TNF-α is involved in activating DNA fragmentation in skeletal muscle

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Abstract

Intraperitoneal administration of 100 μg kg-1 (body weight) of tumour necrosis factor-α to rats for 8 consecutive days resulted in a significant decrease in protein content, which was concomitant with a reduction in DNA content. Interestingly, the protein/DNA ratio was unchanged in the skeletal muscle of the tumour necrosis factor-α-treated animals as compared with the non-treated controls. Analysis of muscle DNA fragmentation clearly showed enhanced laddering in the skeletal muscle of tumour necrosis factor-α-treated animals, suggesting an apoptotic phenomenon. In a different set of experiments, mice bearing a cachexia-inducing tumour (the Lewis lung carcinoma) showed an increase in muscle DNA fragmentation (9.8-fold) as compared with their non-tumour-bearing control counterparts as previously described. When gene-deficient mice for tumour necrosis factor-α receptor protein I were inoculated with Lewis lung carcinoma, they were also affected by DNA fragmentation; however the increase was only 2.1-fold. These results suggest that tumour necrosis factor-α partly mediates DNA fragmentation during experimental cancer-associated cachexia. © 2002 Cancer Research UK.

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APA

Carbó, N., Busquets, S., Van Royen, M., Alvarez, B., López-Soriano, F. J., & Argilés, J. M. (2002). TNF-α is involved in activating DNA fragmentation in skeletal muscle. British Journal of Cancer, 86(6), 1012–1016. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjc.6600167

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