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Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS logoLink to Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS
. 2006 Sep 29;63(21):2527–2537. doi: 10.1007/s00018-006-6240-2

TGF-β transcriptionally activates the gene encoding the high-affinity adenosine transporter CNT2 in rat liver parenchymal cells

R Valdés 1,2, S Fernández-Veledo 1,3, I Aymerich 1,4, F J Casado 1, M Pastor-Anglada 1,
PMCID: PMC11135982  PMID: 17013559

Abstract.

The nucleoside transporter CNT2 is the highest-affinity adenosine transporter identified so far. Recent evidence suggests that CNT2 has functions other than salvage (i.e. modulation of purinergic responses). Here we identified TGF-β1 as a potent inducer of CNT2 protein expression in liver parenchymal cells. By contrast, CNT1, which is a target of multifunctional cytokines involved in liver cell proliferation, does not respond to TGF-β1 treatment. Cloning of a murine CNT2 gene sequence with promoter-like activity enabled us to demonstrate that this cytokine exerts this effect by transcriptionally activating the CNT2-encoding gene in a JNK-dependent manner. The evidence that CNT2 is not a target of multifunctional cytokines involved in hepatocyte proliferation, but instead, of a cytokine that plays major roles in differentiation and apoptosis, further supports the view that the main physiological role of this transporter protein is not nucleoside salvage.

Keywords. TGF-β, nucleoside transporters, liver, apoptosis, CNT2, adenosine

Footnotes

Received 23 May 2006; received after revision 30 July 2006; accepted 24 August 2006

R. Valdés and S. Fernández-Veledo contributed equally to this work.


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