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The effect of small molecule pharmacological agents on the triterpenoid saponin induced endolysosomal escape of saporin and a saporin-based immunotoxin in target human lymphoma cells

The effect of small molecule pharmacological agents on the triterpenoid saponin induced endolysosomal escape of saporin and a saporin-based immunotoxin in target human lymphoma cells
The effect of small molecule pharmacological agents on the triterpenoid saponin induced endolysosomal escape of saporin and a saporin-based immunotoxin in target human lymphoma cells
Triterpenoid saponins augment the cytotoxicity of saporin based immunotoxins. It is postulated that this results from a saponin-mediated increase in the endolysosomal escape of the toxin to the cytosol, but this remains to be confirmed. To address this issue, we used a number of pharmacological inhibitors of endocytic processes as probes to investigate the role played by saponin in the endolysosomal escape of fluorescently labeled saporin and a saporin based immunotoxin targeted against CD38 on human lymphoma and leukemia cell lines. Endolysosomal escape of the toxin was measured by flow cytometric pulse shape analysis. These results were compared to the effects of the various inhibitors on the saponin-mediated augmentation of toxin and immunotoxin cytotoxicity. Inhibitors of clathrin-mediated endocytosis, micropinocytosis, and endosomal acidification abrogated the saponin-induced increase in the endolysosomal escape of the toxin into the cytosol, suggesting that these processes may be involved in the internalization of saponin to the same endolysosomal vesicle as the toxin. Alternatively, these processes may play a direct role in the mechanism by which saponin promotes toxin escape from the endolysosomal compartment to the cytosol. Correlation with the effects of these inhibitors on the augmentation of cytotoxicity provides additional evidence that endolysosomal escape is involved in driving augmentation.
2227-9059
Wensley, Harrison J.
0a8a2519-6821-491c-9fd6-6f2155212a34
Smith, Wendy S.
9c2a6497-d964-4d81-9686-3d36b81c41b9
Holmes, Suzanne E.
df2f1eed-45a4-4caf-ac64-542d91558bd1
Flavell, Sopsamorn U.
6e6f64c0-a33b-43ce-ba6a-bdcd5b419eeb
Flavell, David J.
2e599911-9bdc-463a-8829-e9cf0edda50d
Wensley, Harrison J.
0a8a2519-6821-491c-9fd6-6f2155212a34
Smith, Wendy S.
9c2a6497-d964-4d81-9686-3d36b81c41b9
Holmes, Suzanne E.
df2f1eed-45a4-4caf-ac64-542d91558bd1
Flavell, Sopsamorn U.
6e6f64c0-a33b-43ce-ba6a-bdcd5b419eeb
Flavell, David J.
2e599911-9bdc-463a-8829-e9cf0edda50d

Wensley, Harrison J., Smith, Wendy S., Holmes, Suzanne E., Flavell, Sopsamorn U. and Flavell, David J. (2021) The effect of small molecule pharmacological agents on the triterpenoid saponin induced endolysosomal escape of saporin and a saporin-based immunotoxin in target human lymphoma cells. Biomedicines, 9 (3). (doi:10.3390/biomedicines9030300).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Triterpenoid saponins augment the cytotoxicity of saporin based immunotoxins. It is postulated that this results from a saponin-mediated increase in the endolysosomal escape of the toxin to the cytosol, but this remains to be confirmed. To address this issue, we used a number of pharmacological inhibitors of endocytic processes as probes to investigate the role played by saponin in the endolysosomal escape of fluorescently labeled saporin and a saporin based immunotoxin targeted against CD38 on human lymphoma and leukemia cell lines. Endolysosomal escape of the toxin was measured by flow cytometric pulse shape analysis. These results were compared to the effects of the various inhibitors on the saponin-mediated augmentation of toxin and immunotoxin cytotoxicity. Inhibitors of clathrin-mediated endocytosis, micropinocytosis, and endosomal acidification abrogated the saponin-induced increase in the endolysosomal escape of the toxin into the cytosol, suggesting that these processes may be involved in the internalization of saponin to the same endolysosomal vesicle as the toxin. Alternatively, these processes may play a direct role in the mechanism by which saponin promotes toxin escape from the endolysosomal compartment to the cytosol. Correlation with the effects of these inhibitors on the augmentation of cytotoxicity provides additional evidence that endolysosomal escape is involved in driving augmentation.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 12 March 2021
Published date: 15 March 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 508685
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/508685
ISSN: 2227-9059
PURE UUID: 684398b5-967e-455b-855c-2066b4900b45
ORCID for Wendy S. Smith: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2413-6717
ORCID for David J. Flavell: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7145-4737

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Date deposited: 29 Jan 2026 17:48
Last modified: 31 Jan 2026 08:20

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Contributors

Author: Harrison J. Wensley
Author: Wendy S. Smith ORCID iD
Author: Suzanne E. Holmes
Author: Sopsamorn U. Flavell
Author: David J. Flavell ORCID iD

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