AP-2 transcription factor family member expression, activity, and regulation in human epidermal keratinocytes in vitro


Autoria(s): Popa, Claudia; Dahler, Alison L.; Serewko-Auret, Magdalena M.; Wong, Chung F.; Smith, Louise; Barnes, Liam M.; Strutton, Geoff M.; Saunders, Nicholas A.
Contribuinte(s)

Laurence D. Etkin

Data(s)

01/01/2004

Resumo

The AP-2 transcription factor family is presumed to play an important role in the regulation of the keratinocyte squamous differentiation program; however, limited functional data are available to support this. In the present study, the activity and regulation of AP-2 were examined in differentiating human epidermal keratinocytes. We report that (1) AP-2 transcriptional activity decreases in differentiated keratinocytes but remains unchanged in differentiation-insensitive squamous cell carcinoma cell lines, (2) diminished AP-2 transcriptional activity is associated with a loss of specific DNA-bound AP-2 complexes, and (3) there is an increase in the ability of cytoplasmic extracts, derived from differentiated keratinocytes, to phosphorylate AP-2alpha and AP-2beta when cells differentiate. In contrast, extracts from differentiation-insensitive squamous cell carcinoma cells are unable to phosphorylate AP-2 proteins. Finally, the phosphorylation of recombinant AP-2alpha by cytosolic extracts from differentiated keratinocytes is associated with decreased AP-2 DNA-binding activity. Combined, these data indicate that AP-2 trans-activation and DNA-binding activity decrease as keratinocytes differentiate, and that this decreased activity is associated with an enhanced ability to phosphorylate AP-2alpha and beta.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:72300

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

Palavras-Chave #Cell Biology #Developmental Biology #Ap-2 #Human Epidermal Keratinocytes #Transcription Factor #Differentiation-specific Genes #Superoxide-dismutase Gene #Dna-binding Proteins #Cystatin-a Gene #Nf-kappa-b #Retinoic Acid #Epithelial-cells #Terminal Differentiation #Intermediate-filaments #Mouse Embryogenesis #C1 #320602 Cell Physiology #730108 Cancer and related disorders
Tipo

Journal Article