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. 2004 Jul;61(14):1775–1784. doi: 10.1007/s00018-004-4192-y

Acylphosphatase overexpression triggers SH-SY5Y differentiation towards neuronal phenotype

C Cecchi 1, G Liguri 1, C Fiorillo 1, F Bogani 1, M Gambassi 1, E Giannoni 1, P Cirri 1, S Baglioni 1, G Ramponi 1,
PMCID: PMC11138849  PMID: 15241553

Abstract

An acylphosphatase (AcPase) overexpression study was carried out on SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells, using a green fluorescent fusion protein (AcP-GFP), with GFP acting as a reporter protein. The cellular proliferation rate was significantly reduced by overexpression of AcPase by a factor of ten. In contrast, clones transfected with two inactive AcPase mutants showed a growth rate comparable to control cells. This suggests that AcPase catalyzes the proliferative down-regulation. AcPase-overexpressing clones showed a physiological mortality rate as assessed by an MTT reduction test and by evaluation of necrotic markers. DNA fragmentation analysis and assays of caspase-3 and poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP)-active fragments showed no evidence of any apoptotic pattern. AcPase overexpression led to a marked increase in PARP activity as well as Bcl-2 content; these are commonly up-regulated during differentiative processes in neuronal cells. In fact, the typical differentiation marker, growth-associated-protein 43, was significantly up-regulated. Microscopic observations also showed a clear increase in the differentiative phenotype in AcPase-overexpressing cells. Our results clearly show that AcPase plays a primary causative role in neuronal differentiation.

Keywords: Acylphosphatase, SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cell, differentiation, apoptosis, PMA

Footnotes

Received 3 May 2004; accepted 25 May 2004


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