Griseofulvin interacts with microtubules both in vivo and in vitro
1976; Elsevier BV; Volume: 102; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1016/0022-2836(76)90293-x
ISSN1089-8638
AutoresKlaus Weber, Jürgen Wehland, Wilhelm Herzog,
Tópico(s)Photosynthetic Processes and Mechanisms
ResumoImmunofluorescence microscopy using monospecific tubulin antibody shows that in vivo griseofulvin interferes with the expression of both cytoplasmic and spindle microtubules in tissue culture cells in a concentration-dependent manner. In mouse 3T3 cells cytoplasmic microtubules are destroyed at a griseofulvin concentration of 5 × 10−5 m. At this concentration no increase of the mitotic index is observed but the cells are arrested in interphase, probably due to the destruction of cytoplasmic microtubules. Lowering the drug concentration to 10−5 m allows 3T3 cells to accumulate in c-mitotic ("colchicin-mitotic") arrest. In HeLa cells the display of spindle microtubules observed in drug-arrested cells appears similar to that seen in normal metaphase cells only at lower griseofulvin concentrations. Higher drug concentrations induce c-mitotic arrest accompanied by an increasing loss of typical metaphase tubulin structures. In vitro polymerization experiments with brain tubulin using both light-scattering and electron microscopy show that in the presence of griseofulvin tubulin can aggregate rapidly in the cold. This behaviour is not found in the absence of the drug. Thus both in vivo and in vitro experiments show that griseofulvin, like other c-mitotic drugs, acts at the level of tubulin polymerization and that its effects are concentration dependent.
Referência(s)