pubmed:abstractText |
Interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha) has been used as therapy for the treatment of a variety of viral diseases and malignancies including multiple myeloma. The effectiveness of interferon-alpha in treating multiple myeloma, however, has been somewhat variable, and the mechanism(s) accounting for this is not well understood. As a means to examine the basis for the differential effectiveness of this cytokine, we have analyzed IFN-alpha-mediated modulation of the cell cycle in two human myeloma cell lines. These two cell lines, ANBL-6 and KAS-6/1, display dramatically different outcomes in response to this cytokine. Although IFN-alpha inhibited the growth of ANBL-6 cells by blocking cell cycle progression from G0/G1 to S phase, IFN-alpha stimulated cell cycle progression in KAS-6/1 cells. Moreover, the effects of IFN-alpha on cell cycle progression correlated with the phosphorylation status of the retinoblastoma protein. Of interest, IFN-alpha increased cyclin D2 expression and cyclin-dependent kinase activity in the KAS-6/1 cells but not in the ANBL-6 cells. To determine whether the differential effects of IFN-alpha on myeloma cell cycle progression could also result from differences in the expression of cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors, we examined the effects of IFN-alpha on the induction of cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors with broad regulatory function (p21 and p27) and those with specificity for G1-associated cyclin-cyclin-dependent kinase complexes (p15, p16, p18, and p19). Although we failed to detect an effect of IFN-alpha on expression levels of p21, p15, p16, or p18, IFN-alpha treatment of the ANBL-6 cell line resulted in induction of p19 expression, whereas it was without effect on the KAS-6/1 cell line. These results suggest that heterogeneity in IFN-alpha-mediated growth effects in myeloma cells correlates with differential induction of cyclin D2 and p19(INK4d) expression.
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