Homeobox (HOX) genes control axial specification during mammalian development and also regulate skin morphogenesis. Although selected HOX genes are variably expressed in leukemias and kidney and colon cancer cell lines, their relationship with the neoplastic phenotype remains unclear. In both normal development and neoplastic transformation, HOX target genes are largely unknown. We investigated the expression and function of HOXB cluster genes in human melanoma. The HOXB7 gene was constitutively expressed in all 25 melanoma cell lines and analyzed under both normal and serum-starved conditions, as well as in in vivo primary and metastatic melanoma cells; conversely, HOXB7 was expressed in proliferating but not quiescent normal melanocytes. Treatment of melanoma cell lines with antisense oligomers targeting HOXB7 mRNA markedly inhibited cell proliferation and specifically abolished expression of basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) mRNA. Band shift and cotransfection experiments showed that HOXB7 directly transactivates the bFGF gene through one out of five putative homeodomain binding sites present in its promoter. These novel findings indicate a key role for constitutive HOXB7 expression in melanoma cell proliferation via bFGF. The results also raise the possibility that growth factor genes are critical HOX target genes in other developmental and/or neoplastic cell systems.
Human peripheral blood granulocytes were analyzed for expression of interleukin-6 (IL-6) using reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and in situ hybridization. Neutrophil granulocytes from healthy donors were shown to express variable levels of IL-6. This expression was rapidly down-regulated after the removal of the cells from the circulating blood. In vitro culture of neutrophils abolished IL-6 expression, which could be reactivated by addition of GM-CSF to the culture medium. Constitutive expression of IL-6 was instead demonstrated in eosinophil granulocytes purified from normal donors and from a hypereosinophilic patient. In situ hybridization of unstimulated granulocytes confirmed that IL-6 expression occurs both in eosinophils and in neutrophils from peripheral blood. These findings show that granulocytes can actively contribute to cytokine expression in the peripheral blood and suggest their role in the afferent limb of the immune response, since by IL-6 production they might modulate T- and B- lymphocyte functions, granulocyte self-priming, and endothelial interaction.
Human peripheral blood granulocytes were analyzed for expression of interleukin-6 (IL-6) using reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and in situ hybridization. Neutrophil granulocytes from healthy donors were shown to express variable levels of IL-6. This expression was rapidly down-regulated after the removal of the cells from the circulating blood. In vitro culture of neutrophils abolished IL-6 expression, which could be reactivated by addition of GM-CSF to the culture medium. Constitutive expression of IL-6 was instead demonstrated in eosinophil granulocytes purified from normal donors and from a hypereosinophilic patient. In situ hybridization of unstimulated granulocytes confirmed that IL-6 expression occurs both in eosinophils and in neutrophils from peripheral blood. These findings show that granulocytes can actively contribute to cytokine expression in the peripheral blood and suggest their role in the afferent limb of the immune response, since by IL-6 production they might modulate T- and B- lymphocyte functions, granulocyte self-priming, and endothelial interaction.
Human melanoma ceil lines express many different cytokines [l], including l~photoxin (LT), the production of which has been considered to be restricted to cells of the lymphocytic lineage in response to cell activation. LT expression by melanomas is constitutive and characterized by the presence of two mRNAs. In the present paper we report an analysis of the origin of the two LT-specific transcripts in four human melanoma cell lines at different stages of progression and in four melanocytic cell lines. Reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) performed with primers lying in the first and fourth exons and hybridization with intron probes showed a spliced and a full-unspliced LT mRNA. This pattern was also displayed by one out of four melanocyte cell lines. Western blot analysis indicated that LT RNA is properly translated to a 23-25 kDa protein and immunocytochemistry showed its localization within the cytoplasm and on the cell membrane.
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