Recent studies with thymocytes have suggested a critical role for intracellular potassium in the regulation of apoptosis. In this study, we examined the pathways of K regulation during ovarian cell death. In initial studies, fluorographic analysis demonstrated a significant loss of K during apoptosis stimulated by doxorubicin in oocytes and trophic hormone deprivation in granulosa cells. In oocytes, suppression of potassium efflux by potassium-enriched medium prevented condensation, budding, and fragmentation, although it did not block DNA degradation, suggesting the existence of potassium-independent nucleases in oocytes. Culture of granulosa cells in potassium-enriched medium inhibited internucleosomal DNA cleavage, although high-molecular weight DNA cleavage was apparent, suggesting that the nuclease or nucleases responsible for generating 50-kilobase (kb) fragments in these cells is potassium independent. To address this directly, isolated granulosa cell nuclei were stimulated to autodigest their DNA, and internucleosomal, but not large-fragment, cleavage was completely blocked by 150 mM potassium. We next examined whether the proapoptotic caspases are targets for potassium regulation. In cell-free assays, processing of pro-interleukin-1β and proteolysis of cellular actin by recombinant caspase-1 and caspase-3, respectively, were suppressed by the presence of 150 mM potassium. Other monovalent ions (NaCl, LiCl) exerted a similar effect in these cell-free assays. Thus, in oocytes and granulosa cells, potassium efflux appears to occur early in the cell death program and may regulate a number of apoptotic events including caspase activity and internucleosomal DNA cleavage. However, there also exist novel potassium-independent pathways in both ovarian germ cells and somatic cells that signal certain apoptotic events, such as large-fragment DNA cleavage.
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1 November 2000
Identification of Potassium-Dependent and -Independent Components of the Apoptotic Machinery in Mouse Ovarian Germ Cells and Granulosa Cells
Gloria I. Perez,
Daniel V. Maravei,
Alexander M. Trbovich,
John A. Cidlowski,
Jonathan L. Tilly,
Francis M. Hughes, Jr
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