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Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy : CII logoLink to Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy : CII
. 1998 Sep;47(2):113–120. doi: 10.1007/s002620050511

Unresponsiveness to interferon associated with STAT1 protein deficiency in a gastric adenocarcinoma cell line

E Abril 1, L M Real 1, A Serrano 1, P Jimenez 1, A García 1, J Canton 1, I Trigo 1, F Garrido 1, F Ruiz-Cabello 1
PMCID: PMC11037368  PMID: 9769120

Abstract

HC class I expression can be up-regulated by interferons (IFN) and other cytokines. Both IFNα and IFNγ have been shown to exert their effects via a recently discovered signalling pathway by inducing tyrosine phosphorylation of their receptors. Receptors for interferons and other cytokines signal through the action of associated protein tyrosine kinases of the JAK family (Janus kinase) and latent cytoplasmic transcriptional activators from the STAT family (signal transducers and activators of transcription). Here we report a gastric adenocarcinoma cell line, AGS, that is defective in its response to either IFNα or IFNγ. AGS cells display selective alterations only in MHC class I inducibility and not in constitutive MHC class I expression. In nuclear extracts of AGS cells, no binding activity to interferon-responsive elements (GAS/ISRE) was observed. We found that AGS cells showed an extremely low level of STAT1 expression, which may be responsible for the absence of biological response to IFN. Because STAT1-deficient cells are highly sensitive to infection by virus, the absence of these proteins may also contribute to the tumor phenotype, giving the tumor a selective advantage, by inhibiting cell growth suppression mediated by IFN and abetting escape from the T cell antitumor response.

Keywords: Key words Gene expression, Promoter, Transcriptional factors, Interferon response elements

Footnotes

Received: 6 November 1997 / Accepted: 23 April 1998


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