Gap junctional intercellular communication (GJIC) and connexin expression are frequently decreased in neoplasia and may contribute to defective growth control and loss of differentiated functions. GJIC, in E9 mouse lung carcinoma cells and WB-aB1 neoplastic rat liver epithelial cells, was elevated by forced expression of the gap junction proteins, connexin43 (Cx43) and connexin32 (Cx32), respectively. Transfection of Cx43 into E9 cells increased fluorescent dye-coupling in the transfected clones, E9-2 and E9-3, to levels comparable to the nontransformed sibling cell line, E10, from which E9 cells originated. Transduction of Cx32 into WB-aB1 cells also increased dye-coupling in the clone, WB-a/32-10, to a level that was comparable to the nontransformed sibling cell line, WB-F344. The cell cycle distribution was also affected as a result of forced connexin expression. The percentage of cells in G(1)-phase increased and the percentage in S-phase decreased in E9-2 and WB-a/32-10 cells as compared to E9 and WB-aB1 cells. Concomitantly, these cells exhibited changes in G(1)-phase cell cycle regulators. E9-2 and WB-a/32-10 cells expressed significantly less cyclin D1 and more p27(kip-1) protein than E9 and WB-aB1 cells. Other growth-related properties (expression of platelet-derived growth factor receptor-beta, epidermal growth factor receptor, protein kinase C-alpha, protein kinase A regulatory subunit-Ialpha, and production of nitric oxide in response to a cocktail of pro-inflammatory cytokines) were minimally altered or unaffected. Thus, enhancement of connexin expression and GJIC in neoplastic mouse lung and rat liver epithelial cells restored G(1) growth control. This was associated with decreased expression of cyclin D1 and increased expression of p27(kip-1), but not with changes in other growth-related functions.
Gap junctional intercellular communication (GJIC) and the expression of gap junction proteins (connexins) are frequently decreased in neoplastic cells and have been increased by cAMP and retinoids. GJIC and connexin expression were investigated in early passage normal human ovarian surface epithelial (HOSE) cells, human ovarian adenocarcinoma cell lines (CaOV-3, NIH:OVCAR-3, SK-OV-3 and SW626) and surgical specimens of human serous cystadenocarcinomas. We hypothesized that GJIC and connexin expression would be decreased in neoplastic cells and would be increased by cAMP and retinoic acid. Cultured HOSE cells exhibited extensive fluorescent dye-coupling and connexin43 (Cx43) expression; other connexins were not detected. The ovarian adenocarcinoma cell lines had little dye-coupling or connexin expression. Deletions and rearrangements of the Cx43 gene were not detected by Southern blotting in the carcinoma lines. N6, 2'-O-dibutyryladenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate and all-trans-retinoic acid inhibited cell proliferation, but did not enhance GJIC or Cx43 expression. Surface epithelial cells of benign ovaries expressed Cx43, but this expression was barely detectable in ovarian serous cystadenocarcinomas. Thus, normal HOSE cells had extensive GJIC and Cx43 expression whereas ovarian carcinoma cells had less and cAMP and retinoic acid did not change these, although both agents inhibited cell growth.
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