4.5 Article

Wnts differentially regulate colony growth and differentiation of chondrogenic rat calvaria cells

Journal

BIOCHIMICA ET BIOPHYSICA ACTA-MOLECULAR CELL RESEARCH
Volume 1538, Issue 2-3, Pages 129-140

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/S0167-4889(00)00123-3

Keywords

collagen type II gene expression; Wnt family (Wnt-1, Wnt-3a, Wnt-4, Wnt-7a, Wnt-7b, Wnt-5a, Wnt-11); RCJ3.1(C5.18) rat calvaria cell; chlorate; secreted frizzled-related protein; differentiation; chondrocyte; protein kinase C

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The wingless- and int-related proteins (Wnts) have an important role during embryonic development and limb patterning. To investigate their function during chondrocyte differentiation, we used NIH3T3 cells producing seven members of the Wnt family and secreted frizzled-related protein (sFRP-2) for co-culture experiments with the rat chondrogenic cell line pColl(II)-EGFP-5. Pilot experiments showed a negative effect of Wnt-7a on the proliferation of three rodent chondrogenic cell lines, RCJ3.1(C5.18), CFK-2, and C1. To establish a reporter system for chondrogenic differentiation we then produced a stably transfected chondrogenic cell line based on RCJ3.1(C5.18) for further experiments, which expresses green fluorescence protein (EGFP) under the collagen type II promoter (pColl(II)-EGFP-5). This cell line permits convenient observation of green fluorescence as a marker for differentiation in lift cultures. The colony size of this cell line in agarose suspension cultures was reduced to 20-40% of control, when exposed to Wnt-1, 3a, 4, 7a, and 7b for 14 days. Similarly, reporter gene expression and the synthesis of cartilage-specific proteoglycans were inhibited by this group of Wnts. In contrast, pColl(II)-EGFP-5 cells exposed to Wnt-5a and Wnt-11 reached 140% of control, and reporter gene expression and proteoglycan synthesis were stimulated. The effects of Wnt-7a and Wnt-5a were additive in pColl(II)-EGFP-5 cells and some but not all Wnt effects were antagonized by the inhibition of proteoglycan sulfation with chlorate, by sFRP-2. which may modulate Wnt receptor binding, or by inhibitors of protein kinase C. These results suggest two functional Wnt subclasses that differentially regulate proliferation and chondrogenic differentiation in vitro which may have implications for cartilage differentiation in vivo. Since some, but not all Wnt effects were sensitive to inhibitors of proteoglycan synthesis or protein kinase C, multiple modes of signal transduction may be involved. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available