1. Academic Validation
  2. Inhibition of tumor cell growth by RTP/rit42 and its responsiveness to p53 and DNA damage

Inhibition of tumor cell growth by RTP/rit42 and its responsiveness to p53 and DNA damage

  • Cancer Res. 1998 Oct 1;58(19):4439-44.
S K Kurdistani 1 P Arizti C L Reimer M M Sugrue S A Aaronson S W Lee
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Medicine, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School, Harvard Institutes of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA.
PMID: 9766676
Abstract

Through a differential screening technique, we have identified a cDNA clone with differential expression in normal versus tumor cells. This clone, designated rit42 (reduced in tumor, 42 kDa), was previously isolated as a homocysteine-inducible gene in human endothelial cells (RTP), and the same or a highly related androgen-responsive gene in mouse has also been identified. Both Northern blot analysis and in situ hybridization demonstrated a significantly diminished expression in tumor cells, including those derived from breast and prostate when compared with normal cells. It was shown that RTP/rit42 mRNA cycles with cell division, peaking at G1 and G2-M, with lower expression in S phase. The biphasic expression of RTP/rit42 mRNA was absent in tumor cells. Introduction of rit42 cDNA into human Cancer cells reduced cell growth both in vitro and in nude mice. Moreover, analysis of a tetracycline-regulated p53-inducible system in null-p53 cell lines showed that RTP/rit42 mRNA expression increased concomitantly with p53 expression and followed a similar time course. In addition, DNA-damaging agents induced RTP/rit42 expression in a p53-dependent manner but independent of a p53-mediated G1 arrest. Immunofluorescence analysis of a FLAG epitope-tagged RTP/rit42 protein revealed a cytoplasmic localization pattern with redistribution to the nucleus upon DNA damage. We have localized RTP/rit42 to human chromosome 8q24.3. Taken together, these results are consistent with a growth inhibitory role for RTP/rit42, and its down-regulation may contribute to the tumor malignant phenotype.

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