Activation of neutral sphingomyelinase participates in ethanol-induced apoptosis in Hep G2 cells

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Abstract

The mechanism underlying ethanol-induced apoptosis in liver cells is not clear. Sphingomyelin (SM) metabolism is a novel signal transduction pathway that has an impact on apoptosis in many cell types. We investigated whether the SM pathway is involved in ethanol-induced apoptosis in the liver. Hep G2 cells were treated with ethanol followed by assaying apoptosis, sphingomyelinase (SMase) activity, caspase-3 activity, and the changes of SM content in the cells. We found that ethanol dose-dependently increased apoptosis and the effect was accompanied by increases of caspase-3 activity and neutral SMase activity. At concentrations of 80 and 160 mM, ethanol significantly increased caspase-3 activity by 120% and neutral SMase activity by 24%. The activity of acid SMase was only slightly increased without statistical significance. C2-ceramide, the exogenous SM metabolite, mimicked the effects of ethanol on apoptosis and caspase-3 activation. When the SM content was determined 24 h after treatment with ethanol, its level was 15% lower than that of controls. The results indicate that metabolism of SM triggered by neutral SMase participates in ethanol-induced apoptosis in Hep G2 cells and activation of caspase-3 is involved in the apoptotic pathway.

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Liu, J. J., Wang, J. Y., Hertervig, E., Cheng, Y., Nilsson, Å. K. E., & Duan, R. D. (2000). Activation of neutral sphingomyelinase participates in ethanol-induced apoptosis in Hep G2 cells. Alcohol and Alcoholism, 35(6), 569–573. https://doi.org/10.1093/alcalc/35.6.569

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