Differential gene expression in neoplastic and human papillomavirus-immortalized oral keratinocytes
Open Access
- 21 January 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Oncogene
- Vol. 18 (3) , 827-831
- https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.onc.1202328
Abstract
We have previously demonstrated that normal human oral keratinocytes immortalized by transfection with human papillomavirus type-16 Dna became tumorigenic after exposure to a chemical carcinogen. In an effort to detect differentially regulated genes associated with this transition from the immortal to the malignant phenotype, we employed representational differences analysis (a PCR-coupled subtractive hybridization technique). After analysing 50 colonies, 12 putative messages were identified. Northern analysis comparison using the identified cDNAs as probes was made between normal human oral keratinocyte, papillomavirus-immortalized human oral keratinocytes (HOK-16B), a neoplastic cell line derived from HOK-16B (HOK-16B-BaP-T) and the human oral cancer cell lines Hep-2, SCC-9 and Tu-177. We found that mRNAs encoding for cyclophilin A, c-myc binding protein 1, the heat shock protein 90α and one unknown transcript were up-regulated in the oral cancer cell lines analysed as well as in HOK-16B cells. We also detected a downregulation of the mRNAs encoding the skin-derived antileukoproteinase SKALP/elafin, the translationally regulated p23 protein and one unknown transcript. Whether these messages are associated to the neoplastic conversion of human keratinocytes remains to be determined.Keywords
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