Low dose of wortmannin reduces radiosensitivity of human glioblastoma cells through the p53 pathway.

Oncol Rep

Department of Radiation Biophysics, Radiation Effect Research Unit, Atomic Bomb Disease Institute, Nagasaki University School of Medicine, Sakamoto, Nagasaki 852-8523, Japan.

Published: January 2003

Wortmannin is an inhibitor of PI3-kinase and acts on cultured cells at dosages below 1 microM. Wortmannin also inhibits the gene products of the PI3-kinase family such as ATM or DNA-PK at dosages above 10 microM in cultured cells. There are many reports on the enhancement of radiosensitivity by a high dose of wortmannin inhibiting the proteins of the PI3-kinase family. However, there have been no reports on the effect on radiosensitivity of low doses of wortmannin inhibiting PI3-kinase. We found that low doses of wortmannin reduced the radiosensitivity of human A172 glioblastoma cells. This effect was shown only in wild-type p53 cells, but was not shown in mutant p53 cells such as T98G or A172/248W carrying a dominant point-mutated p53 gene. This result indicates that the PI3-kinase, or another wortmannin-sensitive enzyme, may affect the signal transduction of p53. We examined the response of the p53 pathway by X-ray irradiation. A low dose of wortmannin did not affect the accumulation of p53 and the phosphorylation of p53 at ser-15, but reduced the induction of WAF1 and enhanced the induction of GADD45.

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