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Tetracycline-inducible protein expression in pancreatic cancer cells: effects of CapG overexpression

Authors :
Eithne Costello
Rosalind E. Jenkins
Sarah Tonack
Taoufik Nedjadi
Sabina Patel
Mehdi Jalali
John P. Neoptolemos
Christopher E. Goldring
Source :
World journal of gastroenterology. 17(15)
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

AIM: To establish stable tetracycline-inducible pancreatic cancer cell lines. METHODS: Suit-2, MiaPaca-2, and Panc-1 cells were transfected with a second generation reverse tetracycline-controlled transactivator protein (rtTA2S-M2), under the control of either a cytomegalovirus (CMV) or a chicken β-actin promoter, and the resulting clones were characterised. RESULTS: Use of the chicken (β-actin) promoter proved superior for both the production and maintenance of doxycycline-inducible cell lines. The system proved versatile, enabling transient inducible expression of a variety of genes, including GST-P, CYP2E1, S100A6, and the actin capping protein, CapG. To determine the physiological utility of this system in pancreatic cancer cells, stable inducible CapG expressors were established. Overexpressed CapG was localised to the cytoplasm and the nuclear membrane, but was not observed in the nucleus. High CapG levels were associated with enhanced motility, but not with changes to the cell cycle, or cellular proliferation. In CapG-overexpressing cells, the levels and phosphorylation status of other actin-moduating proteins (Cofilin and Ezrin/Radixin) were not altered. However, preliminary analyses suggest that the levels of other cellular proteins, such as ornithine aminotransferase and enolase, are altered upon CapG induction. CONCLUSION: We have generated pancreatic-cancer derived cell lines in which gene expression is fully controllable.

Details

ISSN :
22192840
Volume :
17
Issue :
15
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
World journal of gastroenterology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....789a1a6dd53d2fb91e53cc1533f0fd1c