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Vol. 294, Issue 1, 134-140, July 2000
Department of Cell Biology and Anatomy and Bowles Center for
Alcohol Studies, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,
Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Previous studies using cell and whole embryo cultures
have shown that free radicals play an important role in the
ethanol-induced death of mouse neural crest cells (NCCs; a significant
cell type with respect to the genesis of alcohol-related birth
defects). This investigation was spurred by reports of increased iron
in ethanol-exposed fetuses and the knowledge that iron can
initiate the production of reactive oxygen species. Initially, the
ameliorative potential of two iron chelators, deferoxamine and
phenanthroline, relative to ethanol-induced cell death was examined.
Cotreatment of cultured NCCs with 100 mM ethanol and either 1 or 10 µM deferoxamine or 10, 50, or 250 µM phenanthroline significantly
increased the percentage of viable cells as compared with exposure to
100 mM ethanol alone. These data indicate that iron is involved
in the ethanol-induced cytotoxicity. To support this premise, the
direct toxicity of iron to NCCs was also examined. As expected, loading the cells with Fe(II)/Fe(III) using 8-hydroxyquinoline as a carrier had
an adverse effect on their viability as did treatment with a
neurotoxin, 6-hydroxydopamine, that releases iron from ferritin storage. Cotreatment with an antioxidant,
N-acetylcysteine, significantly diminished the toxicity
of ethanol alone, that resulting from iron loading, as well as from the
combination of ethanol exposure and iron loading. These results
confirm the role of free radical-mediated damage in ethanol-induced
cytotoxicity and highlight the potential role of iron relative to the
genesis of alcohol-related birth defects.
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