Abstract

The role of N-myc, c-src, and major histocompatibility complex (MHC, H-2 in the mouse) class I antigen gene expressions in dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO)-induced differentiation and intracerebral tumorigenicity was examined using a mouse MNB85 neuroblastoma cell line. A fluorescence-activated cell sorter disclosed cell-surface MHC enhancement by DMSO, causing an increase in cytotoxic T-lymphocyte sensitivity. Southern blot analysis verified a single copy of the proto-oncogenes and MHC deoxyribonucleic acids in both untreated and DMSO-treated MNB85 cells. Northern blot analysis indicated that DMSO treatment induced a decrease in N-myc and an increase in c-src and MHC messenger ribonucleic acids. Nuclear run-off transcription assay revealed down-regulation of N-myc at a posttranscriptional level, contrasted with primary up-regulation of c-src at a transcriptional level. Immunoprecipitation after treatment with enzyme endo-beta-N-acetyl-glycoseamidase H proved that the terminal glycosylation of MHC heavy-chain gene products normally occurs in the Golgi apparatus of MNB85 cells. Intracerebral tumorigenicity assay showed that cells highly MHC-expressed by DMSO were less tumorigenic than untreated cells in association with DMSO-augmented cytotoxic T-lymphocyte susceptibility. These results suggest that proto-oncogenes may be linked to cellular differentiation, while cell-surface MHC gene expression influences intracerebral immunosurveillance.

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