Abstract

The ST2 gene is induced in murine fibroblast cells at the start of cell proliferation. Although IL-33 has been identified as a ligand for one of the two major gene products of ST2 – namely, the transmembrane receptor form ST2L – prompting immunological research on inflammation, the roles of the ST2 gene products in cell proliferation remain to be elucidated.Using a cell proliferation assay system with NIH-3T3 cells, a normal murine fibroblast cell line, we found that treatment with recombinant ST2 caused an acceleration of cell proliferation, suggesting that ST2 acts in an autocrine/paracrine fashion. Strikingly, shRNA-induced knockdown of both ST2 gene products, ST2 and ST2L, reduced cell proliferation. This effect was effectively canceled by the expression of shRNA-resistant ST2, but not shRNA-resistant ST2L.The novel enhancement of cell proliferation by ST2 appears to involve positive feedback. Since the ST2 level is increased in various diseases involving inflammation, future investigations into the role of ST2 gene products in relation to various diseases, including malignancies, may be warranted.

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