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The Journal of Immunology, Vol 151, Issue 5 2345-2354, Copyright © 1993 by American Association of Immunologists
ARTICLES |
Y Asano, MA Brach, A Ahlers, S de Vos, JH Butterfield, LK Ashman, P Valent, HJ Gruss and F Herrmann
Department of Internal Medicine I, University of Freiburg Medical Center, Germany.
Modulation of expression of the c-kit proto-oncogene product, the receptor for the recently identified stem cell factor, was studied on 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA)-stimulated cultures of CD34+ normal bone marrow progenitor cells, blast cells from patients with primary acute myelogenous leukemia, cells from the leukemia cell lines HEL and MO7E, as well as cultured HMC-1 mast cells. Expression of c-kit was assessed on both RNA and protein level employing standard Northern blotting, reverse transcription, and polymerase chain reaction-based Southern blotting, as well as cell surface labeling with anti-c-kit mAb YB5.B8. Treatment of virtually all cell types with nontoxic concentrations of TPA (10(-9) M) for at least 48 h was associated with down-regulation of synthesis of c-kit transcripts and stem cell factor- receptor surface expression. Studies on the mechanism of action of TPA utilizing the HEL erythroleukemia line showed that TPA was primarily acting by accelerating the turnover of c-kit RNA most likely through induction of a destabilizing protein. The effect of TPA on c-kit expression levels was independent of TPA-mediated induction of differentiation since other compounds including IFN-gamma, vitamin D3, retinoic acid, arabinofuranosylcytosine, butyric acid, and camptothecin, which also effectively induced differentiation of HEL cells, failed to alter levels of c-kit expression.
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