Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2131420 Experimental Cell Research 2009 10 Pages PDF
Abstract
Insulin-like growth factor 1 receptor (IGF-1R) is important for transformation of cells with cellular and viral oncogenes. This knowledge is mainly based on experiments on IGF-1R knockout mouse fibroblasts, which mostly are unable to transform after introduction of various oncogenes. Recently, we observed two variants of R- cells, one of which (R-s) surprisingly expresses the β-subunit of IGF-1R whereas the other one (R-r) does not. Here we show that the β-subunit is localized intracellularly and forms perinuclear aggregates. It expresses tyrosine kinase activity and appears to be crucial for cell survival since knockdown of it kills the R-s cells. H-RasV12 and/or polyoma middle T-antigen fail to transform R-r, whereas R- cells expressing the β-subunit were transformed as assessed by formation of colonies in soft agar. The oncogenic transformation of R-s cells was, however, abrogated when the aberrant β-subunit was knockdown by siRNA. The occurrence of intracellular IGF-1R, especially in tumor cells, has been widely reported but its function has not been understood. Our study provides evidence that it may be important for cell survival and transformation.
Related Topics
Life Sciences Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology Cancer Research
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