Abstract
Abstract
The effects of dichloroacetate, a known hypocholesterolemic agent, were studied in cultured growing and confluent human fibroblast cells. Microscopic examination showed no visible adverse effects of dichloroacetate on confluent cells during exposure to concentrations as high as 5 mM for 96 hr. Higher concentrations resulted in cell death after varying periods of incubation. There were no viable cells after 24 hr of exposure to 100 mM dichloroacetate. In contrast, much lower concentrations proved lethal to growing cells; cell growth, as determined by cell numbers at specified times after splitting, was suppressed by 1 mM dichloroacetate and 5 mM concentrations resulted in cell death. Similar effects were noted with glyoxylate. The hypocholesterolemic effect of dichloroacetate is probably not due to any effect on the low density lipoprotein pathway, since concentrations of up to 1 mM dichloroacetate did not affect the cellular binding and uptake of 125I-labeled low density lipoprotein. It is concluded that growing and rapidly metabolizing cells are much more sensitive to the toxic effects of dichloroacetate and glyoxylate than confluent cells.
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