Abstract

Manganese superoxide dismutase (MnSOD) has been found to be depleted in a variety of tumor cells as well as in in vitro transformed cell lines, suggesting that MnSOD may function as an anticarcinogen by protecting the cell from oxidant-induced carcinogenesis. The relationship between MnSOD expression and tumor promotion was studied by transfection of a human MnSOD cDNA into the promotable mouse epidermal cell line JB6 clone41. The effect of MnSOD overexpression on the promotion-sensitive phenotype of JB6 cells was assessed by measuring growth characteristics such as growth rate and the ability to form colonies in soft agar. Compared with the parental and vector-transfected (gpt) control cells, MnSOD-overexpressing cells had a slower growth rate and their ability to form colonies in soft agar was significantly decreased in response to 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) treatment. Since the transformation-sensitive phenotype of JB6 clone41 cells is associated with increased expression of the transcription factor AP-1, we compared c-jun and c-fos mRNA expression in MnSOD-transfected and control JB6 cells. Overexpression of MnSOD led to a significant decrease in c-jun and c-fos expression in response to treatment with TPA or the oxidant promoter superoxide. These findings indicate that the promotion-sensitive phenotype of JB6 clone41 cells can be reverted by increasing MnSOD intracellularly. A possible mechanism is that elevated MnSOD expression might change the intracellular redox state by altering the balance of reactive oxygen species. This could lead to a modulation of TPA and oxidant-induced signal transduction pathways controlling cell growth and differentiation.

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