique:
received: 02 07 2019
revised: 17 09 2019
accepted: 20 09 2019
pubmed: 24 9 2019
medline: 23 10 2019
entrez: 24 9 2019
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

The anthracycline doxorubicin (DOX) is widely used in cancer therapy with the limitation of cardiotoxicity leading to the development of congestive heart failure. DOX-induced oxidative stress and changes of the phosphoproteome as well as epigenome were described but the exact mechanisms of the adverse long-term effects are still elusive. Here, we tested the impact of DOX treatment on cell death, oxidative stress parameters and expression profiles of proteins involved in epigenetic pathways in a cardiomyocyte cell culture model. Markers of oxidative stress, apoptosis and expression of proteins involved in epigenetic processes were assessed by immunoblotting in cultured rat myoblasts (H9c2) upon treatment with DOX (1 or 5 μM for 24 or 48 h) in adherent viable and detached apoptotic cells. The apoptosis markers cleaved caspase-3 and fractin as well as oxidative stress markers 3-nitrotyrosine and malondialdehyde were dose-dependently increased by DOX treatment. Histone deacetylases (SIRT1 and HDAC2), histone lysine demethylases (KDM3A and LSD1) and histone lysine methyltransferases (SET7 and SMYD1) were significantly regulated by DOX treatment with generation of cleaved protein fragments and posttranslational modifications. Overall, we found significant decrease in histone 3 acetylation in DOX-treated cells. DOX treatment of cultured cardiomyocyte precursor cells causes severe cell death by apoptosis associated with cellular oxidative stress. In addition, significant regulation of proteins involved in epigenetic processes and changes in global histone 3 acetylation were observed. However, the significance and clinical impact of these changes remain elusive.

Identifiants

pubmed: 31545955
pii: S0009-2797(19)31136-6
doi: 10.1016/j.cbi.2019.108834
pii:
doi:

Substances chimiques

Antibiotics, Antineoplastic 0
Biomarkers 0
Histones 0
Doxorubicin 80168379AG
Hydrogen Peroxide BBX060AN9V
Histone Demethylases EC 1.14.11.-
KDM1A protein, rat EC 1.14.11.-
Histone Deacetylases EC 3.5.1.98
histone demethylase KDM3a, rat EC 3.5.1.98

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

108834

Informations de copyright

Copyright © 2019 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Auteurs

Alina Hanf (A)

Center for Cardiology, Department of Cardiology - Molecular Cardiology, University Medical Center, 55131, Mainz, Germany.

Matthias Oelze (M)

Center for Cardiology, Department of Cardiology - Molecular Cardiology, University Medical Center, 55131, Mainz, Germany.

Adrian Manea (A)

Institute of Cellular Biology and Pathology "Nicolae Simionescu" of the Romanian Academy, 8, B.P. Hasdeu Street, 050568, Bucharest, Romania.

Huige Li (H)

Department of Pharmacology, Johannes Gutenberg University Medical Center, 55131, Mainz, Germany.

Thomas Münzel (T)

Center for Cardiology, Department of Cardiology - Molecular Cardiology, University Medical Center, 55131, Mainz, Germany; Partner Site Rhine-Main, German Center for Cardiovascular Research (DZHK), Langenbeckstr. 1, 55131, Mainz, Germany.

Andreas Daiber (A)

Center for Cardiology, Department of Cardiology - Molecular Cardiology, University Medical Center, 55131, Mainz, Germany; Partner Site Rhine-Main, German Center for Cardiovascular Research (DZHK), Langenbeckstr. 1, 55131, Mainz, Germany. Electronic address: daiber@uni-mainz.de.

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Classifications MeSH