Abstract

Two types of clones have been isolated from the SW613-S human colon carcinoma cell line. Clones with a high level of amplification of the c- myc gene are tumorigenic in nude mice and can proliferate in chemically defined, serum-free medium, whereas clones with a low level of amplification are nontumorigenic and cannot multiply in defined medium. The expression level of the insulin-like growth factor type 1 (IGF-1) gene is low in tumorigenic clones and undetectable in nontumorigenic clones. Tumorigenic clones produce high levels of IGF-2 (and IGF-binding proteins), compared to nontumorigenic clones. This is the consequence of a differential transcriptional regulation of the IGF-2 gene between the two types of clones. This regulation consists of a modulation of the activity of promoters P3 and P4. Overexpression of the IGF-2 gene is constitutive in tumorigenic clones: it is stably maintained during in vitro propagation of the cells. Tumorigenic cell lines obtained after transfer of c- myc gene copies into the cells of nontumorigenic clones exhibit a high level of expression of the IGF-2 gene when they are grown in vivo, as subcutaneous tumors in nude mice. This high level of expression is lost in most of these cell lines when they are returned to in vitro culture conditions indicating that, in these cells, IGF-2 overexpression is not constitutive but inducible by in vivo growth conditions. We had previously shown that tumorigenic clones use the overproduced IGF-2 as an autocrine growth factor. The results reported here suggest than IGF-2 overexpression has an important role in the tumorigenic phenotype of these cells.

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