It is well established that cells synchronised at the G1-S phase are highly radiosensitive. In this study, p16-null human glioma cell lines were induced into G1 cell cycle arrest by adenovirus-mediated p16 gene transfer, and examined for radiation-induced cell killing. Clonogenic analysis and trypan blue extraction test showed that the p16 gene transfer enhanced radiation-induced cell killing in p16-null glioma cell lines. TUNEL assays and pulse-field gel electrophoresis confirmed that the radiation-induced cell killing of p16-transfected cells could be caused by a nonapoptotic mechanism. Gimsa staining demonstrated that irradiation alone or Ax-mock infection plus irradiation results in a slight increase in the frequency of cells with abnormal nucleus, compared to unirradiated uninfected or Ax-mock infected cells. However, Ax-hp16 or Ax-hp21 infection alone modestly increased the frequency of cells with abnormal nucleus (especially bi- and multinucleation), and 4-Gy irradiation of Ax-hp16 or Ax-hp21 infected cells substantially enhanced this frequency. These results suggest that there exists some unknown interaction between radiation and p16 in cytoplasm/ membranes, which decreases cytokinesis and promotes abnormal nucleation. Thus, p16 expression prevented radiation-induced apoptosis by promoting abnormal nucleation, thereby leading to another mode of cell death. © 2003 Cancer Research UK.
CITATION STYLE
Hama, S., Matsuura, S., Tauchi, H., Yamasaki, F., Kajiwara, Y., Arita, K., … Kurisu, K. (2003). p16 gene transfer increases cell killing with abnormal nucleation after ionising radiation in glioma cells. British Journal of Cancer, 89(9), 1802–1811. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjc.6601299
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