Abstract

Osteopontin (OPN) is a secreted glycoprotein produced by osteoclasts, macrophages, T cells, hematopoietic cells, and vascular smooth muscle cells. It contributes to macrophage homing and cellular immunity. It also mediates neovascularization, inhibits apoptosis, and plays important roles in extracellular matrix remodeling and angiogenesis. These properties are also characteristics of metastatic cancer cells. Consequently, the OPN gene was found to be upregulated among various metastatic cancer cells. This suggests that OPN is involved in tumor metastasis. How the OPN gene is upregulated in metastatic cancer cells remains to be illustrated. Thus, we investigated the transcriptional activation of the OPN promoter in the human metastatic cancer cell line A2058. We cloned the OPN promoter, and serial deletion analysis of the OPN promoter showed that the region between -170 and -127 may act as an enhancer to control the OPN gene in metastatic tumor cells. This region was found to contain overlapped AML-1 and C/EBP binding site motifs. Gel-mobility-shift assays using the A2058 nuclear extract and AML-1a or C/EBPalpha (CCAAT/enhancer binding protein alpha) recombinant protein indicated that these two transcription factors can bind to the overlapped AML-1 /C/EBP binding site motifs on the OPN regulatory sequence from -147 to -127. Surprisingly, the gel-shift experiments did not show supershift complex formation between AML-1 and C/EBPalpha. Functional analysis showed that the C/EBPalpha was more potent than the complex of AML-1 and its cofactor CBFbeta to upregulate the OPN promoter. In addition, AML-1 and C/EBPalpha did not exhibit transactivation additively or synergistically. Our results suggest that AML-1 and C/EBPalpha play an important role in the upregulation of the OPN gene in metastatic tumor cells.

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