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  2. Differentiation of PC12 cells induced by N8-acetylspermidine and by N8-acetylspermidine deacetylase inhibition

Differentiation of PC12 cells induced by N8-acetylspermidine and by N8-acetylspermidine deacetylase inhibition

  • Biochem Pharmacol. 2002 Jun 1;63(11):2011-8. doi: 10.1016/s0006-2952(02)00991-7.
Sreenivasu Mudumba 1 Ana Menezes David Fries Jim Blankenship
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Pharmacology, School of Pharmacy, University of the Pacific, Stockton, CA 95211, USA.
Abstract

Spermidine is one of the simple polyamines found in cells of virtually all living organisms. It undergoes a metabolic conversion to N8-acetylspermidine catalyzed by an enzyme in cell nuclei and is converted back to spermidine by a deacetylase in the cytoplasm. In this study, two different mechanisms were used to produce an elevation in the level of N8-acetylspermidine in PC12 cells: inhibition of N8-acetylspermidine deacetylase and direct addition of N8-acetylspermidine to the Cell Culture. The increasing intracellular concentration of N8-acetylspermidine was accompanied by signs of PC12 cell differentiation including increased content of dopamine and morphological changes (neurite outgrowths), suggesting a strong and perhaps causal relationship among these effects. This effect on differentiation appears to be specific for N8-acetylspermidine as the addition of Other polyamines including spermidine and N1-acetylspermidine did not elicit these changes. Nerve growth factor (NGF) and dexamethasone, commonly used inducers of differentiation in PC12 cells, produced differentiation without measurable changes in N8-acetylspermidine levels, suggesting that different (or multiple) mechanisms may be involved in these differentiation processes.

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