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  • Title: Priming of human myeloid leukemic cell lines HL-60 and U-937 with retinoic acid for differentiation effects of cyclic adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate-inducing agents and a T-lymphocyte-derived differentiation factor.
    Author: Olsson IL, Breitman TR, Gallo RC.
    Journal: Cancer Res; 1982 Oct; 42(10):3928-33. PubMed ID: 6286101.
    Abstract:
    The human cell lines HL-60 (acute promyelocytic leukemia) and U-937 (histiocytic monoblast-like lymphoma) differentiate to functionally mature cells by incubation with retinoic acid (RA). This differentiation is potentiated by agents known to increase intracellular cyclic adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate (cAMP) levels. The present study shows that these cells can be primed for differentiation by treatment for approximately one day with RA followed by exposure to a cAMP-inducing agent. The reverse sequence was ineffective. Thus, HL-60 could be primed by incubation for less than 20 hr with 10 nM RA to respond by differentiation to the addition of 10 nM prostaglandin E2 or 1 nM cholera toxin, whereas 10 nM RA alone was almost inactive. RA-primed HL-60 also responded with differentiation to a concentration of T-lymphocyte-derived differentiation-inducing factor which alone was inactive. U-937 primed by incubation for 24 hr with 100 nM RA responded to cAMP-inducing agents and differentiation-inducing factor, which alone were inactive on this cell line. Priming of these cell lines does not depend on the normal rate of protein synthesis, as it occurs even better in the presence of a concentration of cycloheximide that inhibits growth completely, suggesting that a decrease in synthesis of some protein(s) favors RA-induced differentiation. Cycloheximide alone produced some priming of HL-60 but not of U-937. HL-60, but not U-937, primed with RA responded to adenosine triphosphate and other nucleoside triphosphates, consistent with the notion that modulation of the RA effect may be mediated through protein kinase activity at the plasma membrane. The finding that myeloid cell lines, like HL-60 and U-937, blocked at a late stage of maturation can be primed by RA to respond to cAMP-inducing agents and differentiation-inducing factor may improve our understanding of the arrest in maturation typical of some forms of leukemia.
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