Copyright © 1998 by Institute of Pharmacology
Polish Academy of Sciences
Pol. J. Pharmacol., 1998, 50, 151-157
ISSN 1230-6002

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DOXORUBICIN-INDUCED INHIBITION OF PROLIDASE ACTIVITY IN HUMAN SKIN FIBROBLASTS AND ITS IMPLICATION TO IMPAIRED COLLAGEN BIOSYNTHESIS
Anna Muszyńska, Jerzy Pałka#, Sławomir Wołczyński*
 Department of Medicinal Chemistry, Medical Academy, Mickiewicza 2, PL 15-230 Białystok, Poland,
*Department of Gynecological Endocrinology, Medical Academy, Skłodowskiej 24 A, PL 15-276 Białystok, Poland


Doxorubicin-induced inhibition of prolidase activity in human skin fibroblasts and its implication to impaired collagen biosynthesis. A. MUSZYŃSKA, J. PAŁKA, S. WOŁCZYŃSKI. Pol. J. Pharmacol., 1998, 50, 151-157.

One of the recognized side effects accompanying doxorubicin administration is poor wound healing resulting from impairement of collagen biosynthesis. However, the precise mechanism of doxorubicin-induced inhibition of collagen synthesis has not been established. We considered prolidase, an enzyme involved in collagen metabolism as a possible target for doxorubicin-induced inhibition of synthesis of this protein. Prolidase [E.C.3.4.13.9] cleaves imidodipeptides containing C-terminal proline, providing large amount of proline for collagen resynthesis. Therefore, we compared the effect of doxorubicin on prolidase activity and collagen biosynthesis in cultured human skin fibroblasts. We have found that doxorubicin induces coordinately inhibition of prolidase activity (IC50 ~10 ± 3 µM ) and collagen biosynthesis (IC50 ~15 ± 3 µM) in cultured human skin fibroblasts. The inhibitory effect of doxorubicin on prolidase activity and collagen biosynthesis was not due to cytotoxicity of this drug as shown by cell viability tetrazoline test. The decrease in prolidase activity in fibroblasts treated with doxorubicin was not accompanied by differences in the amount of the enzyme protein recovered from these cells as shown by western immunoblot analysis. It may suggest that the inhibition is a posttranslational event. The data presented here rise possibility that doxorubicin-induced decrease in collagen biosynthesis is mostly due to the inhibition of prolidase activity.

Key words: doxorubicin, collagen, prolidase, fibroblast

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