scholarly journals Determination of tissue-type plasminogen-activator mRNA in human and non-human cell lines by dot-blot hybridization

1985 ◽  
Vol 231 (2) ◽  
pp. 309-313 ◽  
Author(s):  
G Opdenakker ◽  
A Billiau ◽  
G Volckaert ◽  
P de Somer

A labelled cDNA clone was used in DNA-RNA hybridization on nitrocellulose filter paper (dot-blot technique) to detect and quantify mRNA for endogenous tissue plasminogen activator (PA) in cell extracts and samples of RNA purification runs. Although, for detection purposes, the assay was less sensitive than translation in Xenopus oocytes, it was at least as reliable and much more convenient for the purpose of quantitative determination. In particular, the technique was used to study the kinetics of PA mRNA formation in a human melanoma cell line (Bowes) after exposure to the tumour promoter 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate (TPA). Incubation of the cells with TPA resulted in a 15-20-fold increase in cellular PA mRNA content. The effect was time- and dose-dependent: the increase in PA-specific mRNA was clearly visible as early as 4 h after initiation of TPA treatment in Bowes cells. It was blocked completely by pretreatment of the cells with actinomycin D, indicating that TPA caused enhancement of synthesis of PA mRNA rather than inhibition of PA mRNA degradation. The use of the nitrocellulose dot-blot technique also revealed that two non-human cell lines produce mRNAs which cross-react with the human PA mRNA, namely the mouse melanoma cell line B16 and the rat brain-tumour cell line, RT4-71-1. TPA was found to exert similar stimulatory effects on the synthesis of mRNAs in these cell lines as in Bowes cells.

1987 ◽  
Author(s):  
T Sakai ◽  
K Okada ◽  
H Bando ◽  
S Ueshima ◽  
N Tanaka ◽  
...  

The human melanoma cell line (Bowes) secretes tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) into the culture medium. As reported previously, the secretion of t-PA was depressed and t-PA was accumulated in the intracellular compartment at alternative sodium and potassium ion concentrations and also in the presence of monensin, an ionophore for monovalent cations. In the present study, the secretion and intracellular distribution of t-PA were investigated by radioisotope labeling and fractionation of the cell organelles under normal and monensin-treated conditions. Cell homogenate was fractioneted by discontinuous sucrose density gradient ultracentrifugation. The plasminogen activator (PA) activity or t-PA antigenicity in these fractions was not uniformly distributed, but rather localized in those fractions where cell organelles were rich. This implied that t-PA was enclosed by the intracellular membranous system. Cells were incubated with 35s-methionine and/or 3H-mannose to produce labeled intracellular glycoproteins including t-PA and its premature intermediates, which were separated by immunological adsorption to rabbit anti t-PA IgG-protein A Sepharose. Pulse labeling with 35s-methionine (3 min) demonstrated that intracellular t-PA was transported from the heavier fractions (rER), via intermediate ones (Golgi complex), to lighter ones. The radioactivity of the intracellular t-PA reached a maximum in 30 min, while that of secreted t-PA was observed in 30 min and increased linearly at least for the following 20 min. Enzymography revealed the major intracellular PA activity at 72 kDa and minor activity at 50 kDa. Monensin treatment (10 μM, 6 hr) caused accumulation of the 72 kDa component which was immunologically homologous to secreted t-PA. After long term (3 hr) simultaneous 35s-methionine and 3H-mannose labeling, the radioactivity ratio (3H/35S) the intracellular t-PA was increased in the presence of monensin. These results suggest that some sugar chain(s) in the t-PA molecule are of high mannose type, which is interfered with by monensin in the course of the intracellular processing and transport of t-PA.


Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 954-954
Author(s):  
Kotaro Shide ◽  
Takuro Kameda ◽  
Masaaki Sekine ◽  
Ayako Kamiunten ◽  
Keiichi Akizuki ◽  
...  

Abstract Calreticulin (CALR) exon 9 mutations were reported in about two-thirds of JAK2 or MPL mutation negative ET and PMF patients. The mutations cause frameshifts that result in proteins with novel C-terminus.Retrovirus-mediated gene transfer into cell lines and mouse bone marrow (BM) cells is a common technique, but the expression level is very high compared to the physiological expression.We investigated the effects of physiological expression of mutant CALR using CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing techniques for cell lines, and as for the mouse model, we generated a transgenic mice (TG) expressing human CALR del52 mutant. We used two human cell lines expressing MPL: human acute megakaryoblastic leukemia cell line CMK11-5 which expressed endogenous MPL, and F-36P-MPL cell line which was generated by introducing MPL to GM-CSF-dependent erythroleukemia cell line F-36P. Plasmids coexpressing hCas9 and single-guide RNA were prepared by ligating oligonucleotides (5'-CACCGACAAGAAACGCAAAGAGGAGG-3', 5'-AAACCCTCCTCTTTGCGTTTCTTGTC-3') for the target sequence of human CALR exon 9 into pX330. The plasmids were introduced with a electroporator to each of the cell lines. After limiting dilution cloning, we identified cell lines which have indel mutation at the target site. We produced two types of CMK11-5 subline knocked in a CALR mutation, namely CALR del25 CMK cells and CALR del25/del17 CMK cells, respectively. The former lacks 25 bases in one CALR allele, causing a frameshift that results in a protein resembling human CALR mutant, while the latter lacks an additional 17 bases in another allele in CALR exon 9 and induces a frameshift that causes a deletion in CALR exon 9. Both kinds of CALR mutant CMK11-5 cells showed increased cell proliferation compared to WT cells. We also produced one type of F-36P-MPL subline, CALR del1/ins1 F-36P-MPL cells which had 1 base deletion in one CALR allele resembling human mutation and 1 base insertion in another allele. Though the growth of this subline in the presence of GM-CSF was comparable to WT cells, it showed GM-CSF independent autonomous cell growth. We generated TG mice expressing human CALR del52 mutant driven by the murine H2Kb promoter. We compared the expression level of human CALR mRNA in TG BM cells with the expression of endogenous WT CALR in human cell lines (CMK11-5, F-36P-MPL, CHRF288) using Rn18s as an endogenous control. The expression of human CALR in TG BM was approximately 0.6 times that of endogenous WT CALR in human cell lines, and the physiological expression level was obtained. They exhibited thrombocytosis, with platelet (PLT) counts as high as 2,000 x 109/L. Leukocyte number and the proportion of granulocytes and T and B lymphocytes, were comparable to WT mice. CALR mutation had no impact on Hb level or spleen weight. There was a striking difference in the number of megakaryocytes (Mgks), which was 2-fold higher in BM from TG mice than in WT mice. The TG Mgks were also more mature, with larger diameter, and contained higher number of alpha-granules compared to WT cells. In one year of observation, there is no fibrosis in BM. These observations showed that TG developed human ET-like disease. The survival of TG mice was comparable to that of WT mice. The disease phenotype was transplantable into WT recipient mice. To characterize in detail the impact of MPNs induced by the CALR del52 mutant, we evaluated the frequencies of HSCs and progenitors in BM. The frequency of both LT-HSC and ST-HSC in BM was higher inTG mice compared to WT mice. The frequencies of progenitors (CMP, MEP, and MKP) were also greater in BM from TG mice than from WT mice. However, BM cells did not have enhanced replating capacity. We next examined whether or not ruxolitinib (RUX) treatment ameliorated thrombocytosis in TG mice. Either 90 mg/kg bid of RUX or vehicle was administrated to TG mice for 4 weeks.TG mice treated with vehicle showed a mean 16% increase in PLT count during the treatment period, probably due to the disease progression. RUX treatment attenuated the increase in the number of PLTs in TG mice by a mean of 22%, but the overall count was still higher than that in WT mice. BM sections showed that RUX reduced the Mgks number in TG. In summary, physiological expression of CALR mutant increases cell growth and cytokine independency in human cell lines expressing MPL, and develops ET in mice. RUX therapy attenuated the increased numbers of peripheral blood PLTs and BM Mgks, and ameliorated CALR mutation-induced ET. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


1985 ◽  
Vol 38 (5) ◽  
pp. 577-584
Author(s):  
O. Matsuo ◽  
H. Kikuchi ◽  
S. Ueshima ◽  
K. Okada ◽  
C. Matsuo ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 5 (5) ◽  
pp. 172472 ◽  
Author(s):  
Setsuko Shioda ◽  
Fumio Kasai ◽  
Ken Watanabe ◽  
Kohei Kawakami ◽  
Azusa Ohtani ◽  
...  

Human cell lines have been used in a variety of research fields as an in vitro model. These cells are all derived from human tissue samples, thus there is a possibility of virus infection. Virus tests are routinely performed in clinical practice, but are limited in cell lines. In this study, we investigated 15 kinds of viruses in 844 human cell lines registered at the Japanese Collection of Research Bioresources (JCRB) Cell Bank. Our real-time PCR analysis revealed that six viruses, EBV, HTLV-1, HBV, B19V, HHV-6 and HHV-7, were detected in 43 cell lines. Of them, 20 cell lines were transformed by intentional infection in vitro with EBV or HTLV-1. Viruses in the other 23 cell lines and one EBV transformed cell line are derived from an in vivo infection, including five de novo identifications of EBV, B19V or HHV-7 carriers. Among them, 17 cell lines were established from patients diagnosed with virus-associated diseases. However, the other seven cell lines originated from in vivo cells unrelated to disease or cellular tropism. Our approach to screen for a set of 15 viruses in each cell line has worked efficiently to identify these rare cases. Virus tests in cell lines contribute not only to safety assessments but also to investigation of in vivo viral infection which can be a characteristic feature of cell lines.


1996 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 53-65 ◽  
Author(s):  
C Strahl ◽  
E H Blackburn

The ribonucleoprotein telomerase, a specialized cellular reverse transcriptase, synthesizes one strand of the telomeric DNA of eukaryotes. We analyzed telomere maintenance in two immortalized human cell lines: the B-cell line JY616 and the T-cell line Jurkat E6-1, and determined whether known inhibitors of retroviral reverse transcriptases could perturb telomere lengths and growth rates of these cells in culture. Dideoxyguanosine (ddG) caused reproducible, progressive telomere shortening over several weeks of passaging, after which the telomeres stabilized and remained short. However, the prolonged passaging in ddG caused no observable effects on cell population doubling rates or morphology. Azidothymidine (AZT) caused progressive telomere shortening in some but not all T- and B-cell cultures. Telomerase activity was present in both cell lines and was inhibited in vitro by ddGTP and AZT triphosphate. Prolonged passaging in arabinofuranyl-guanosine, dideoxyinosine (ddI), dideoxyadenosine (ddA), didehydrothymidine (d4T), or phosphonoformic acid (foscarnet) did not cause reproducible telomere shortening or decreased cell growth rates or viabilities. Combining AZT, foscarnet, and/or arabinofuranyl-guanosine with ddG did not significantly augment the effects of ddG alone. Strikingly, with or without inhibitors, telomere lengths were often highly unstable in both cell lines and varied between parallel cell cultures. We propose that telomere lengths in these T- and B-cell lines are determined by both telomerase and telomerase-independent mechanisms.


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