Phorbol diester-induced alterations in the expression of protein kinase C isozymes and their mRNAs. Analysis in wild-type and phorbol diester-resistant HL-60 cell clones
In an HL-60 cell subline (PR-17) which was greater than 100-fold resistant to the differentiating and cytostatic activities of phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA), the protein kinase C phenotype was found to be nearly identical to that of wild-type HL-60 cells. A measurable decrease (30%) in the s...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of biological chemistry 1991-08, Vol.266 (23), p.15135-15143 |
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Zusammenfassung: | In an HL-60 cell subline (PR-17) which was greater than 100-fold resistant to the differentiating and cytostatic activities
of phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA), the protein kinase C phenotype was found to be nearly identical to that of wild-type
HL-60 cells. A measurable decrease (30%) in the specific activities of crude preparations of PR-17 cell protein kinase C was
observed when the enzyme was measured with histone as the phosphate acceptor substrate, but other aspects of the protein kinase
C phenotype (intracellular concentrations and binding affinities of phorbol diester receptors, translocation of activated
enzyme from cytosolic to particulate subcellular fractions, relative expression of the alpha and beta isozyme proteins) were
equivalent in both PMA-resistant PR-17 cells and in wild-type HL-60 cells. Direct analysis of the behavior of the alpha and
beta isozymes after the exposure of each cell type to 100 nM PMA for 12 h revealed that the activities and intracellular concentrations
of both isozymes were downregulated to an equivalent extent in both wild-type and PMA-resistant cells. These results suggest
that the cellular basis for the resistance to the effects of PMA was present "down-stream" from the activation and down-regulation
of protein kinase C and was perhaps a nuclear component. Among the genes which were likely to be differentially regulated
when each of the two cell lines were treated with PMA were those for the protein kinase C isozymes themselves. In wild-type
HL-60 cells, the intracellular concentrations of type HL-60 cells, the intracellular concentrations of mRNA for each of the
beta isozymes were increased (up to 5-fold) 48 h after the initiation of PMA treatment; further studies indicate that an activator
of protein kinase C could influence the expression of HL-60 cell protein kinase C genes in an isozyme-specific manner. Comparable
PMA-induced alterations in mRNA levels were not observed in PMA-resistant cells, even under conditions of significant activation
and subsequent down-regulation of protein kinase C protein. Taken together, these data suggest that activation and down-regulation
of the isozymes of protein kinase C may not represent absolute determinants of the PMA-induced differentiation of HL-60 cells,
but that specific alterations in the levels of the mRNA for the beta isozymes of protein kinase C, or of other genes which
may be regulated by the activated kinase isozymes, are important to the induction of leukemi |
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ISSN: | 0021-9258 1083-351X |
DOI: | 10.1016/S0021-9258(18)98596-0 |