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  • Cadmium activates a program...
    Messner, Barbara; Ploner, Christian; Laufer, Günther; Bernhard, David

    Toxicology letters, 08/2012, Letnik: 212, Številka: 3
    Journal Article

    ► Cadmium causes a necrotic cell death in endothelial cells. ► Cd-induced necrosis is a programmed, BCL-XL-inhibitable process. ► Lysosomal membrane permeabilization and release of DNAse II are central in the execution of cell death. ► DNAse-mediated degradation of nuclear DNA results in “apoptosis mimicry” in several cell death assays. Cadmium is a highly toxic, carcinogenic, and atherogenic element. A central principle in many Cd-induced pathophysiologies is the induction of cell death. In past studies Cd was shown to cause apoptosis, necrosis, programmed necrosis, or autophagy. This study was conducted to precisely define the end stage processes and outcome of Cd-induced cell death in endothelial cells (ECs). We show that Cd leads to acidification and permeabilization of lysosomes, followed by the release of active DNAse II from lysosomes. The absence of nuclear DNA due to DNAse II activity may have lead to misinterpretations of the type of cell death outcome in previous studies. Further, Cd-induced cell death is characterized by a massive release of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), a gold standard marker for the occurrence of plasma membrane rupture i.e. necrosis. Importantly, lentivirus-based over-expression of the anti-apoptotic protein BCL-XL abrogates lysosomal rupture, DNA degradation and LDH release, clearly indicating that Cd induces a programmed form of cell death with a necrotic endpoint.