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Research Article

Analysis of mechanisms of cell death of T-lymphocytes induced by organotin agents

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Pages 184-193 | Received 09 Feb 2009, Accepted 08 Jun 2009, Published online: 13 Aug 2009
 

Abstract

Organotin compounds are known to cause thymic atrophy and an accompanying deficiency of cell-mediated immunity. The study reported here focused on cell death in the thymus as a contributing factor in the induction of thymic atrophy following exposure to dibutyltin (DBTC) and tributyltin (TBTC). In an in vivo study, a reversible thymic atrophy was induced in rats by a single intraperitoneal administration (2.0 mg/kg) of DBTC or TBTC; the magnitude of this effect over a 4-d post-treatment period differed between the two agents. In in vitro studies, T-lymphocytes were isolated from thymuses of naïve rats and then exposed to 1 μM DBTC or TBTC for varying periods of time. Analysis by flow cytometry showed that DBTC induced primarily necrosis, while TBTC induced apoptosis, of the cells. Activities of caspase-8, -9, and -3 were also measured; TBTC exposure caused marked increases in the activities, while DBTC exposure did not cause any significant change. TBTC exposure also appeared to induce expression of CAD (which fragments DNA), but had minimal effect on levels of the CAD inhibitor, ICAD. In contrast, DBTC exposure resulted in a larger level of ICAD expression. WST-8 and JC-1 assays were used to evaluate mitochondrial function, since a strong activation of caspase-9 by TBTC suggested mitochondrial involvement. The involvement of caspase in the activation was examined using cytochrome c expression; cytochrome expression and the loss of mitochondrial function occurred within 10 min of TBTC exposure. DBTC exposure affected the mitochondria less. These results indicated that effects on mitochondria likely played an important role in the induction of apoptosis by TBTC. The results of this study show that DBTC and TBTC induce necrosis and apoptosis of T-lymphocytes, respectively, by apparently indicating different mechanisms of cell death. It follows that these increases in cell death induced by these organotin compounds likely contributed to the thymic atrophy observed in the rats here.

Acknowledgements

Declaration of interest: The authors report no conflicts of interest. The authors alone are responsible for the content and writing of the paper.

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