Bovine seminal ribonuclease is cytotoxic for both malignant and normal telomerase-positive cells

  • Authors:
    • Maria Viola
    • Massimo Libra
    • Daniela Callari
    • Fulvia Sinatra
    • Daniele Spada
    • Davide Noto
    • Giovanni Emmanuele
    • Fabrizio Romano
    • Maurizio Averna
    • Franca Maria Pezzino
    • Franca Stivala
    • Salvatore Travali
  • View Affiliations

  • Published online on: October 1, 2005     https://doi.org/10.3892/ijo.27.4.1071
  • Pages: 1071-1077
Metrics: Total Views: 0 (Spandidos Publications: | PMC Statistics: )
Total PDF Downloads: 0 (Spandidos Publications: | PMC Statistics: )


Abstract

Bovine seminal-ribonuclease (BS-RNase) is a member of the ‘ribonucleases with special biological actions’ family since it possesses specific anti-tumour, anti-spermatogenic and embryotoxic activities and exerts an immunosuppressive effect on T lymphocytes. In previous studies it was demonstrated that BS-RNase induced apoptosis in proliferating, malignant and normal cells and that telomerase activity loss also caused apoptotic death in neoplastic cells. Since an obvious relationship between cell proliferation and telomerase activity exists, the aim of this work was to study if the pro-apoptotic cytotoxic action exerted by BS-RNase on proliferating malignant cells (HT29) and proliferating normal cells (PHA-stimulated lymphocytes) could be linked to a possible BS-RNase effect on telomerase activity. In BS-RNase-treated HT29 cells (Na-butyrate-differentiated or not) and human lymphocytes (proliferating or not), we investigated cell vitality (MTT method) and morphology (SEM), BS-RNase localization (immunofluorescence), telomerase activity (TRAP-ELISA method), hTR mRNA expression (RT-PCR), and hTERT levels (western blot). While no BS-RNase effect was detectable on not proliferating cells, a clear relationship was noticed between the diminished number of vital elements of both proliferating cell populations after treatment (48 h and 72 h for HT29 and PHA-stimulated lymphocytes, respectively) with 50 µg/ml BS-RNase and the decrease of their telomerase activity. At the same time, we found that hTR levels, the RNA subunit of telomerase, in proliferation-inhibited BS-RNase-treated cells were diminished. Moreover, by immunofluorescence technique, we detected BS-RNase in the HT29 cell nucleolus after 3-h treatment. Therefore, as hTR has been recently proven to co-fractionate with nucleoli, we hypothesize that a BS-RNase direct action on the telomerase hTR subunit could be a possible mechanism of action by which BS-RNase exerts its pro-apoptotic effects only on proliferating cells.

Related Articles

Journal Cover

October 2005
Volume 27 Issue 4

Print ISSN: 1019-6439
Online ISSN:1791-2423

Sign up for eToc alerts

Recommend to Library

Copy and paste a formatted citation
x
Spandidos Publications style
Viola M, Libra M, Callari D, Sinatra F, Spada D, Noto D, Emmanuele G, Romano F, Averna M, Pezzino FM, Pezzino FM, et al: Bovine seminal ribonuclease is cytotoxic for both malignant and normal telomerase-positive cells. Int J Oncol 27: 1071-1077, 2005
APA
Viola, M., Libra, M., Callari, D., Sinatra, F., Spada, D., Noto, D. ... Travali, S. (2005). Bovine seminal ribonuclease is cytotoxic for both malignant and normal telomerase-positive cells. International Journal of Oncology, 27, 1071-1077. https://doi.org/10.3892/ijo.27.4.1071
MLA
Viola, M., Libra, M., Callari, D., Sinatra, F., Spada, D., Noto, D., Emmanuele, G., Romano, F., Averna, M., Pezzino, F. M., Stivala, F., Travali, S."Bovine seminal ribonuclease is cytotoxic for both malignant and normal telomerase-positive cells". International Journal of Oncology 27.4 (2005): 1071-1077.
Chicago
Viola, M., Libra, M., Callari, D., Sinatra, F., Spada, D., Noto, D., Emmanuele, G., Romano, F., Averna, M., Pezzino, F. M., Stivala, F., Travali, S."Bovine seminal ribonuclease is cytotoxic for both malignant and normal telomerase-positive cells". International Journal of Oncology 27, no. 4 (2005): 1071-1077. https://doi.org/10.3892/ijo.27.4.1071