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Mefloquine, an anti‐malaria agent, causes reactive oxygen species‐dependent cell death in mast cells via a secretory granule‐mediated pathway

Authors :
Gunnar Pejler
Fabio R. Melo
Helena Öhrvik
Aida Paivandy
Behdad Zarnegar
Gabriela Calounova
Source :
Pharmacology Research & Perspectives
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Wiley, 2014.

Abstract

Mast cells are known to have a detrimental impact on a variety of pathological conditions. There is therefore an urgent need of developing strategies that limit their harmful effects. The aim of this study was to accomplish this by developing a means of inducing mast cell apoptosis. The strategy was to identify novel compounds that induce mast cell apoptosis by permeabilization of their secretory lysosomes (granules). As a candidate, we assessed mefloquine, an anti-malarial drug that has been proposed to have lysosome-permeabilizing activity. Mefloquine was added to mast cells and administered in vivo, followed by assessment of the extent and mechanisms of mast cell death. Mefloquine was cytotoxic to murine and human mast cells. Mefloquine induced apoptotic cell death of wild-type mast cells whereas cells lacking the granule compounds serglycin proteoglycan or tryptase were shown to undergo necrotic cell death, the latter finding indicating a role of the mast cell granules in mefloquine-induced cell death. In support of this, mefloquine was shown to cause compromised granule integrity and to induce leakage of granule components into the cytosol. Mefloquine-induced cell death was refractory to caspase inhibitors but was completely abrogated by reactive oxygen species inhibition. These findings identify mefloquine as a novel anti-mast cell agent, which induces mast cell death through a granule-mediated pathway. Mefloquine may thus become useful in therapy aiming at limiting harmful effects of mast cells.

Details

ISSN :
20521707
Volume :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pharmacology Research & Perspectives
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d86012e748052468f656237ac375b2e7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/prp2.66