Abstract

The observation that overexpression of the anti-apoptotic protein Bcl-2 is associated with both cancer development and anti-cancer drug resistance suggests that factors which regulate bcl-2 expression may be important therapeutic targets. We report here that taxol or okadaic acid (OA) treatment of HL-60 cells reduced bcl-2 mRNA steady state levels to 50% of control cell levels in 20–24 hr of treatment. The 3′-untranslated region of bcl-2 mRNA contains four potential A+U-rich elements (AREs), which are associated with mRNA destabilization. RNA gel mobility shift assays revealed that HL-60 cell extracts contain proteins that bind to RNA transcripts containing the first bcl-2 ARE (ARE 1). ARE 1 binding activity was substantially reduced in extracts of cells treated for 20 hr with taxol or OA and was abolished after 32 hr of treatment. UV-induced RNA cross-linking assays revealed that untreated HL-60 cell extracts contain approximately eight proteins, ranging in size from 32 to 100 kDa, that bind to ARE 1 RNA. Following 20 hr of taxol or OA treatment, RNA cross-linking to ∼70 and ∼38 kDa proteins was greatly reduced, and cross-linking to four proteins of 45–60 kDa sizes was progressively reduced with 10–34 hr of OA or taxol treatment. Collectively, these results suggest a novel action of taxol and OA on bcl-2 expression, which involves bcl-2 mRNA downregulation through inactivation of bcl-2 mRNA stabilizing factors.

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