
Sunitinib-sensitive Suicidal Erythrocyte Death
Author(s) -
Nazneen Shaik,
Adrian Lupescu,
Florian Läng
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
cellular physiology and biochemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.486
H-Index - 87
eISSN - 1421-9778
pISSN - 1015-8987
DOI - 10.1159/000341434
Subject(s) - ceramide , sunitinib , phosphatidylserine , apoptosis , annexin , programmed cell death , cytosol , microbiology and biotechnology , chemistry , mitochondrion , biology , biochemistry , medicine , enzyme , phospholipid , membrane , renal cell carcinoma
Sunitinib, a multikinase inhibitor, stimulates apoptosis and is thus utilized for the treatment of malignancy. Even though lacking mitochondria and nuclei, critical elements in apoptosis of nucleated cells, erythrocytes may undergo eryptosis, an apoptosis-like suicidal death, characterized by cell shrinkage and cell membrane scrambling with phosphatidylserine-exposure at the cell surface. Triggers of eryptosis include activation of Ca(2+) permeable cation channels with subsequent increase of cytosolic Ca(2+)-activity ([Ca(2+)](i)), ceramide formation, ATP-depletion, stimulation of p38 kinase and caspase activation. The present study explored, whether sunitinib stimulates eryptosis. [Ca(2+)](i )was estimated from Fluo-3-fluorescence, cell volume from forward scatter, phosphatidylserine-exposure from annexin-V-binding, hemolysis from hemoglobin release, ceramide abundance from anti-ceramide antibody binding, and cytosolic ATP from luciferin-luciferase activity. A 48 h exposure to sunitinib (10 µM) significantly decreased forward scatter and increased annexin-V-binding, effects paralleled by significant increase of [Ca(2+)](i). Sunitinib exposure was followed by a slight but significant increase of hemolysis. Sunitinib induced annexin-V-binding was slightly, but significantly blunted by removal of extracellular Ca(2+), by p38 kinase inhibitor SB203580 (10 µM) and by the pancaspase inhibitor zVAD (10 µM). Sunitinib, however, did not significantly modify cytosolic ATP and ceramide abundance. The present observations reveal that sunitinib is able to trigger suicidal death in erythrocytes even in the absence of nuclei and mitochondria.