Homologous and heterologous Gap‐junctional intercellular communication in v‐raf‐, v‐myc‐, and v‐raf/v‐myc‐transduced rat liver epithelial cell lines
- 1 January 1992
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Molecular Carcinogenesis
- Vol. 5 (4) , 301-310
- https://doi.org/10.1002/mc.2940050411
Abstract
We examined gap‐junctional intercellular communication (GJIC) in a series of normal and v‐raf‐, v‐myc‐, and v‐raf/v‐myc‐transduced rat liver epithelial (RLE) cell lines using the scrape loading‐dye transfer and fluorescence‐recovery‐after‐photobleaching (FRAP) assays. Whereas the normal RLE cell line, the control helper virus‐transduced cell line, and the v‐myc‐transduced cell line all showed excellent GJIC, the v‐raf‐transduced cell lines displayed decreasing levels of GJIC associated with their increasing tumorigenicity. The v‐raf/v‐myc‐transformed cell lines showed the lowest levels of GJIC and were also the most tumorigenic. Heterologous GJIC of these oncogenetransduced cell lines was also compared with that in the normal RLE cells. A modified FRAP assay, using fluorescent‐microbead labeling to identify the oncogene‐transduced cell from surrounding normal cells, was used to quantify the heterologous GJIC. The v‐raf/v‐myc‐transformed RLE cells had no heterologous communication with the normal RLE cells, whereas v‐raf‐ and v‐myc‐transduced cell lines maintained heterologous GJIC. Northern analysis showed that connexin 43 was the only gap‐junction protein message expressed in these cell lines; connexin 32 and connexin 26 were not expressed. The levels of connexin 43 mRNA expression were relatively unchanged in all cell lines, suggesting that the reduction in GJIC was primarily at the posttranslational level. These findings suggest that reduction of homologous GJIC in v‐raf‐ and v‐raf/v‐myc‐transformed RLE cells is linked to their tumorigenic potential. Furthermore, the loss of heterologous GJIC, which we observed only in the v‐raf/v‐myc‐transformed cells, might release such cells from the growth‐regulating effects of surrounding normal cells, possibly contributing to their enhanced tumorigenic potential.Keywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- Development of an in vitro model of tumor progression using v-raf and v-raf/v-myc transformed rat liver epithelial cells: Correlation of tumorigenicity with the downregulation of specific proteinsMolecular Carcinogenesis, 1990
- Neoplastic transformation and lineage switching of rat liver epithelial cells by retrovirus‐associated oncogenesMolecular Carcinogenesis, 1988
- Polyomavirus middle T antigen downregulates junctional cell-to-cell communication.Molecular and Cellular Biology, 1987
- Modification of gap junctions in cells transformed by a temperature-sensitive mutant of Rous sarcoma virusThe Journal of Membrane Biology, 1986
- Modulation of cell communication and carcinogenesis.The Japanese Journal of Physiology, 1985
- Intercellular communication and the control of growth: XII. Alteration of junctional permeability by simian virus 40. roles of the large and smallT antigensThe Journal of Membrane Biology, 1984
- Intercellular communication and the control of growth: X. Alteration of junctional permeability by thesrc gene. A study with temperature-sensitive mutant Rous sarcoma virusThe Journal of Membrane Biology, 1984
- Tumorigenic conversion of primary embryo fibroblasts requires at least two cooperating oncogenesNature, 1983
- Rapid and reversible reduction of junctional permeability in cells infected with a temperature-sensitive mutant of avian sarcoma virus.The Journal of cell biology, 1981
- The Sequential Analysis of Cancer DevelopmentAdvances in Cancer Research, 1980