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Query: UMLS:C0029463 (
osteosarcoma
)
16,637
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Antibodies against non-
histone
chromosomal proteins for 89Sr-induced
osteogenic sarcoma
(mouse) were prepared by immunization of rabbits. The immunoreactivity of this antigen was then compared with those of non-
histone
chromosomal proteins from Ehrlich ascites tumor, normal mouse liver, and calf thymus by the method of quantitative microcomplement fixation. The non-
histone
chromosomal proteins of 98Sr-induced
osteogenic sarcoma
, fractionated by hydroxylapatite chromatography, exhibited significant affinity for the antibodies. Similar proteins from Ehrlich ascites tumor, normal mouse liver, or calf thymus were virtually inactive, indicating the tissue-specificity of 89Sr-induced
osteogenic sarcoma
proteins.
...
PMID:Immunospecificity of non-histone chromosomal proteins in 89Sr-induced osteogenic sarcoma (mouse). 7 Apr 27
Primary cultures of calvarial derived normal diploid osteoblasts undergo a developmental expression of genes reflecting growth, extracellular matrix maturation, and mineralization during development of multilayered nodules having a bone tissue-like organization. Scanning electron microscopy of the developing cultures indicates the transition from the uniform distribution of cuboidal osteoblasts to multilayered nodules of smaller cells with a pronounced orientation of perinodular cells towards the apex of the nodule. Ultrastructural analysis of the nodule by transmission electron microscopy indicates that the deposition of mineral is confined to the extracellular matrix where cells appear more osteocytic. The cell body contains rough endoplasmic reticulum and golgi, while these intracellular organelles are not present in the developing cellular processes. To understand the regulation of temporally expressed genes requires an understanding of which genes are selectively expressed on a single cell basis as the bone tissue-like organization develops. In situ hybridization analysis using 35S labelled
histone
gene probes, together with 3H-thymidine labelling and autoradiography, indicate that greater than 98% of the pre-confluent osteoblasts are proliferating. By two weeks, both the foci of multilayered cells and internodular cell regions have down-regulated cell growth associated genes. Post-proliferatively, but not earlier, initial expression of both osteocalcin and osteopontin are restricted to the multilayered nodules where all cells exhibit expression. While total mRNA levels for osteopontin and osteocalcin are coordinately upregulated with an increase in mineral deposition, in situ hybridization has revealed that expression of osteocalcin and osteopontin occurs predominantly in cells associated with the developing nodules. In contrast, proliferating rat
osteosarcoma
cells (ROS 17/2.8) concomitantly express histone H4, along with osteopontin and osteocalcin. These in situ analyses of gene expression during osteoblast growth and differentiation at the single cell level establish that a population of proliferating calvarial-derived cells subsequently expresses osteopontin and osteocalcin in cells developing into multilayered nodules with a tissue-like organization.
...
PMID:Expression of cell growth and bone specific genes at single cell resolution during development of bone tissue-like organization in primary osteoblast cultures. 164 67
Establishing regulatory mechanisms that mediate proliferation of osteoblasts while restricting expression of genes associated with mature bone cell phenotypic properties to post-proliferative cells is fundamental to understanding skeletal development. To gain insight into relationships between growth control and the developmental expression of genes during osteoblast differentiation, we have examined expression of three classes of genes during the cell cycle of normal diploid rat calvarial-derived osteoblasts and rat
osteosarcoma
cells (ROS 17/2.8): cell cycle and growth-related genes (e.g.,
histone
), genes that encode major structural proteins (e.g., actin and vimentin), and genes related to the biosynthesis, organization, and mineralization of the bone extracellular matrix (e.g., alkaline phosphatase, collagen I, osteocalcin, and osteopontin). In normal diploid osteoblasts as well as in
osteosarcoma
cells we found that
histone
genes, required for cell progression, are selectively expressed during S phase. All other genes studied were constitutively expressed both at the transcriptional and posttranscriptional levels. Alkaline phosphatase, an integral membrane protein in both osteoblasts and
osteosarcoma
cells, exhibited only minimal changes in activity during the osteoblast and
osteosarcoma
cell cycles. Our findings clearly indicate that despite the loss of normal proliferation-differentiation interrelationships in
osteosarcoma
cells, cell cycle regulation or constitutive expression of growth and phenotypic genes is maintained.
...
PMID:Expression of cell growth and bone phenotypic genes during the cell cycle of normal diploid osteoblasts and osteosarcoma cells. 782 87
The role of the vitamin K dependent proteins, osteocalcin which is bone specific and matrix Gla protein (MGP) found in many tissues, has been studied by inhibition of synthesis of their characteristic amino acid, gamma-carboxyglutamic acid (Gla) with the anticoagulant sodium warfarin. The effect of sodium warfarin on expression of these proteins, and other phenotypic markers of bone and cartilage during cellular differentiation and development of tissue extracellular matrix, was examined in several model systems. Parameters assayed include cell growth (reflected by
histone
gene expression) and collagen types I and II, osteopontin, alkaline phosphatase, and mineralization. Studies were carried out in calvarial bone organ cultures, normal diploid rat osteoblast and chondrocyte cultures, and rat
osteosarcoma
cell lines ROS 17/2.8 and 25/1. In normal diploid cells, warfarin consistently stimulated cell proliferation (twofold). In osteoblast cultures, MGP mRNA levels were generally increased (three to tenfold). Notably, MGP mRNA levels were not affected in chondrocyte cultures, either with chronic or acute warfarin treatments. Osteocalcin mRNA levels and synthesis were decreased up to 50% in ROS 17/2.8 cells and in chronically treated (1 and 5 micrograms/ml sodium warfarin) rat osteoblast cultures after 22 days. Early stages of osteoblast phenotype development from the proliferation period to initial tissue formation (nodules) appeared unaffected; while after day 14, further growth and mineralization of the nodule areas were significantly decreased in warfarin-treated cultures. In summary, warfarin has opposing effects on the expression of two vitamin K dependent proteins, MGP and osteocalcin, in osteoblast cultures and MGP is regulated differently between cartilage and bone as reflected by cellular mRNA levels. Additionally, warfarin effects expression of nonvitamin K dependent proteins which may reflect the influence of warfarin on endoplasmic reticulum associated enzymes.
...
PMID:Differential effects of warfarin on mRNA levels of developmentally regulated vitamin K dependent proteins, osteocalcin, and matrix GLA protein in vitro. 804 Jan 86
Interrelationships between proliferation and expression of cell growth as well as bone cell-related genes were examined from two standpoints. First, the consequence of downregulating proliferation by DNA synthesis inhibition on expression of a cell cycle-regulated
histone
gene and genes associated with development of the bone cell phenotype (type I collagen, alkaline phosphatase, osteopontin, and osteocalcin) was investigated. Second, the requirement for stringent growth control to support functional relationships between expression of proliferation and differentiation-related genes was explored. Parameters of cell growth and osteoblast-related gene expression in primary cultures of normal diploid osteoblasts, that initially express proliferation-dependent genes and subsequently postproliferative genes associated with mature bone cell phenotypic properties, were compared to those operative in ROS 17/2.8
osteosarcoma
cells that concomitantly express cell growth and mature osteoblast phenotypic genes. Our findings indicate that in both normal diploid osteoblasts and
osteosarcoma
cells, expression of the cell cycle regulated
histone
genes is tightly coupled with DNA synthesis and controlled predominantly at a posttranscriptional level. Inhibition of proliferation by blocking DNA synthesis with hydroxyurea upregulates a subset of developmentally expressed genes that postproliferatively support progressive establishment of mature osteoblast phenotypic properties (e.g., alkaline phosphatase, type 1 collagen, and osteopontin). However, the osteocalcin gene, which is expressed during the final stage of osteoblast differentiation when extracellular matrix mineralization occurs, is not upregulated. Variations in the extent to which inhibition of proliferation in normal diploid osteoblasts and in ROS 17/2.8
osteosarcoma
cells selectively affects transcription and cellular levels of mRNA transcripts from bone cell-related genes (e.g., osteocalcin) may reflect modifications in proliferation/differentiation interrelationships when stringent growth control is abrogated.
...
PMID:Influence of DNA replication inhibition on expression of cell growth and tissue-specific genes in osteoblasts and osteosarcoma cells. 812 86
Cell cycle and growth control of the DNA binding and transactivation functions of regulatory factors provides a direct mechanism by which cells may coordinate transcription of a multitude of genes in proliferating cells. The promoters of human DNA replication dependent histone H4, H3, and H1 genes interact with at least seven distinct proteins. One of these proteins is a proliferation-specific nuclear factor, HiNF-D, that interacts with a key cis-regulatory element (H4-Site II; 41 bp) present in H4 genes. Here we describe binding sites for HiNF-D in the promoters of H3 and H1 genes using cross-competition, deletion analysis, and methylation interference assays, and we show that HiNF-D recognizes intricate arrangements of at least two sequence elements (CA- and AG-motifs). These recognition motifs are irregularly dispersed and distantly positioned in the proximal promoters (200 bp) of both the H3 and H1 genes. In all cases, these motifs either overlap or are in close proximity to other established transcriptional elements, including ATF and CCAAT sequences. Although HiNF-D can interact with low affinity to a core recognition domain, auxiliary elements in both the distal and proximal portions of each promoter cooperatively enhance HiNF-D binding. Thus, HiNF-D appears to bridge remote regulatory regions, which may juxtapose additional trans-activating proteins interacting within
histone
gene promoters. Consistent with observations in many cell culture systems, the interactions of HiNF-D with the H4, H3, and H1 promoters are modulated in parallel during the cessation of proliferation in both
osteosarcoma
cells and normal diploid osteoblasts, and these events occur in conjunction with concerted changes in
histone
gene expression. Thus, HiNF-D represents a candidate participant in coordinating transcriptional control of several
histone
gene classes.
...
PMID:Cell cycle controlled histone H1, H3, and H4 genes share unusual arrangements of recognition motifs for HiNF-D supporting a coordinate promoter binding mechanism. 818 66
Nuclease hypersensitive sites were mapped in the proximal promoter of the osteocalcin gene, which is expressed only in bone cells exhibiting the mature osteoblast phenotype. Nuclei from proliferating and confluent rat
osteosarcoma
(ROS) 17/2.8 cells were subjected to DNase I digestion, and hypersensitivity was assayed by the indirect end-labeling method, using osteocalcin gene probes. Hypersensitive sites were detected in two promoter domains: -590 to -390, which spans the vitamin D responsive element, and -170 to -70, which spans the TATA box and the CCAAT-containing OC box domain. Together, these elements regulate basal and vitamin D enhanced osteocalcin gene transcription. We observed a parallel relationship between the intensity of bands representing the hypersensitive sites and the extent to which the osteocalcin gene is transcribed. Both in confluent cultures and in response to vitamin D, when osteocalcin transcription was upregulated, the hypersensitive bands were significantly intensified. Additionally, the bands were decreased under conditions that downregulate osteocalcin gene transcription. A functional relationship between the presence of hypersensitive sites and osteocalcin gene transcription is further supported by the absence of hypersensitivity in nonosseous cells that do not express osteocalcin, although these proliferating cells exhibited hypersensitivity in a cell cycle regulated
histone
gene promoter. Our results suggest the involvement of chromatin structure in transcriptional responsiveness of the osteocalcin gene to physiologic modulation.
...
PMID:DNase I hypersensitive sites in promoter elements associated with basal and vitamin D dependent transcription of the bone-specific osteocalcin gene. 828 56
Cell density-induced growth inhibition of
osteosarcoma
cells (ROS 17/2.8) results in the shutdown of proliferation-specific histone H4 and H2B genes and the concomitant up-regulation of several osteoblast-related genes. In several respects, this reciprocal regulatory relationship is analogous to the proliferation/differentiation transition stage during development of the bone cell phenotype in normal diploid osteoblasts. Here, we comprehensively analyzed the promoter binding activities interfacing with key regulatory elements in the cell cycle-dependent
histone
and bone-specific osteocalcin genes. Similarly, we examined factors interacting with a series of general transcription regulatory elements that are present in a broad spectrum of promoters. The results show that
histone
promoter binding activities HiNF-D, HiNF-P/H4TF-2, H4UA-1, and OCT-1, as well as AP-1 activity, are proliferation dependent. These factors decline coordinately during the cessation of proliferation in both ROS 17/2.8 bone tumor cells and normal diploid osteoblasts. Collective down-regulation of these trans-activating factors occurs in both cell types within the physiological context of constitutive regulation of ubiquitous transcription factors (Sp1, ATF, and CCAAT binding proteins). In addition, during growth inhibition of ROS 17/2.8 cells we observe a complex series of modifications in protein/DNA interactions of the osteocalcin gene. These modifications include both increased and decreased representation of promoter factor complexes occurring at steroid hormone response elements as well as tissue-specific basal promoter sequences. These results demonstrate cell growth regulation of the promoter factors binding to the proliferation-specific
histone
and tissue-specific osteocalcin genes during the cessation of proliferation.
...
PMID:Concerted control of multiple histone promoter factors during cell density inhibition of proliferation in osteosarcoma cells: reciprocal regulation of cell cycle-controlled and bone-related genes. 848 27
Fetal rat calvarial-derived osteoblasts in vitro (ROB) reinitiate a developmental program from growth to differentiation concomitant with production of a bone tissue-like organized extracellular matrix. To identify novel genes which may mediate this sequence, we isolated total RNA from three stages of the cellular differentiation process (proliferation, extracellular matrix maturation, and mineralization), for screening gene expression by the differential mRNA display technique. Of 15 differentially displayed bands that were analyzed by Northern blot analysis, one prominent 310 nucleotide band was confirmed to be proliferation-stage specific. Northern blot analysis showed a 600-650 nt transcript which was highly expressed in proliferating cells and decreased to trace levels after confluency and throughout the differentiation process. We have designated this transcript PROM-1 (for proliferating cell marker). A full length PROM-1 cDNA of 607 bp was obtained by 5' RACE. A short open reading frame encoded a putative 37 amino acid peptide with no significant similarity to known sequences. Expression of PROM-1 in the ROS 17/2.8
osteosarcoma
cell line was several fold greater than in normal diploid cells and was not downregulated when ROS 17/2.8 cells reached confluency. The relationship of PROM-1 expression to cell growth was also observed in diploid fetal rat lung fibroblasts. Hydroxyurea treatment of proliferating osteoblasts blocked PROM-1 expression; however, its expression was not cell cycle regulated. Upregulation of PROM-1 in response to TGF-beta paralleled the stimulatory effects on growth as quantitated by
histone
gene expression. In conclusion, PROM-1 represents a small cytoplasmic polyA containing RNA whose expression is restricted to the exponential growth period of normal diploid cells; the gene appears to be deregulated in tumor derived cell lines.
...
PMID:Detection of a proliferation specific gene during development of the osteoblast phenotype by mRNA differential display. 901 59
Treatment of cultured cells with trichostatin A (TSA), a specific histone deacetylase inhibitor, induces the
histone
hyperacetylation and modulates expression of some mammalian genes. We examined the effects of TSA on cell growth arrest, and its relation to expression of the WAF1/Cip1 gene, a potent inhibitor of cyclin-dependent kinases, in a p53-mutated human
osteosarcoma
cell line MG63. TSA at 500 ng/ml induced growth arrest at both G1 and G2/M phases, and the expressions of the WAF1/Cip1 mRNA and protein. We also examined the changes of acetylated isoforms of histone H4. Dose-response and kinetic analysis suggest a close correlation between the level of
histone
acetylation and the induction of the WAF1/Cip1 expressions. Using several mutant WAF1/Cip1 promoter fragments, we found that the TSA responsive elements are two Sp1 sites at -82 and -69 relative to the transcription start site. These findings indicate that TSA induces the WAF1/Cip1 promoter through the typical Sp1 sites, in a p53-independent fashion. Furthermore, the Sp1-luc plasmid, containing SV40 promoter-derived three consensus Sp1 binding sites, was markedly activated by TSA, compared to the mutant Sp1-luc plasmid. These results demonstrate that transcriptional activation through the Sp1 sites of the WAF1/Cip1 promoter by TSA coincides with induced hyperacetylation of histone H4.
...
PMID:Histone deacetylase inhibitor activates the WAF1/Cip1 gene promoter through the Sp1 sites. 940 48
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