Nuclear factor kappaB subunits induce epithelial cell growth arrest
- PMID: 10945614
Nuclear factor kappaB subunits induce epithelial cell growth arrest
Abstract
Nuclear factor kappaB (NF-kappaB) gene-regulatory proteins play important roles in inflammation, neoplasia, and programmed cell death. Recently, blockade of NF-kappaB function has been shown to result in epithelial hyperplasia, suggesting a potential role for NF-kappaB in negative growth regulation. We expressed active NF-kappaB subunits in normal epithelial cells and found that NF-kappaB profoundly inhibits cell cycle progression. This growth inhibition is resistant to mitogenic stimuli and is accompanied by other features of irreversible growth arrest. NF-kappaB-triggered cell cycle arrest is also associated with selective induction of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21CiP1, with overexpression of p21(Cip1) alone inducing findings similar to those seen with NF-kappaB in vitro. An active NF-kappaB subunit expressed in the epidermis of p21(CiP1-/- mice, however, displays only partial growth-inhibitory effects, suggesting that full NF-kappaB growth inhibition is only partially p21(Cip1) dependent in this setting. These data indicate that NF-kappaB can trigger cell cycle arrest in epithelial cells in association with selective induction of a cell cycle inhibitor.