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-dependent Pathway1
Department of Veterinary Biosciences [J. A. H., J. W. D.] and Division of Molecular Biology and Cancer Genetics, Ohio State Comprehensive Cancer Center [J. W. D.], The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 43210
| Abstract |
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mRNA and protein in nonneoplastic HC11 mouse mammary epithelial cells. This up-regulation is dependent on signaling by phospho-Stat3 (signal transducers and activators of transcription). The same signaling pathway is activated in two human breast cancer cell lines, a neoplastic mouse mammary epithelial cell line and a second nonneoplastic mouse mammary epithelial cell line. [3H]Thymidine incorporation and flow cytometry demonstrate that OSM inhibits the growth of HC11 cells by reducing the number of S-phase cells. These phenotypic changes are accompanied by reduced expression of S-phase genes with a corresponding increased expression of G0 genes in HC11 cells. Reduction of C/EBP
protein in HC11 cells by expression of a C/EBP
antisense construct inhibits OSM-mediated growth arrest. These data demonstrate that OSM induces up-regulation of C/EBP
via a Stat3- dependent pathway in mammary epithelial cells and that the growth inhibition induced by OSM depends on the presence of C/EBP
. | Introduction |
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OSM stimulates proliferation of some cell types, such as myeloma cells and Kaposis sarcoma cells, and inhibits proliferation of others, such as melanoma cells and normal and neoplastic mammary epithelial cells (712). In normal and neoplastic human mammary epithelial cells, OSM inhibits cell cycle progression, with a reduction in the proportion of S-phase cells and an adoption of morphological phenotype characteristic of differentiated breast epithelial cells (1113). However, little is known about the signaling pathways involved in determining whether OSM induces cell proliferation or growth inhibition. To understand the biological role of OSM in the mammary gland and enhance the effectiveness of OSM as a therapeutic agent, an understanding of the OSM-activated signaling pathways leading to growth arrest of normal and neoplastic cells is of crucial importance.
Recent studies have demonstrated that OSM and IL-6 simultaneously induce growth inhibition and increased migration of T47D breast cancer cells via different, simultaneously activated signaling pathways (14). The growth inhibition induced by both OSM and IL-6 depends on Stat3 activation, but no downstream mediators of growth arrest have been identified. The increased cell migration induced by IL-6 is independent of Stat3 and depends on activation of the MAPK/phosphatidylinositol 3'-kinase pathway. This suggests that the ultimate cell fate depends on a balance between the different cytokine-activated signaling pathways.
Stats are latent cytoplasmic transcription factors, which, upon activation by tyrosine phosphorylation, form homo- or heterodimers, translocate to the nucleus, and bind consensus DNA sequences to activate transcription. Stat3 has previously been shown to be involved in regulation of both proliferation and growth arrest, depending on the cell type (1519). Several human breast cancer cell lines exhibit dysregulation of Stat3 signaling characterized by constitutively activated Stat3 (20, 21). In contrast, Stat3 activation in the involuting mouse mammary gland has been proposed as the "driving force" for mammary epithelial apoptosis (2224). Conditional Stat3 knockout in the involuting mouse mammary gland confers delayed involution (25). Previous work from our laboratory demonstrates that mammary gland involution in vivo and serum and growth factor withdrawal in vitro result in Stat3 activation, with subsequent Stat3 binding to the acute phase response element of the C/EBP
promoter, increased Stat3-dependent C/EBP
transcription, and, ultimately, growth arrest and apoptosis of mammary epithelium (2628). Thus, these contrasting roles for Stat3 in mammary epithelium demonstrate that there are other factors (presumably other signaling pathways) that interact with the Stat3 pathway to influence the ultimate fate of the cell.
C/EBP
is a member of the C/EBP family of leucine zipper DNA-binding proteins, which have been implicated in the control of growth and differentiation in a variety of tissue and cell types (2934). The six C/EBP family members (
, ß,
,
,
, and C/EBP homologous protein-10) form homo- or heterodimers with C/EBPs and other leucine zipper proteins and bind to DNA to activate or repress transcription (35, 36). C/EBP
has an important role in the induction of G0 growth arrest and apoptosis in cultured mouse mammary epithelium in response to serum and growth factor withdrawal (37, 38).
To investigate the signaling pathways involved in the OSM-mediated growth arrest response of mammary epithelial cells, nonneoplastic HC11 mouse mammary epithelial cells were treated with OSM. The work described herein demonstrates that the OSM-induced growth arrest response in HC11 cells and other mouse mammary epithelial cells is similar to what occurs in human mammary epithelium. OSM treatment of HC11 cells decreases [3H]thymidine incorporation and reduces the number of S-phase cells, with corresponding increases in expression of G0 genes and decreases in expression of S-phase genes. In addition, in both mouse and human mammary epithelium, OSM induces sustained Stat3 phosphorylation and phospho-Stat3-dependent C/EBP
up-regulation. Furthermore, we show that the growth arrest response induced by OSM is markedly diminished in HC11 cells expressing C/EBP
antisense mRNA. These data support a direct role for C/EBP
in the OSM-mediated growth arrest of mammary epithelial cells and suggest that the integrity of the Stat3-C/EBP
pathway is important for the growth arrest response of mammary epithelial cells to OSM.
| Materials and Methods |
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, LIF, IL-6 (Peprotech, Rocky Hill, NJ), and OSM (mouse and human; R&D Systems, Minneapolis, MN).
Transfections.
To make the bulk-transfected C/EBP
antisense cell lines, HC11 cells were transfected with the pcDNA3-C/EBP
antisense plasmid or the empty pcDNA3 plasmid using Transfectam reagent (Promega, Madison, WI; Ref. 38). Selection was carried out in the presence of 700 µg/ml Geneticin (Invitrogen Life Technologies, Inc.) for 2 weeks. Clonal cell lines were established from individual colonies, and Western blotting identified the
1 clone as having maximal inhibition of C/EBP
protein expression. Other colonies were pooled to establish bulk transfected cell lines to dilute the influence of clonal variation. The
1 antisense plasmid has been described previously (38).
Northern Blot Analysis.
Total RNA was isolated from cultured cells using RNazol B (Tel-Test, Friendswood, TX). Northern blots were carried out using standard procedures (40). Blots were probed with the following random primer-labeled ([
-32P]dCTP) cDNAs: C/EBP
, C/EBPß (a generous gift of Dr. Steven McKnight; University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center), GAS1 (growth arrest-specific gene 1; a generous gift of Dr. Claudio Schneider; Cosorzio Interuniversitario Biotecnologie), TRPM 2, TK, and histone 2B (Oncor, Gaithersburg, MD). Cyclophilin receptor protein partial cDNA was used as a constitutive probe. Fold induction was calculated from densitometric measurements taken using an AlphaImager 2000 (Alpha Innotech, Staffordshire, United Kingdom). Figures depicting multiple mRNAs were either coprobed or stripped and sequentially reprobed. Results are representative of experiments performed two to four times.
Western Blot Analysis.
Whole cell protein lysates were prepared from tissue culture cells. Cells were washed with cold PBS, scraped into microfuge tubes, and centrifuged for 30 s at 14,000 x g to pellet cells. The supernatant was removed, and cells were suspended in whole cell lysis buffer [20 mM Tris (pH 8.0), 137 mM NaCl, 10% glycerol, 1% NP40, 0.1% SDS, 0.5% sodium deoxycholate, and 2 mM EDTA]. Protease, kinase, and phosphatase activities were inhibited by the addition of Complete tablets (Roche Molecular Biochemicals, Indianapolis, IN), 1 mM NaF, 1 mM NaVO3, 1 mM Na2MoO4, and 10 nM okadaic acid to the protein isolation solution. Proteins were quantified using the BCA microprotein assay kit (Pierce, Rockford, IL). Proteins were separated by SDS-PAGE and transferred to nitrocellulose membranes by electroblotting. Evenness of loading was verified by examination of gels stained with Coomassie Blue. Western blots were probed with primary antibodies to Stat3, phospho-Stat3 (Y705), Stat1, phospho-Stat1 (Y701), p42/p44, phospho-p42/p44 (T202 and Y204; Cell Signaling Technology, Beverly, MA), p21, C/EBP
(Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, CA), p27, and cyclin D1 (Transduction Laboratories, Lexington, KY). Horseradish peroxidase-conjugated antimouse or antirabbit antibodies (Cell Signaling Technology) were used to detect primary antibodies, and the signal was developed using the ECL system (Amersham Biosciences, Piscataway, NJ). Fold induction was calculated from the densitometric measurements taken using an AlphaImager 2000 (Alpha Innotech). Figures depicting multiple proteins were either stripped and sequentially reprobed or prepared by running multiple gels using the same lysates. Results are representative of experiments performed two to four times.
[3H]Thymidine Incorporation Studies.
Cells were plated in 24-well tissue culture dishes at a density of 1.2 x 104 cells/well in 400 µl of medium containing 2% heat-inactivated FBS (12, 13). After 5 h, OSM was added to the desired final concentration. At the designated time points, cells were pulsed for 2 h with [3H]thymidine (1 µCi/ml), harvested by precipitation with cold 10% trichloroacetic acid, solubilized in 0.3 N NaOH, and counted by liquid scintillation counting. Results represent the average of two to six independent experiments with 36 wells/time point/condition.
Flow Cytometric Cell Cycle Analysis.
Cells were plated in 6-cm tissue culture dishes at a density of 1.3 x 105 cells/plate, in 3.5 ml of medium containing 2% heat-inactivated FBS. After 5 h, OSM was added to the desired final concentration. At the designated time points, cells were harvested from the various treatments, fixed in 70% ethanol overnight, and stained with propidium iodide. The percentage of cells in each cell cycle phase was assessed by fluorescence-activated cell sorter analysis. Results represent the average of three independent experiments with 23 samples/time point/condition.
Statistical Analysis.
Statistical analyses were performed using SAS JMP software (SAS Institute, Cary, NC). Students t test or a one-way analysis of variance and Tukey-Kramer comparison of all pairs were used to compare averages for different treatment groups.
| Results |
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both increased almost 6-fold (Fig. 3A). The mRNA levels of the S-phase markers histone and TK were reduced 23-fold (Fig. 3B), and the mRNA levels of the G0 markers GAS1, TRPM2, and C/EBP
were increased 35-fold (Fig. 3C). These results are consistent with the flow cytometry results (Fig. 2) and suggest that OSM induces cell cycle exit into G0. OSM also induces changes in the levels of other growth-regulated proteins (Fig. 3D). OSM induced 3-fold decreases in the protein levels of cyclin D1 and p21WAF1/CIP1, whereas p27KIP1 remained unchanged. The levels of phospho-p44/p42 (ERK1 and ERK2) increased 3-fold.
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mRNA by Cytokines Is Unique to OSM.
by cytokines was a general characteristic of IL-6-type cytokines or a unique feature of OSM, HC11 cells were treated with IL-6, LIF, and OSM. In addition, cells were treated with IFN-
. IL-6, LIF, OSM, and IFN-
are known to inhibit proliferation of mammary epithelial cells (5, 1113, 4146). Cells were treated with cytokines at the indicated concentrations, and RNA was harvested after 1, 8, and 24 h. C/EBP
mRNA was induced 7-fold after 1 h in cells treated with IFN-
but disappeared by 8 h (Fig. 4). In contrast, C/EBP
mRNA was induced 8-fold after 1 h in cells treated with OSM and remained elevated at 8 and 24 h. Neither IL-6 nor LIF had any effect on C/EBP
mRNA levels. Similar induction patterns and levels were observed at the 15 and 30 min time points (data not shown). The C/EBPß mRNA level remained relatively unchanged for all cytokines at all time points.
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mRNA and Protein by OSM Corresponds to Sustained Stat3 Phosphorylation.
also transduces signals via activation of Stat proteins. HC11 cells were treated with the IL-6-type cytokines IL-6, LIF, and OSM, along with IFN-
, and proteins were harvested after 1, 8, and 24 h. Western blots probed with antibodies to phospho-Stat3 (Y705), Stat3, phospho-Stat1 (Y701), and Stat1 are shown in Fig. 5. Stat3 phosphorylation was increased at 1 h (3-fold), 8 h (6-fold), and 24 h (6-fold) in the OSM-treated cells. Stat1 was phosphorylated at 1, 8, and 24 h (34-fold) in the IFN-
-treated cells. Similar induction patterns and levels were observed at the 15 and 30 min time points (data not shown). IFN-
treatment increased Stat3 phosphorylation (2-fold) only before and at the 1 h time point. Interestingly, IFN-
induced C/EBP
mRNA only at time points that corresponded to Stat3 activation, and not Stat1 activation. Stat3 and Stat1 protein levels were unchanged by cytokine treatment. Stat5 activation was not detected at any of the time points examined (data not shown). Neither IL-6 nor LIF had any effect on phosphorylation of Stat1 or Stat3 in HC11 cells.
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Protein Is Not Unique to HC11 Cells.
in mammary epithelial cells other than HC11 cells, the levels of phospho-Stat3 and C/EBP
protein in response to OSM were examined in several other mammary epithelial cell lines. HC11, NMuMg, and MM5MT cells, which are nontransformed (HC11 and NMuMg) and transformed (MM5MT) mouse mammary epithelial cell lines, were treated with OSM for 24 h. Western blots probed with phospho-Stat3, Stat3, and C/EBP
are shown in Fig. 6A. In all cell lines at all time points, there were sustained increases in both Stat3 phosphorylation (36-fold) and C/EBP
protein levels (38-fold) in response to OSM treatment. Fig. 6B shows Western blots of two neoplastic human mammary epithelial cell lines, MCF-7 and SKBR3, treated with OSM for 24 h. Increased Stat3 phosphorylation (34-fold) and increased C/EBP
protein levels (34-fold) were also present in these human cell lines in response to OSM. These data demonstrate that the activation of Stat3 and induction of C/EBP
are a general response of mammary epithelial cells to OSM treatment.
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in HC11 Cells.
protein depends on Stat3 activation and not a Stat3-independent mechanism, HC11 cells were pretreated with 50 µM AG490 (a specific inhibitor of JAK2) or a DMSO control for 24 h, followed by treatment with OSM for 1 h. Western blots comparing the OSM induction of phospho-Stat3 (Y705) and C/EBP
, with and without AG490 pretreatment, are shown in Fig. 7. Pretreatment with AG490 at the 50% inhibitory concentration caused a 23-fold reduction in both the amount of phospho-Stat3 and C/EBP
protein induced in response to OSM. This supports a role for the JAK family members in the OSM-mediated activation of Stat3 and demonstrates the dependence of C/EBP
up-regulation on Stat3 phosphorylation.
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in the OSM induction of growth arrest of HC11 cells, [3H]thymidine incorporation studies and flow cytometric analysis of cell cycle status were examined in HC11 cells with reduced expression of C/EBP
protein. HC11 cells were transfected with a pcDNA3 control plasmid (pccon) or a pcDNA3-C/EBP
antisense plasmid and selected for 2 weeks in G418. In subsequent experiments, both the
1 antisense (clonal) cell line and the bulk transfected C/EBP
antisense cell line (
bulk) were used to reduce the contribution of clonal variation. The level of C/EBP
protein induction in response to OSM treatment was compared for these three cell lines (Fig. 8A). The OSM-treated
bulk cells and
1 cells expressed approximately 80% and 30%, respectively, of the C/EBP
protein expressed by the pccon cells, demonstrating the efficacy of the antisense construct at reducing C/EBP
protein expression.
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antisense cells exhibited significantly less of a reduction in [3H]thymidine incorporation when treated with OSM (42% reduction for
bulk cells and 13% reduction for
1 cells).
To confirm the results of the [3H]thymidine incorporation data, flow cytometry was used to assess the cell cycle status of the OSM-treated antisense cells. The results are summarized in Table 1. The pcbulk cells showed a 49% decrease in the number of S-phase cells after 4 days treatment with OSM, similar to the parental HC11 cell line (48% decrease; Fig. 2). In contrast, the
bulk and
1 cells showed only a 16% decrease and a 10% increase, respectively, in the number of S-phase cells. These results suggest that C/EBP
is an important mediator of OSM-induced growth arrest.
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| Discussion |
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is a downstream mediator of the Stat3-dependent growth arrest response in OSM-treated mammary epithelium.
This is the first report to examine the effects of OSM on mouse mammary epithelium. Nonneoplastic and neoplastic mouse mammary epithelial cells undergo growth arrest in response to OSM in a manner similar to human mammary epithelial cells (12, 13). In addition, C/EBP
is increased in all OSM-treated mammary epithelial cell lines examined (Fig. 6). The similarities between mouse and human mammary epithelial cells in the signaling pathways initiated and the growth arrest responses induced after treatment with OSM indicate that the mouse is a suitable model for investigating the therapeutic response of mammary cancers to OSM.
Previous results show that C/EBP
is up-regulated in mammary epithelium only during G0, and not during any other stage of the cell cycle (37). The reductions in the S-phase markers histone and TK and the increases in the mammary epithelial G0 markers C/EBP
, GAS1, and TRPM2 (Fig. 3) suggest that OSM causes mammary epithelial cells to withdraw from the cell cycle. The reduction in cyclin D1 protein is also consistent with G0 growth arrest (13). The persistent increase in C/EBP
for the 4-day duration of the growth assays (Fig. 3A) suggests that C/EBP
has a significant role in maintaining the OSM-induced growth arrest. A similar, persistent up-regulation of C/EBP
has previously been shown to be responsible for cell cycle exit and maintenance of G0 growth arrest in mammary epithelium after serum and growth factor deprivation (37, 38).
The reduction in p21CIP1 induced by OSM is consistent with other reports that activated Stat3 represses p21CIP1 expression in mammary epithelial cells. During mammary gland involution, when Stat3 is normally activated, conditional Stat3 knockout mice demonstrate a marked increase in p21CIP1 expression compared with wild-type controls (25). The lack of change in p27KIP1 level during this time is expected because these cells were not confluent and hence were not contact inhibited (4850).
HC11 cells are commonly used as a model to study mammary epithelial growth and differentiation. Lactogenic hormone treatment of HC11 cells induces differentiation via two different signaling pathways, MAPK-dependent synthesis of enzymes involved in cytoplasmic lipid droplet formation and Stat5-dependent synthesis of ß-casein (51, 52). Treatment of human mammary carcinoma cells with OSM causes activation of the MAPK pathway, with MAPK-dependent formation of cytoplasmic lipid droplets (53). OSM-treated HC11 cells exhibit similar MAPK activation (Fig. 3) and cytoplasmic lipid droplet formation (data not shown). However, neither Stat5 activation nor ß-casein synthesis is observed in OSM-treated HC11 cells (data not shown). Thus, the differentiation pathway induced by OSM is not completed.
The growth status of mammalian cells at a given point in time is the result of a balance between mitogenic and growth arrest signals. The growth arrest of OSM-treated HC11 cells is blocked in the presence of high levels of EGF and insulin, even though Stat3 is activated, and C/EBP
expression is increased (data not shown). A similar phenomenon occurs in HC11 cells transfected with a CMV-C/EBP
plasmid that constitutively overexpresses C/EBP
protein. In growth medium containing the mitogens insulin and EGF, the C/EBP
-overexpressing cells grow at the same rate as controls. However, under serum and growth factor withdrawal conditions, the C/EBP
-overexpressing cells undergo growth arrest more rapidly than controls (38). These data suggest that the expression of C/EBP
alone is not sufficient to inhibit growth. Alternatively, posttranslational modifications of C/EBP
, which may not occur in the presence of mitogens, may be required for C/EBP
growth-inhibitory activity. Liu et al. (12) have shown that OSM antagonizes the mitogenic response of human mammary epithelial cells to EGF in a manner that is dependent on the dose of both EGF and OSM. The difference between our observation (that OSM cannot block mitogenic signals) and that of Liu et al. (12) may be due to the amount of EGF added, the addition of insulin, or the effects of autocrine growth factors produced in the different cell lines.
The reduction in thymidine incorporation induced by OSM varies for the different cell lines examined (Fig. 1). This may be due to variations in the endogenous growth factors produced in the different cell types or to variations in the growth-regulating signaling pathways altered in the different cell types during the process of immortalization and/or transformation. In addition, because human-derived cell lines generally double at a slower rate than mouse-derived cell lines, the relative level of growth arrest induced by OSM in SKBR3 cells may have been greater with treatment times longer than 4 days.
In human mammary epithelial cells, the signaling pathway responsible for inducing growth arrest after treatment with OSM is cell line specific. In T47D human mammary carcinoma cells, OSM induces growth arrest by a Stat3-dependent pathway and cell migration by MAPK- and phosphatidylinositol 3'-kinase-dependent pathways (14). Li et al. (47) demonstrate that in MCF-7 human mammary carcinoma cells, the MAPK pathway is not involved in the growth arrest induced by OSM. In contrast, they show that the OSM-induced growth arrest of MDA-MB231 human mammary carcinoma cells does depend on MAPK. In HC11 cells, inhibition of the MAPK pathway using the specific MAPK inhibitor PD90859 does not affect the induction of C/EBP
and does not interfere with the growth arrest response induced by OSM (data not shown).
We treated HC11 cells with other cytokines that have been reported to induce growth arrest of mammary epithelial cells. OSM and IFN-
are the only two cytokines examined that induce Stat3 phosphorylation and increase C/EBP
mRNA and protein in HC11 cells (Figs. 4 and 5). Subsequent evaluation showed that HC11 cells do not express the cytokine-specific components of the IL-6 and LIF receptors (data not shown), which explains their lack of response to these cytokines. Preliminary data from our laboratory demonstrate that IL-6 does induce Stat3 phosphorylation and C/EBP
protein up-regulation in human breast cancer cell lines.4 IFN-
induces only a transient increase in phospho-Stat3 and C/EBP
. IFN-
also induces sustained Stat1 phosphorylation; however, this does not correspond to any changes in C/EBP
mRNA levels. This observation is consistent with the report of Cantwell et al. (54), which demonstrates that phospho-Stat3, but not phospho-Stat1, binds to the acute phase response element of the mouse C/EBP
promoter. C/EBPß, which also regulates growth in the mouse mammary gland, is not influenced at the mRNA level by the addition of any of these cytokines (32, 33).
The specific JAK2 inhibitor AG490 reduces both Stat3 activation and C/EBP
up-regulation in HC11 cells treated with OSM (Fig. 7), which is consistent with previous reports that demonstrate that OSM signals through the JAK family of non-receptor tyrosine kinases (55). These data also demonstrate that the increase in C/EBP
occurs specifically in response to Stat3 phosphorylation and not other OSM-activated signaling pathways.
The [3H]thymidine incorporation data in Fig. 8 and cell cycle analysis data in Table 1 demonstrate a role for C/EBP
in the induction of growth arrest in response to OSM. The greater the reduction in the levels of C/EBP
protein by the antisense construct, the less able the cells are to initiate a full growth arrest response to OSM. The dependence of the OSM-induced mammary epithelial cell growth arrest on the presence of C/EBP
, reported here, is consistent with a recent report by Badache et al. (14), which demonstrates that IL-6-type cytokines induce growth arrest of T47D human mammary carcinoma cells by a Stat3-dependent mechanism. We propose that this dependence is due to Stat3 induction of C/EBP
in these human cells.
C/EBPs inhibit cell proliferation via mechanisms that depend on their transcription factor activities and via protein-protein interactions with cell cycle-regulatory proteins. In IL-6-treated M1 leukemia cells, C/EBPs, including C/EBP
, have a role in the transcriptional regulation of the growth arrest-associated gene GADD45
(growth arrest and DNA damage; Ref. 56). In contrast, in hepatocytes, C/EBP
inhibits cell proliferation through direct binding to cyclin-dependent kinases 2 and 4 and blocking their association with cyclins (57). In adipocytes and granulocytes, C/EBP
binds to E2F and directly inhibits E2F-dependent transcription (58). Furthermore, dominant negative mutations in human C/EBP
are associated with acute myeloid leukemia, establishing a tumor suppressor function for C/EBP
(59). Interactions between C/EBP
and cell cycle-regulatory proteins are currently under investigation in our laboratory.
In summary, the data presented here are significant on two levels. First, C/EBP
has an important role in the induction of G0 growth arrest in response to both OSM and serum and growth factor withdrawal of near confluent, mouse mammary epithelium (37, 38). Thus, C/EBP
appears to be an important, common, downstream factor regulating the entry of mammary epithelial cells into G0 in response to a variety of growth-inhibitory signals. This growth-regulatory role for C/EBP
is supported by recent reports of dysregulation of C/EBP
levels in mouse mammary carcinomas and in androgen-independent human prostate carcinomas (60, 61).
Second, the potential usefulness of OSM as a therapeutic agent for treating breast cancer is enhanced by knowledge of the signaling pathways responsible for growth arrest induction. Understanding the signaling pathways involved in determining whether OSM-treated cells proliferate or undergo growth arrest is important for evaluating when OSM may be therapeutically useful. Specifically, it may be important to evaluate the integrity of the Stat3-C/EBP
pathway before using OSM to treat breast cancer.
| Footnotes |
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2 To whom requests for reprints should be addressed, at Department of Veterinary Biosciences, The Ohio State University, 1900 Coffey Road, Columbus, OH 43210. Phone: (614) 292-4261; Fax: (614) 292-6473; E-mail: dewille.1{at}osu.edu. ![]()
3 The abbreviations used are: OSM, oncostatin M; IL, interleukin; LIF, leukemia inhibitory factor; C/EBP, CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein; JAK, Janus kinase; EGF, epidermal growth factor; TRPM2, testosterone repressed specific message 2; CP, cyclophilin; Stat, signal transducers and activators of transcription; MAPK, mitogen-activated protein kinase; FBS, fetal bovine serum; ATCC, American Type Culture Collection; TK, thymidine kinase; ERK, extracellular signal-regulated kinase. ![]()
4 Sivko. Growth arrest and oncostatin M treatment activate Stat3 and increase C/EBP
expression in mammary epithelial cells, manuscript in preparation. ![]()
Received 2/20/02; revised 4/22/02; accepted 4/29/02.
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M. Thangaraju, M. Rudelius, B. Bierie, M. Raffeld, S. Sharan, L. Hennighausen, A-M. Huang, and E. Sterneck C/EBP{delta} is a crucial regulator of pro-apoptotic gene expression during mammary gland involution Development, November 1, 2005; 132(21): 4675 - 4685. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |