Signal transducer and activator of transcription 1 (STAT1), a transcription factor known to participate in antiviral responses, acts as a tumor suppressor inhibiting cell growth and promoting apoptosis. To study the role of STAT1 in DNA damage-induced apoptosis in B lymphocytes, its active form, STAT1alpha, was specifically inhibited by the overexpression of STAT1beta, the STAT1alpha truncated inhibitory isoform. An episomal vector with a tetracycline-inducible bidirectional promoter was created to induce the expression of 2 proteins, STAT1beta and enhanced green fluorescence protein (EGFP). The same vector was used to overexpress STAT1alpha as a control. Expression of STAT1beta inhibited the phosphorylation, the DNA-binding activity, and the transcriptional activity of STAT1alpha, as well as the expression of STAT1alpha target genes such as p21WAF1/CIP1, TAP1, IRF1, and PKR. Inhibiting STAT1alpha by STAT1beta increased the growth rate of transfected cells and their resistance to fludarabine-induced apoptosis and cell cycle arrest. Overexpressing STAT1beta reversed the negative regulation of Mdm2 expression observed after treatment with interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma), which activates STAT1, or with fludarabine. Nuclear translocation of p53 after fludarabine treatment was decreased when STAT1beta was overexpressed, and it was increased when STAT1alpha was induced. Oligonucleotide pull-down experiments showed a physical STAT1/p53 interaction. Our results show that imbalance between the antiproliferative/proapoptotic isoform STAT1alpha and the proliferative isoform STAT1beta is likely to play a crucial role in the regulation of proliferation and apoptosis and that STAT1alpha may regulate p53 activity and sensitize B cells to fludarabine-induced apoptosis.
Many cell lines are sensitive to growth at low cell density and undergo apoptosis induced by oxidative stress if the cell density is decreased below a critical threshold. In stable transfection experiments this cell density-dependent growth may be the limiting factor, since during drug selection the cell density falls below the critical threshold, precluding outgrowth of transfected clones. We describe here a simple protocol for the establishment of stably transfected human B cell lines making use of the protective action of antioxidants. The protocol includes: (i) seeding the cells in medium supplemented with sodium pyruvate, alpha-thioglycerol and bathocuproine disulfonate; (ii) delaying the onset of dominant marker selection to improve recovery of the cells after electroporation. Stably transfected clones have thus been obtained from Burkitt's lymphoma lines, which have been regarded as untransfectable. Using this protocol the stable transfection efficiency with episomal plasmids approaches the transient transfection efficiency, indicating that virtually every transfected cell can be established as a stably transfected clone. This protocol should also prove useful for other cell lines, e.g. neuronal cells, having similar sensitivities to oxidative stress.
Cell lines were established by co-transfection of cloned M-ABA Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) DNA fragments with plasmids conferring resistance to dominant selective markers. A baby hamster kidney cel line carrying the HindIlI-I1 fragment exhibits a nuclear antigen of 82 000 daltons, serologicaily defined as EBV-determined nuclear antigen (EBNA) 1. Furthermore, a Rat-i cell line transfected with DNA of the clone pM 780-28 containing three large internal repeats (Bgl-U) and the adjacent BgMl-C fragment expresses a nuclear antigen of 82 000 daltons which can be visualized only by a subset of anti EBNA-positive human sera. Sera recognizing the 82 000-dalton protein of the transfected cell line reacted with a protein of the same size in the non-producer line Raji, designated as EBNA 2. Conversely, sera without reactivity to the 82 000-dalton protein failed to react with EBNA 2 of Raji cells. P3HR-1 and Daudi cells with large deletions in BgM-U and -C are devoid of EBNA 2. The data presented provide evidence that a second EBNA protein is encoded by the region of the EBV genome which is deleted in the non-transforming P3HR-1 strain.
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