Region-specific methylation of the parathyroid hormone-related peptide gene determines its expression in human renal carcinoma cell lines. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Tumor production of a parathyroid hormone-related peptide (PTHrP) is a common cause of the syndrome of humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy, which is frequently associated with renal cell carcinomas. Why certain renal cell carcinomas produce PTHrP while others do not is unknown. Using a system of 12 human renal carcinoma cell lines which either do (n = 6) or do not (n = 6) produce PTHrP, we found that the expression of the PTHrP gene in these cell lines is controlled at the transcriptional level. Transfection studies failed to demonstrate variation in PTHrP promoter activity in these cell lines sufficient to account for the differential PTHrP expression, implicating a cis-acting mechanism. Transcription of the PTHrP gene in these cell lines was found to correlate with the methylation state of specific CpG dinucleotides located within the promoter region but outside a CpG island. The functional importance of this mechanism of control was confirmed by the ability of the demethylating agent, 5-azacytidine, to induce PTHrP mRNA expression in previously nonexpressing cell lines.

publication date

  • September 25, 1993

Research

keywords

  • DNA, Neoplasm
  • Kidney Neoplasms
  • Protein Biosynthesis
  • Proteins
  • RNA, Messenger

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 0027169403

PubMed ID

  • 7690760

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 268

issue

  • 27