Abstract

The effects of calcium ionophores A23187 and ionomycin on the c-myb and c-myc mRNA levels have been investigated in the Friend erythroleukemia cell line F4-6 using Northern blot analysis. Treatment of the cells with 0.5-4 microM A23187 or 1-4 microM ionomycin induced a concentration-dependent decrease in c-myb mRNA; this decrease was abolished by EGTA. c-myc mRNA levels were only moderately affected. After 12-24 h of calcium ionophore exposure, c-myb mRNA returned to pretreatment levels. No similar decrease in c-myb mRNA was seen with the sodium ionophore monensin (up to 16 microM). The dimethyl sulfoxide-induced suppression of c-myb and also of c-myc mRNA levels was not prevented in Ca(2+)-free medium and thus appeared Ca(2+)-independent. A23187 and ionomycin were capable of inducing beta-globin mRNA synthesis in F4-6 cells. Prolonged calcium ionophore exposure, however, strongly reduced cell viability and resulted only in a slight hemoglobin increase at lower concentrations. These results suggest that a rise in [Ca2+]i may be a signal leading to a transient decrease in c-myb mRNA and the initiation of erythroid differentiation in Friend cells. The transient suppression of c-myb mRNA levels represents a common feature of the action of dimethyl sulfoxide and calcium ionophores.

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