학술논문

Increased cystine uptake capability associated with malignant progression of Nb2 lymphoma cells
Document Type
Original Paper
Source
Leukemia. 11(8):1329-1337
Subject
T cell lymphoma
tumor progression
2-mercaptoethanol
xc- cystine-glutamate transport
Language
English
ISSN
0887-6924
1476-5551
Abstract
Analysis of rat, pre-T cell ‘Nb2 lymphoma’ sublines, manifesting different degrees of malignant progression, can indicate phenotypic changes potentially useful as therapeutic targets. In this study, the prolactin (cytokine)-dependent Nb2-11 and autonomous Nb2-SFJCD1 sublines were compared for in vitro thiol growth requirements. Whereas Nb2-11 culture growth depended on 2-mercaptoethanol (2-ME; 33–100 μ M), Nb2-SFJCD1 cells were 2-ME-independent. This difference stemmed from differential uptake of exogenous L-cystine, critically required for proliferation. Uptake of 35S-L-cystine (10 μ Ci/ml; 40 μ M) showed Nb2-11 cells had low cystine uptake capability; 2-ME enhanced cystine uptake to growth-sustaining levels. Nb2-SFJCD1 cells did not require 2-ME due to intrinsic, 11-fold higher cystine uptake via the xc- cystine/glutamate transport system. In absence of 2-ME, monosodium glutamate abrogated Nb2-SFJCD1 proliferation by specifically inhibiting cystine uptake (85% at 10 m M). Elevated glutathione (GSH) levels were not essential for growth of either line as shown with L -buthionine-(S,R)-sulfoximine (0.1–4 m M) treatment. The cyst(e)ine requirement therefore did not primarily involve maintenance of normal GSH levels, reported critical for T lymphocyte replication. These and other results suggest increased cystine uptake capability constitutes another potential step in progression of T cell cancers which is not coupled to cytokine autonomy or metastatic ability development. The xc- transport system apparently provides a novel target for T cell cancer therapy. Its inhibition would suppress cystine uptake by certain progressed cells, and also interfere with cystine uptake, and subsequent cysteine release, by eg macrophages, thought to have a role in cysteine delivery to lymphoid cells.