Differential effects of transforming growth factor on cell cycle regulatory molecules in human myeloid leukemia cells.

Journal: Oncogene
Published:
Abstract

In this report we have studied the mechanism by which Transforming Growth Factor beta (TGF beta) inhibits growth of human myeloid leukemia cell lines. TGF beta 1 arrested cells in G1 phase and significantly downregulated the expression of cyclin D2, cyclin D3, cdk4, cyclin A, and cdk2. The downregulation of the molecules resulted in approximately 50-90% decrease of the molecule-dependent kinase activity, varying with each molecule. Although treatment of cells with TGF beta 1 up-regulated accumulation of p27(kip1) in both nucleus and cytoplasm, the association of the p27(kip1) with cdk2, cyclin A, cyclin D2, cyclin D3, and cdk4 was markedly down-regulated, suggesting that p27(kip1) is not responsible for the downregulation of the kinase activity. In contrast, TGF beta 1 upregulated cyclin E-associated p27(kip1) with no effect on the expression of cyclin E. p27(kip1)-immunodepletion upregulated cyclin E-dependent kinase activity by more than 10-fold in TGF beta 1-treated cells but not in proliferating cells; whereas immunodepletion of p27(kip1) from cdk2-immunoprecipitates markedly downregulated cdk2 kinase activity in the lysates extracted from both proliferating and TGF beta-treated cells. Consistent with this observation, TGF beta 1 and p27(kip1) antisense cDNA had a synergistic or additive inhibitory effect on cdk2 but not cyclin E-dependent kinase activity. Our data suggest that (1) TGF beta 1-mediated growth inhibition is accomplished through multiple pathways and (2) p27(kip1) has opposing effects on cdk2 and cyclin E activity in response to TGF beta 1.

Authors
X Hu, X Zhang, Q Zhong, A Fisher, M Bryington, K Zuckerman
Relevant Conditions

Retinoblastoma, Leukemia