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Vol. 273, Issue 4, 2322-2328, January 23, 1998
Cell to Cell Contact Is Not Required for Bystander Cell Killing
by Escherichia coli Purine Nucleoside Phosphorylase
Brian W.
Hughes ,
Scott A.
King ,
Paula W.
Allan§,
William B.
Parker§, and
Eric J.
Sorscher ¶
From the Departments of Physiology and Biophysics,
and ¶ Medicine, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham,
Alabama 35294 and the § Southern Research Institute,
Birmingham, Alabama 35255-5305
Expression of Escherichia coli purine
nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP) activates prodrugs and kills entire
populations of mammalian cells, even when as few as 1% of the cells
express this gene. This phenomenon of bystander killing has been
previously investigated for herpes simplex virus-thymidine kinase
(HSV-TK) and has been shown to require cell to cell contact. Using
silicon rings to separate E. coli PNP expressing cells from
non-expressing cells sharing the same medium, we demonstrate that
bystander cell killing by E. coli PNP does not require
cell-cell contact. Initially, cells expressing E. coli PNP
convert the non-toxic prodrug, 6-methylpurine-2 -deoxyriboside (MeP-dR)
to the highly toxic membrane permeable toxin, 6-methylpurine (MeP). As
the expressing cells die, E. coli PNP is released into the
culture medium, retains activity, and continues precursor conversion
extracellularly (as determined by reverse phase high performance liquid
chromatography of both prodrug and toxin). Bystander killing can also
be observed in the absence of extracellular E. coli PNP by
removing the MeP-dR prior to death of the expressing cells. In this
case, 100% of cultured cells die when as few as 3% of the cells of a
population express E. coli PNP. Blocking nucleoside
transport with nitrobenzylthioinosine reduces MeP-dR mediated cell
killing but not MeP cell killing. These mechanisms differ fundamentally
from those previously reported for the HSV-TK gene.
Copyright © 1998 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.

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Copyright © 1998 by the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.
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