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  • Title: Involvement of protein kinase Cdelta in contact-dependent inhibition of growth in human and murine fibroblasts.
    Author: Heit I, Wieser RJ, Herget T, Faust D, Borchert-Stuhlträger M, Oesch F, Dietrich C.
    Journal: Oncogene; 2001 Aug 23; 20(37):5143-54. PubMed ID: 11526503.
    Abstract:
    There is evidence that protein kinase C delta (PKCdelta) is a tumor suppressor, although its physiological role has not been elucidated so far. Since important anti-proliferative signals are mediated by cell-cell contacts we studied whether PKCdelta is involved in contact-dependent inhibition of growth in human (FH109) and murine (NIH3T3) fibroblasts. Cell-cell contacts were imitated by the addition of glutardialdehyde-fixed cells to sparsely seeded fibroblasts. Downregulation of the PKC isoforms alpha, delta, epsilon, and mu after prolonged treatment with 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA, 0.1 microM) resulted in a significant release from contact-inhibition in FH109 cells. Bryostatin 1 selectively prevented TPA-induced PKCdelta-downregulation and reversed TPA-induced release from contact-inhibition arguing for a role of PKCdelta in contact-inhibition. In accordance, the PKCdelta specific inhibitor Rottlerin (1 microM) totally abolished contact-inhibition. Interestingly, immunofluorescence revealed a rapid translocation of PKCdelta to the nucleus when cultures reached confluence with a peak in early-mid G1 phase. Nuclear translocation of PKCdelta in response to cell-cell contacts could also be demonstrated after subcellular fractionation by Western blotting and by measuring PKCdelta-activity after immunoprecipitation. Transient transfection of NIH3T3 cells with a dominant negative mutant of PKCdelta induced a transformed phenotype. We conclude that PKCdelta is involved in contact-dependent inhibition of growth.
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