首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
   检索      


Changes in gene expression during senescence of adrenocortical cells in culture
Authors:Hornsby P J  Cheng C Y  Lala D S  Maghsoudlou S S  Raju S G  Yang L
Institution:

Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Medical College of Georgia, Augusta, GA 30912, U.S.A.

Abstract:Bovine adrenocortical cells undergo a process in which expression of steroid hydroxylases is lost progressively as a function of population doubling level (PDL) in culture. Each cytochrome P450 shows a characteristic rate of loss of expression as a function of PDL (in order of rates of loss: CYP11B > CYP21 > CYP17 > CYP11A). CYP11B and CYP21 require insulin-like growth factor I as well as cyclic AMP; these are the only factors required for induction in the primary culture. Middle- and later passage cells do not express CYP11B and CYP21 under the same conditions, but will do so when cells are grown in extracellular matrix Matrigel. In late-passage cells neither CYP17, CYP21, nor CYP11B are expressed, even in the presence of Matrigel; only CYP11A is expressed in late-passage cultures. When the different environmental factors required for induction of CYP11B and CYP21 are taken into account, induction of these genes disappears with the same kinetics as previously shown for CYP17 as a function of PDL. The primary cause of the loss of expression of these genes is likely to be a phenotypic switching event similar to that previously demonstrated for CYP17 by in situ hybridization. The mechanism of phenotypic switching is unknown. However, one HpaII site at −2.3 kb of CYP17 was methylated in the bovine adrenal cortex in vivo but showed rapid and complete demethylation when adrenocortical cells were placed in culture. This indicates a unique, reproducible, environmentally determined change in methylation, with as yet undetermined consequences. However, data from reporter constructs suggest that phenotypic switching does not result from a simple loss of regulatory factors that act within 2.5 kb of the promoter. Previous data suggested that SV40 T antigen may affect phenotypic switching, and thus that SV40 may be useful for the derivation of functional adrenocortical cell lines. Adaptation of methods previously used for bovine cells to human adrenocortical cells to produce SV40 T antigen-transfected clones yielded data indicating preservation of essential aspects of the human adrenocortical cell differentiated phenotype.
Keywords:
本文献已被 ScienceDirect PubMed 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号