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Am J Physiol Cell Physiol (May 2, 2007). doi:10.1152/ajpcell.00084.2007
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Submitted on February 25, 2007
Accepted on April 29, 2007

The Antiproliferative Effects of Agmatine Correlate with The Rate of Cellular Proliferation

Masato Isome1, Mark J Lortie1, Yasuko Murakami2, Eva Parisi1, Senya Matsufuji3, and Joseph Satriano1*

1 Dept. of Medicine, Div. of Nephrology, University of California San Diego and VA San Diego Healthcare System, San Diego, California, United States
2 Dept of Genetics & Molecular Biology, Musashino University, School of Pharmacy, Tokyo , Nishi, Japan
3 Dept of Biochemistry II, Jikei Univ School of Medicine, Tokyo , Minato-ku, Japan

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: jsatriano{at}ucsd.edu.

Polyamines are small cationic molecules required for cellular proliferation. Agmatine is a biogenic amine unique in its capacity to arrest proliferation in cell lines by depleting intracellular polyamine levels. We previously demonstrated that agmatine enters mammalian cells via the polyamine transport system. As polyamine transport is positively correlated with the rate of cellular proliferation, the current study examines the antiproliferative effects of agmatine on cells with varying proliferative kinetics. Herein we evaluate agmatine transport, intracellular accumulation and its effects on antizyme expression and cellular proliferation in non-transformed cell lines and their transformed variants. H-ras and Src transformed murine NIH/3T3 cells (Ras/3T3 and Src/3T3, respectively) exposed to exogenous agmatine exhibit increased uptake and intracellular accumulation relative to the parental NIH/3T3 cell line. Similar increases were obtained for human primary foreskin fibroblasts relative to a human fibrosarcoma cell line, HT1080. Agmatine increases expression of antizyme, a protein that inhibits polyamine biosynthesis and transport. Ras/3T3 and Src/3T3 cells demonstrated augmented increases in antizyme protein expression relative to NIH/3T3 in response to agmatine. All transformed cell lines were significantly more sensitive to the antiproliferative effects of agmatine than non-transformed lines. These effects were attenuated in the presence of exogenous polyamines or inhibitors of polyamine transport. In conclusion, the antiproliferative effects of agmatine preferentially target transformed cell lines due to the increased agmatine uptake exhibited by cells with short cycling times.







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