In patients with Gardner's syndrome adrenal tumors leading to hormonal excess should be considered. Whether mutations in the APC gene have implications in sporadic adrenal tumorigenesis needs to be proven.
In LLC-PK, cells, urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) mRNA has a short half-life of 70 min. We have previously demonstrated that most of the regulatory regions responsible for the rapid turnover of uPA mRNA in LLC-PK, cells reside in its 3' untranslated region (3' UTR), where there are at least three regulatory sites, one of which is A+U-rich. This A+U-rich sequence mediates uPA mRNA stabilization induced by protein kinase C (PKC) down-regulation. In this work, we found that uPA mRNA is rather stable in MDA-MB-231 cells with a half-life of 17 h. We compared the stability of hybrid globin mRNA containing different parts of uPA mRNA in its 3' UTR and found that the A+U-rich sequence of uPA mRNA renders otherwise stable globin mRNA unstable in LLC-PK, cells but not in MDA-MB-231 cells. We identified a cytoplasmic protein of 40 kDa (p40) which specifically interacts with the A+U-rich sequence. Levels of p40 activity as detected by ultraviolet cross-linking were higher in MDA-MB-231 and PKC-down-regulated LLC-PK, cells than in untreated LLC-PK, cells. Prior treatment of the cytoplasm with a specific antibody against heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein C (hnRNP C) significantly reduced p40 activity. These results suggest a correlation between the A+U-rich sequence-dependent uPA mRNA stabilization in vivo and the binding of hnRNP C to the A+U-rich sequence in vitro.
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