
Germ line c-myc is not down-regulated by loss or exclusion of activating factors in myc-induced macrophage tumors.
Author(s) -
Susan E. Mango,
Gregory D. Schuler,
M. E. R. Steele,
Michael Cole
Publication year - 1989
Publication title -
molecular and cellular biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.14
H-Index - 327
eISSN - 1067-8824
pISSN - 0270-7306
DOI - 10.1128/mcb.9.8.3482
Subject(s) - biology , microbiology and biotechnology , gene , exon , gene expression , endogeny , hypersensitive site , cell culture , retrovirus , regulation of gene expression , cancer research , promoter , genetics , biochemistry
As in tumors with c-myc chromosomal translocations, c-myc retrovirus-induced monocyte tumors constitutively express an activated form of c-myc (the proviral gene), whereas the normal endogenous c-myc genes are transcriptionally silent. Treatment of these retrovirus-induced tumor cells with a number of bioactive chemicals and growth factors that are known to induce c-myc expression in cells of the monocyte lineage failed to induce the endogenous c-myc gene. In contrast, the same treatments induced the c-fos gene in both tumors and a control macrophage line. To investigate c-myc suppression further, a normal copy of the human c-myc gene was introduced into tumor and control cell lines by using a retrovirus with self-inactivating long terminal repeats. This transduced normal gene was expressed at equivalent levels in all cells, regardless of the state of endogenous c-myc gene expression, and was strongly induced by agents that induce the normal gene in the control cells. These results indicate that the signal transduction pathways that normally activate the c-myc gene are functional in myc-induced tumor cells and suggest that endogenous c-myc is actively suppressed. An examination of the c-myc locus itself showed that the lack of transcriptional activity correlated with the absence of several prominent DNase I-hypersensitive sites in the 5'-flanking region of the gene but without loss of general DNase sensitivity. Furthermore, analysis of 22 methylation-sensitive restriction enzyme sites in the 5'-flanking region, first exon, and first intron indicated that the silent c-myc genes remained in the same unmethylated state as did actively expressed genes. Thus, c-myc suppression does not appear to result from the most frequently described mechanisms of gene inactivation.