Modulation of organotin-induced apoptosis by the water pollutant methyl mercury in a human lymphoblastoid tumor cell line and a marine sponge

  • Batel R
  • Bihari N
  • Rinkevich B
  • et al.
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Abstract

BIOSIS COPYRIGHT: BIOL ABS. Apoptosis is a special form of cell death in which the cells actively participate in the process of dying. We found that the water pollutants tributyltin ( < 1 muM) and methyl mercury (MeHg; at concentrations of > 3 muM) induce apoptosis in human T-lymphoblastoid CEM cells and in tissue of the marine sponge Geodia cydonium. At concentrations of > 5 muM, MeHg causes alkaline-labile sites in DNA of CEM cells. At the lower dose of 0.3 muM, MeHg abolishes the tributyltin-induced apoptosis in both CEM cells and sponge tissue. Incubation of sponge tissue with 3 muM of tributyltin induces not only apoptosis but also an increased expression of heat shock protein-70.

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Batel, R., Bihari, N., Rinkevich, B., Dapper, J., Schäcke, H., Schröder, H., & Müller, W. (1993). Modulation of organotin-induced apoptosis by the water pollutant methyl mercury in a human lymphoblastoid tumor cell line and a marine sponge. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 93, 245–251. https://doi.org/10.3354/meps093245

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