DIFFERENTIAL EXTRACELLULAR-MATRIX GENE-EXPRESSION BY FIBROBLASTS DURING THEIR PROLIFERATIVE LIFE-SPAN INVITRO AND AT SENESCENCE

Increasing evidence supports the idea that the finite proliferative life span of normal fibroblasts is a differentiation-like phenomenon. If this were correct, an ordered sequence of differential gene expression should be associated with the in vitro progression of cells from low passage to high pas...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of cellular physiology 1992-04, Vol.151 (1), p.147-155
Hauptverfasser: CHOI, AMK, OLSEN, DR, COOK, KG, DEAMOND, SF, UITTO, J, BRUCE, SA
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Increasing evidence supports the idea that the finite proliferative life span of normal fibroblasts is a differentiation-like phenomenon. If this were correct, an ordered sequence of differential gene expression should be associated with the in vitro progression of cells from low passage to high passage (senescence). To define the pattern of expression of fibroblast differentiation-associated genes during this in vitro progression, we have determined the temporal pattern of expression of extracellular matrix (ECM) genes in Syrian hamster dermal fibroblasts as a function of passage level and percentage of proliferative life span in vitro. Steady-state mRNA levels were determined by Northern and dot blot analyses of total cellular RNA hybridized with cDNA probes specific for fibronectin, procollagen alpha(1)III, and procollagen alpha(1)I. Cells were analyzed at 24 hr postconfluence to minimize the presence of actively proliferating cells, and because maximal levels of fibronectin, alpha(1)III, and alpha(1)I mRNAs were observed 24 hr postconfluence. Unique, multiphasic patterns of expression of each of these ECM components were observed as the cells progressed from low passage to high passage. As the cells reached midhigh passage, fibronectin mRNA levels increased. This midpassage increase in fibronectin was followed by an increase in the level of alpha(1)III mRNA as the cells reached the end of their in vitro proliferative life span, and then alpha(1)I when the cells entered the postmitotic senescent phase, at which time the level of fibronectin mRNA also declined. A similar overlapping cascade pattern of up-regulation of these genes is seen during development and wound repair. This suggests that as cultured fibroblasts reach the end of their proliferative life span, they reinitiate a gene expression program used in tissue development and repair.
ISSN:0021-9541
DOI:10.1002/jcp.1041510119