- Effect of nutritional and enzymatic methionine deprivation upon human normal and malignant cells in tissue culture.
Effect of nutritional and enzymatic methionine deprivation upon human normal and malignant cells in tissue culture.
Human embryonic lung fibroblasts (F-136-35-56) capable of growing in medium containing DL-homocysteine instead of L-methionine and human acute lymphoblastic leukemia cells (CCRF-HSB-2) with absolute methionine requirement exhibited dose-dependent growth inhibition when semipurified L-methionine-degrading enzyme (L-methioninase, EC 4.4.1.11) was added to the tissue cultures. When D-homocystine was added to the cultures together with L-methioninase (0.1 units/ml, which completely degraded the available L-methionine in tissue culture), the F-136-35-56 cells continued to grow whereas the CCRF-HSB-2 cells were completely inhibited. In mixed cultures of the two cell lines with added L-methioninase + D-homocystine or L-methioninase + L-homocysteine thiolactone, the normal fibroblasts grew and synthesized DNA vigorously, whereas the lymphocytic malignant cells lost their viability completely and died within 3 to 4 days.