Abstract

Polyamines serve as natural substrates for the transglutaminase that catalyzes covalent cross-linking of proteins and is involved in cellular adhesion and proliferation. This study tests the hypothesis that intracellular polyamines play a role in the regulation of transglutaminase expression in rat small intestinal crypt cells (IEC-6 cell line) and human colon carcinoma cells (Caco-2 cell line). Treatment with alpha-difluoromethylornithine (DFMO; a specific inhibitor of polyamine synthesis) significantly depleted the cellular polyamines putrescine, spermidine, and spermine in both cell lines. In IEC-6 cells, polyamine depletion was associated with a decrease in the levels of transglutaminase mRNA. In Caco-2 cells, however, polyamine depletion significantly increased the levels of transglutaminase mRNA and enzyme activity. In both cell lines, ornithine decarboxylase mRNA levels increased and protooncogene c-myc mRNA decreased in the presence of DFMO. Addition of polyamines to cells treated with DFMO reversed the effect of DFMO on the levels of mRNA for these genes in both lines. There was no significant change in the stability of transglutaminase mRNA between control and DFMO-treated IEC-6 cells. In contrast, the half-life of mRNA for transglutaminase in Caco-2 cells was dramatically increased after polyamine depletion. Spermidine, when given together with DFMO, completely prevented increased half-life of transglutaminase mRNA in Caco-2 cells. These results indicate that 1) expression of transglutaminase requires polyamines in IEC-6 cells but is inhibited by these agents in Caco-2 cells, 2) polyamines modulate transglutaminase expression at the level of mRNA through different pathways in these two cell lines, and 3) posttranscriptional regulation plays a major role in the induction of transglutaminase mRNA in polyamine-deficient Caco-2 cells.

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