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Vol. 60, Issue 4, 768-775, October 2001
Cooperative Laboratory at Veterans General Hospital, Cancer
Research Division, National Health Research Institutes, Taipei, Taiwan,
Republic of China (S.L., L.-L.C., C.-C.L., T.-S.H.); and Institute of
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, College of Medicine, National
Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan, Republic of China (H.-C.H.)
GL331 is a novel podophyllotoxin-derived compound. In this study, GL331
induced human lung adenocarcinoma cell line CL1-5 growth arrest before
death during the initial 24-h incubation period. We found that GL331
had no inhibitory effect on the expression of cyclins E, A, B1, CDK 4, and CDK 2; instead, its cell growth-inhibitory effect was partly
attributable to an early down-regulation of cyclin D1 expression and in
turn the reduction of retinoblastoma protein phosphorylation.
GL331 enhanced the proteolysis of cyclin D1, and a proteasome inhibitor
was able to block GL331-caused cyclin D1 reduction, suggesting that
GL331-stimulated cyclin D1 degradation was through proteasomal
processes. Additionally, GL331 reduced cellular cyclin D1 mRNA level
down to 45% of control in 4 h and further to around 20% in
12 h. However, GL331 did not accelerate the disappearance of
cyclin D1 mRNA under the condition of transcription blockage induced by
actinomycin D. It was reported that a certain region in the
3'-untranslated region (UTR) of cyclin D1 mRNA mediated the mRNA
degradation upon extracellular stresses. Herein, transient transfection
studies demonstrated that the 3'-UTR insertion did not confer the
susceptibility of luciferase reporter gene to the GL331 treatment.
Together, these data suggested that GL331 did not decrease the
stability of cyclin D1 mRNA. On the other hand, we found that GL331
specifically inhibited the cyclin D1 promoter-driven luciferase
reporter activity. Western blot analyses showed that GL331 decreased
the level of phosphorylated extracellular signal-regulated kinase
(Erk), with no effect on p38 or c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase.
Furthermore, GL331's inhibition of cyclin D1 promoter was attenuated
by ectopic Erk-2 overexpression. These data suggested that GL331
inhibited cyclin D1 gene transcription via the Erk signaling pathway.
In summary, we report that GL331 induced an early decline of cyclin D1
expression by dual mechanisms: 1) enhancement of protein turnover and
2) repression of Erk-mediated gene transcription.
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