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Serum and forskolin cooperate to promote G1 progression in Schwann cells by differentially regulating cyclin D1, cyclin E1, and p27 Kip expression
Author(s) -
Iacovelli Jared,
Lopera Jorge,
Bott Marga,
Baldwin Elizabeth,
Khaled Annette,
Uddin Nizam,
FernandezValle Cristina
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
glia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.954
H-Index - 164
eISSN - 1098-1136
pISSN - 0894-1491
DOI - 10.1002/glia.20578
Subject(s) - forskolin , neuregulin , biology , cyclin d1 , microbiology and biotechnology , cyclin a , cell cycle , schwann cell , cancer research , cyclin e , medicine , endocrinology , signal transduction , stimulation , cell , biochemistry
Abstract Proliferation of Schwann cells in vitro , unlike most mammalian cells, is not induced by serum alone but additionally requires cAMP elevation and mitogenic stimulation. How these agents cooperate to promote progression through the G1 phase of the cell cycle is unclear. We studied the integrative effects of these compounds on receptor‐mediated signaling pathways and regulators of G1 progression. We show that serum alone induces strong cyclical expression of cyclin D1 and E1, 6 and 12 h after addition, respectively. Serum also promotes strong but transient erbB2, ERK, and Akt phosphorylation, but Schwann cells remain arrested in G1 due to high levels of the inhibitor, p27 Kip . Forskolin with serum promotes G1 progression in 22% of Schwann cells between 18 and 24 h by inducing a steady decline in p27 Kip levels that reaches a nadir at 12 h coinciding with peak cyclin E1 expression. Forskolin also delays neuregulin‐induced loss of erbB2 receptors allowing strong acute activation of PI3K, sustained erbB2 phosphorylation and G1 progression in 31% of Schwann cells. We find that the ability of forskolin to decrease p27 Kip is associated with its ability to decrease Krox‐20 expression that is induced by serum and further increased by neuregulin. Our results explain why serum is required but insufficient to stimulate proliferation and identify two routes by which forskolin promotes proliferation in the presence of serum and neuregulin. These findings provide insights into how G1 progression and, cell cycle arrest leading to myelination are regulated in Schwann cells. © 2007 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.

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