Transfection of vitamin D receptor cDNA into the monoblastoid cell line U937. The role of vitamin D3 in homotypic macrophage adhesion.

1994 
A 2-kB cDNA for the vitamin D receptor (VDR) was cloned in sense orientation into the plasmid pMEP4 (containing a cadmium-inducible metallothionein II promoter and a hygromycin-resistance selection gene) and transfected into monoblastoid U937 cells. The resultant cell line, DH39, expressed two species of VDR mRNA: 4.6-kb wild-type mRNA (present in native U937 cells or cells transfected with pMEP4 alone) and 2-kb transfected mRNA, which increased with cadmium treatment. Binding studies (using the active vitamin D metabolite, 1,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol (1,25-DHCC)) showed that DH39 cells contained five times more VDR per cell than controls, and ten times more after cadmium treatment. DH39 were sensitive to 1,25-DHCC: adding cadmium with 100 nM 1,25-DHCC for 72 h completely inhibited proliferation and induced concomitant differentiation. Unlike control cells, differentiation of DH39 by 1,25-DHCC led to homotypic cell-cell adhesion and formation of macrophage clusters. FACS analysis showed that 1,25-DHCC increased the number of cells expressing CD11b in both DH39 and controls, and the number of cells expressing CD11c in DH39. There was a quantitative increase in mean fluorescence intensity of expression of CD11a and CD18 in DH39. Northern blotting showed increased CD11a and CD18 mRNA in DH39. Ab inhibition of 1,25-DHCC-induced homotypic adhesion showed that CD11a/18 mediated the cell-cell clustering. CD50 expression was decreased on DH39, but the CD11a/18 ligand implicated was CD54. DH39 provides a model system not only for investigating the VDR role in 1,25-DHCC anti-proliferative effects, but also for regulation of homotypic macrophage adhesion mechanisms that are important in disease pathogenesis.
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