Modulation of interleukin-6-induced plasma protein secretion in hepatoma cells by p53 species.

1995 
Abstract The ability of p53 species (wild-type and mutant) to modulate the “differentiated” response of human hepatoma cell lines Hep3B and HepG2 to interleukin-6 (IL-6) was investigated. Transient transfection experiments were carried out in Hep3B and HepG2 cell cultures in which IL-6 was used to activate a β-fibrinogen (βFib) enhancer/reporter construct containing two copies of the 36-base pair IL-6-response element (IL-6RE) (pβFibCAT). Cotransfection with constitutive expression vectors for wild-type (wt) human or murine p53 inhibited the activation of the pβFibCAT reporter by IL-6 in both Hep3B and HepG2 cells. Several mutant p53 species either did not inhibit the activation of pβFibCAT or up-regulated the response. Hepatoma cell lines stably expressing the Val-135 temperature-sensitive mutant of murine p53 (wt-like at 32.5°C and mutant-like at 37°C) were derived from Hep3B cells and tested for the temperature-sensitive phenotype of their ability to synthesize and secrete fibrinogen and α-antichymotrypsin in response to IL-6. In an experimental protocol in which the parental Hep3B cells did not show a significant difference in plasma protein secretion at the two temperatures, hepatoma line 3 (p53Val-135) had a greater response to IL-6 at 37°C than parental Hep3B cells, while line 3 cells had a reduced response to IL-6 at 32.5°C. Similarly, hepatoma lines 1 and 2 (both p53Val-135) had reduced IL-6 responsiveness at 32.5°C, whereas line 22 (transfected with pSVneo alone) and the parental Hep3B cells did not. These data indicate that mutations in p53 contained in tumor cells can modulate the “differentiated” response of these cells to cytokines.
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