Abstract
We show here that a protein tyrosine phosphatase inhibitor, sodium orthovanadate, induces rat pheochromocytoma cells to express neurites, a prominent morphological marker of neuronal phenotype. Vanadate-induced differentiation and neurite outgrowth in pheochromocytoma cells was not as extensive as that induced by the positive control employed, nerve growth factor. However, neurite outgrowth responses were comparable between nerve growth factor-treated pheochromocytoma cells and cells primed and then restimulated with vanadate. In the human neuroblastoma cell line, SH-SY5Y, a single exposure to vanadate induced neurite extension in this cell line equal to that initiated by nerve growth factor. In both cell lines vanadate treatment resulted in tyrosine phosphorylation of several high-molecular-weight proteins and using anti-phosphotyrosine antibodies, intense fluorescence was observed in the cell body and neurites of pheochromocytoma cells exposed to vanadate. Vanadate mediated differentiation and neurite outgrowth in pheochromocytoma cells could be ablated by the tyrosine kinase inhibitor erbstatin, whereas nerve growth factor-induced neurite outgrowth was only partially inhibited. In SH-SY5Y cells, erbstatin mediated partial inhibition of both vanadate and nerve growth factor-induced neurite elongation with similar kinetics. In contrast, K252b, a trk tyrosine kinase inhibitor, exhibited only a 30% reduction of neurite outgrowth in vanadate treated pheochromocytoma cells but an 80% reduction in nerve growth factor-treated cells. In SH-SY5Y cells, K252a did not have a statistically significant effect on neurite elongation induced by vanadate in contrast to a 60% reduction in nerve growth factor-treated cells. The membrane impermeable analogue K252b, had no effect on neurite elongation induced with either vanadate or nerve growth factor in these cells. The effects of vanadate were not mimicked by ouabain (0.1–50 μM) indicating that vanadate does not induce differentiation and/or neurite extension by inhibiting ion channel Na.K-ATPase, which is one of its other well-characterised inhibitory activities. Evidence for the selective action of vanadate on some but not all neuronal cell lines comes from the fact that it did not induce neurite extension in the human neuroblastoma cell line SK-N-MC. These data imply that vanadate-induced neurite outgrowth responses in pheochromocytoma and SH-SY5Y cells can be induced by the inhibition of tyrosine phosphatases and appears not to simply mimic nerve growth factor signals. The target(s) of vanadate action in the two cell lines are currently being sought.
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