Cancer Research Infection and Cancer: Biology, Therapeutics, and Prevention
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[Cancer Research 39, 1494-1503, May 1, 1979]
© 1979 American Association for Cancer Research

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The Cytotoxicity of {gamma}-L-Glutaminyl-4-hydroxybenzene for Cells that Contain Tyrosinase, a Study of Melanocytes in the Hair Follicle of the Mouse1

Peter C. Burger2, Lieselotte A. K. Kemper and F. Stephen Vogel

Department of Pathology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina 27710

The s.c. administration of {gamma}-L-glutaminyl-4-hydroxybenzene (GHB) to neonatal black mice produced a prompt, generalized, and selective swelling and lysis of the melanocytes of the hair follicles. The findings indicate that this cytotoxic effect was dependent upon the intracellular activation of GHB by tyrosinase. Supportive of this conclusion were: (a) an absence of comparable cytological alterations in adjacent keratinocytes; (b) a lack of response by melanocytes of albino mice; and (c) patterns of deficient pigmentation produced by GHB in juvenile black mice, suggesting that susceptible follicles were those in the tyrosinase-producng growth phase.

The administration of GHB also induced condensation, or "apoptosis," of individual follicular keratinocytes of both black and albino mice and in the melanocytes in the latter. This response was apparently independent of tyrosinase. It was transitory and without appreciable effect on hair growth.

The findings further characterize the selective cytolytic properties of GHB for mammalian cells that possess tyrosinase and suggest a potential for this natural compound as a chemotherapeutic agent against melanocarcinoma.

1 This investigation was supported in part by Grant CA 19013 awarded by the National Cancer Institute.

2 To whom requests for reprints should be addressed, at Duke University Medical Center, Box 3712, Durham, North Carolina 27710.

Received 10/ 3/78. Accepted 1/26/79.







HOME HELP FEEDBACK SUBSCRIPTIONS ARCHIVE SEARCH TABLE OF CONTENTS
Cancer Research Clinical Cancer Research
Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers & Prevention Molecular Cancer Therapeutics
Molecular Cancer Research Cancer Prevention Research
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Annual Meeting Education Book Meeting Abstracts Online
Copyright © 1979 by the American Association for Cancer Research.