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Original Article

Application of confocal laser scanning microscopy to detect oxidative stress in human colon cells

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Pages 535-547 | Received 12 May 1999, Published online: 07 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Introduction Excess of intracellular reactive oxygen species in relation to antioxidative systems results in an oxidative environment which may modulate gene expression or damage cellular molecules. These events are expected to greatly contribute to processes of carcinogenesis. Only few studies are available on the oxidative/reductive conditions in the colon, an important tumour target tissue. It was the objective of this work to further develop methods to assess intracellular oxidative stress within human colon cells as a tool to study such associations in nutritional toxicology.

Methods We have measured H2O2-induced oxidative stress in different colon cell lines, in freshly isolated human colon crypts, and, for comparative purposes, in NIH3T3 mouse embryo fibroblasts. Detection was performed by loading the cells with the fluorigenic peroxide-sensitive dye 6-carboxy-2′,7′-dichlorodihydrofluorescein diacetate (diacetoxymethyl ester), followed by in vitro treatment with H2O2 and fluorescence detection with confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM). Using the microgel electrophoresis (“Comet”) Assay, we also examined HT29 stem and clone 19A cells and freshly isolated primary colon cells for their relative sensitivity toward H2O2-induced DNA damage and for steady-state levels of endogenous oxidative DNA damage.

Results A dose-response relationship was found for the H2O2-induced dye decomposition in NIH3T3 cells (7.8–125 μM H2O2) whereas no effect occurred in the human colon tumour cell lines HT29 stem and HT29 clone 19A (62–1000 μM H2O2). Fluorescence was significantly increased at 62 μM H2O2 in the human colon adenocarcinoma cell line Caco-2. In isolated human colon crypts, the lower crypt cells (targets of colon cancer) were more sensitive towards H2O2 than the more differentiated upper crypt cells. In contrast to the CLSM results, oxidative DNA damage was detected in both cell lines using the Comet Assay. Endogenous oxidative DNA damage was highest in HT29 clone 19A, followed by the primary colon cells and HT29 stem cells.

Conclusions Oxidative stress in colon cells leads to damage of macromolecules which is sensitively detected in the Comet Assay. The lacking response of the CLSM-approach in colon tumour cells is probably due to intrinsic modes of protective activities of these cells. In general, however, the CLSM method is a sensitive technique to detect very low concentrations of H2O2-induced oxidative stress in NIH3T3 cells. Moreover, by using colon crypts it provides the unique possibility of assessing cell specific levels of oxidative stress in explanted human tissues. Our results demonstrate that the actual target cells of colon cancer induction are indeed susceptible to the oxidative activity of H2O2.

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