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The resistance of macrophage-like tumour cell lines to growth inhibition by lipopolysaccharide and pertussis toxin
Authors:Yue  Xie   Stephanie   von Gavel   A. Ian  Cassady   Katryn J.  Stacey   Timothy L.  Dunn David A.  Hume
Affiliation:Centre for Molecular Biology and Biotechnology, University of Queensland
Abstract:Summary. The process of tumorigenesis is frequently associated with resistance to growth inhibition by physiological regulators of normal cells. Murine macrophage-like cell lines BAC1.2F5, RAW264, J774.1A and PU5/1.8 were resistant to growth inhibition by bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and pertussis toxin, agents that blocked growth of primary bone marrow-derived macrophages (BMDM) in the presence of macrophage colony-stimulating factor (CSF-1). The resistance of the CSF-1-dependent cell line BAC1.2F5 to growth inhibition by pertussis toxin argues against the possibility that pertussis toxin-sensitive G proteins are essential for the pathway of growth stimulation by CSF-1. Conversely, these data add further weight to the argument that LPS mediates some of its biological activities by mimicking the action of pertussis toxin and inhibiting G protein function. The resistance of cell lines to LPS and pertussis toxin was not correlated with any alteration in the expression of mRNA encoding any of three pertussis-toxin sensitive G protein α subunits. The pattern of G protein expression was consistent between primary cells and tumour cells, suggesting that this is a differentiation marker. In particular, Giα2 mRNA was expressed at remarkably high levels in all of the cells. The specificity of LPS resistance was investigated by studying down-regulation of CSF-1 binding and induction of protooncogene c-fos and tumour necrosis factor (TNF) mRNA. BAC1.2F5 cells were LPS-resistant in each of these assays. In CSF-1 binding. RAW264 and J774.1A responded in the same way as bone marrow-derived macrophages but required higher doses of LPS, whereas c-fos and TNF mRNA were induced in these cells at concentrations that did not inhibit growth. In PU5/1.8 cells, CSF-1 binding was already very low and was not further down-regulated, but c-fos and TNF mRNA was inducible by LPS. By contrast to primary macrophages, the cell lines did not respond to LPS with down-regulation of c-fms mRNA, which encodes the CSF-1 receptor. Hence, the resistance of macrophage-like tumour cells to LPS and pertussis toxin was specific to the pathways controlling growth, and was correlated with altered regulation of the CSF-1 receptor.
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