Role of kit-ligand in proliferation and suppression of apoptosis in mast cells: basis for radiosensitivity of white spotting and steel mutant mice.
Open Access
- 1 June 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Vol. 179 (6) , 1777-1787
- https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.179.6.1777
Abstract
The receptor tyrosine kinase Kit and its cognate ligand KL/steel factor are encoded at the white spotting (W) and Steel (Sl) loci of the mouse, respectively. Mutations at both the W and the Sl loci affect hematopoiesis including the stem cell hierarchy, erythropoiesis, and mast cells, as well as gametogenesis and melanogenesis. In addition, mutant mice display an increased sensitivity to lethal doses of irradiation. The role of KL/c-kit in cell proliferation and survival under conditions of growth factor-deprivation and gamma-irradiation was studied by using bone marrow-derived mast cells (BMMC) as a model. Whereas apoptosis induced by growth factor deprivation in BMMC is a stochastic process and follows zero order kinetics, gamma-irradiation-induced apoptosis is an inductive process and follows higher order kinetics. In agreement with these results, gamma-irradiation-induced apoptosis in BMMC was shown to be dependent on p53 whereas apoptosis induced by deprivation is partly dependent on p53, implying that there are other mechanisms mediating apoptosis in KL-deprived BMMC. In the presence and in the absence of serum, KL stimulated proliferation by promoting cell cycle progression. The presence of KL was required only during the early part of the G1 phase for entry into the S phase. At concentrations lower than those required for proliferation, KL suppressed apoptosis induced by both growth factor-deprivation and gamma-irradiation, and internucleosomal DNA fragmentation characteristic of apoptosis. The ability of KL to suppress apoptosis was independent of the phase of the cell cycle in which the cells were irradiated and suppression of apoptosis was a prerequisite for subsequent cell cycle progression. Moreover, addition of KL to gamma-irradiated and growth factor-deprived cells could be delayed for up to 1 h after irradiation or removal of growth factors when cells became irreversibly committed to apoptosis. KL and IL-3 induce suppression of apoptosis in mast cells by different mechanisms based on the observations of induction of bcl-2 gene expression by IL-3 but not by KL. It is proposed that the increased sensitivity of W and Sl mutant mice to lethal irradiation results from paucity of the apoptosis suppressing and proliferative effects of KL.Keywords
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Bcl-2 heterodimerizes in vivo with a conserved homolog, Bax, that accelerates programed cell deathCell, 1993
- bcl-x, a bcl-2-related gene that functions as a dominant regulator of apoptotic cell deathCell, 1993
- Thymocyte apoptosis induced by p53-dependent and independent pathwaysNature, 1993
- p53 is required for radiation-induced apoptosis in mouse thymocytesNature, 1993
- The Steel factorDevelopmental Biology, 1992
- Murine mast cell colony formation supported by IL‐3, IL‐4, and recombinant rat stem cell factor, ligand for c‐kitJournal of Cellular Physiology, 1991
- Wild-type p53 induces apoptosis of myeloid leukaemic cells that is inhibited by interleukin-6Nature, 1991
- Programmed cell death: Apoptosis and oncogenesisCell, 1991
- Fibroblast‐dependent growth of mouse mast cells in vitro: Duplication of mast cell depletion in mutant mice of w/wv genotypeJournal of Cellular Physiology, 1988
- Survival of mononuclear phagocytes depends on a lineage-specific growth factor that the differentiated cells selectively destroyCell, 1982