4.5 Article

Regulated expression of VP16CREB in neuroblastoma cells: Analysis of differentiation and apoptosis

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE RESEARCH
Volume 78, Issue 4, Pages 570-579

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jnr.20304

Keywords

CREB; cAMP; proteasome; doxycycline-regulated gene expression; d2EGFP

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Funding

  1. NIA NIH HHS [R01 AG18285] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NINDS NIH HHS [R01 NS38647] Funding Source: Medline

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Highly malignant neuroblastoma tumors generally have defects in differentiation and apoptotic pathways. For a better understanding of these events, we use a murine neuroblastoma cell line (NBP2) that terminally differentiates into mature neurons in response to elevated levels of cAMP. Because one of the main downstream effectors of the cAMP signaling pathway is cAMP-response element binding (CREB), we reasoned that it might affect the expression of genes associated with differentiation and apoptotic events in NBF2 cells. To investigate this, we established tetracycline-regulated expression (TetOff) of VP16CREB, which constitutively transactivates promoters containing the CRE sequence motif. Using this system, we found that inducible expression of VP16CREB in NBP2 cells results in 1) morphological differentiation that is characterized by the formation of neurites and growth cones, 2) reversible cell differentiation unlike cAMP-induced terminal differentiation, 3) cell cycle arrest at G1, 4) no apoptosis in the presence of partial inhibition of proteasome unlike an increase in cAMP levels, and 5) changes in the expression of many genes, including down-regulation of N-myc, cyclin B1, Dickkopf-1, and Mad-2 and up-regulation of tyrosine hydroxylase, c-fos, N10, and ICER genes. Although VP16CREB expression and activation of the cAM P pathway impart many similar effects in NBP2 cells, they also bear some distinct genetic and morphological differences. Our data suggest that increased levels of cAMP function through not only CREB but also other signaling pathways that account for the additional cAMP-induced effects, including irreversible differentiation and onset of apoptosis during partial inhibition of proteasome in NBP2 cells. (C) 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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