Cargando…

Short-term arginine deprivation results in large-scale modulation of hepatic gene expression in both normal and tumor cells: microarray bioinformatic analysis

BACKGROUND: We have reported arginine-sensitive regulation of LAT1 amino acid transporter (SLC 7A5) in normal rodent hepatic cells with loss of arginine sensitivity and high level constitutive expression in tumor cells. We hypothesized that liver cell gene expression is highly sensitive to alteratio...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Leong, Hwei Xian, Simkevich, Carl, Lesieur-Brooks, Anne, Lau, Bonnie W, Fugere, Celine, Sabo, Edmond, Thompson, Nancy L
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1613245/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16961918
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1743-7075-3-37
_version_ 1782130479439282176
author Leong, Hwei Xian
Simkevich, Carl
Lesieur-Brooks, Anne
Lau, Bonnie W
Fugere, Celine
Sabo, Edmond
Thompson, Nancy L
author_facet Leong, Hwei Xian
Simkevich, Carl
Lesieur-Brooks, Anne
Lau, Bonnie W
Fugere, Celine
Sabo, Edmond
Thompson, Nancy L
author_sort Leong, Hwei Xian
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: We have reported arginine-sensitive regulation of LAT1 amino acid transporter (SLC 7A5) in normal rodent hepatic cells with loss of arginine sensitivity and high level constitutive expression in tumor cells. We hypothesized that liver cell gene expression is highly sensitive to alterations in the amino acid microenvironment and that tumor cells may differ substantially in gene sets sensitive to amino acid availability. To assess the potential number and classes of hepatic genes sensitive to arginine availability at the RNA level and compare these between normal and tumor cells, we used an Affymetrix microarray approach, a paired in vitro model of normal rat hepatic cells and a tumorigenic derivative with triplicate independent replicates. Cells were exposed to arginine-deficient or control conditions for 18 hours in medium formulated to maintain differentiated function. RESULTS: Initial two-way analysis with a p-value of 0.05 identified 1419 genes in normal cells versus 2175 in tumor cells whose expression was altered in arginine-deficient conditions relative to controls, representing 9–14% of the rat genome. More stringent bioinformatic analysis with 9-way comparisons and a minimum of 2-fold variation narrowed this set to 56 arginine-responsive genes in normal liver cells and 162 in tumor cells. Approximately half the arginine-responsive genes in normal cells overlap with those in tumor cells. Of these, the majority was increased in expression and included multiple growth, survival, and stress-related genes. GADD45, TA1/LAT1, and caspases 11 and 12 were among this group. Previously known amino acid regulated genes were among the pool in both cell types. Available cDNA probes allowed independent validation of microarray data for multiple genes. Among genes downregulated under arginine-deficient conditions were multiple genes involved in cholesterol and fatty acid metabolism. Expression of low-density lipoprotein receptor was decreased in both normal and tumor cells. CONCLUSION: Arginine-sensitive regulation appears to be an important homeostatic mechanism to coordinate cell response and nutrient availability in hepatic cells. Genes predicted as arginine-responsive in stringent microarray data analysis were confirmed by Northern blot and RT-PCR. Although the profile of arginine-responsive genes is altered and increased, a considerable portion of the "arginome" is maintained upon neoplastic transformation.
format Text
id pubmed-1613245
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2006
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-16132452006-10-17 Short-term arginine deprivation results in large-scale modulation of hepatic gene expression in both normal and tumor cells: microarray bioinformatic analysis Leong, Hwei Xian Simkevich, Carl Lesieur-Brooks, Anne Lau, Bonnie W Fugere, Celine Sabo, Edmond Thompson, Nancy L Nutr Metab (Lond) Brief Communication BACKGROUND: We have reported arginine-sensitive regulation of LAT1 amino acid transporter (SLC 7A5) in normal rodent hepatic cells with loss of arginine sensitivity and high level constitutive expression in tumor cells. We hypothesized that liver cell gene expression is highly sensitive to alterations in the amino acid microenvironment and that tumor cells may differ substantially in gene sets sensitive to amino acid availability. To assess the potential number and classes of hepatic genes sensitive to arginine availability at the RNA level and compare these between normal and tumor cells, we used an Affymetrix microarray approach, a paired in vitro model of normal rat hepatic cells and a tumorigenic derivative with triplicate independent replicates. Cells were exposed to arginine-deficient or control conditions for 18 hours in medium formulated to maintain differentiated function. RESULTS: Initial two-way analysis with a p-value of 0.05 identified 1419 genes in normal cells versus 2175 in tumor cells whose expression was altered in arginine-deficient conditions relative to controls, representing 9–14% of the rat genome. More stringent bioinformatic analysis with 9-way comparisons and a minimum of 2-fold variation narrowed this set to 56 arginine-responsive genes in normal liver cells and 162 in tumor cells. Approximately half the arginine-responsive genes in normal cells overlap with those in tumor cells. Of these, the majority was increased in expression and included multiple growth, survival, and stress-related genes. GADD45, TA1/LAT1, and caspases 11 and 12 were among this group. Previously known amino acid regulated genes were among the pool in both cell types. Available cDNA probes allowed independent validation of microarray data for multiple genes. Among genes downregulated under arginine-deficient conditions were multiple genes involved in cholesterol and fatty acid metabolism. Expression of low-density lipoprotein receptor was decreased in both normal and tumor cells. CONCLUSION: Arginine-sensitive regulation appears to be an important homeostatic mechanism to coordinate cell response and nutrient availability in hepatic cells. Genes predicted as arginine-responsive in stringent microarray data analysis were confirmed by Northern blot and RT-PCR. Although the profile of arginine-responsive genes is altered and increased, a considerable portion of the "arginome" is maintained upon neoplastic transformation. BioMed Central 2006-09-08 /pmc/articles/PMC1613245/ /pubmed/16961918 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1743-7075-3-37 Text en Copyright © 2006 Leong et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Brief Communication
Leong, Hwei Xian
Simkevich, Carl
Lesieur-Brooks, Anne
Lau, Bonnie W
Fugere, Celine
Sabo, Edmond
Thompson, Nancy L
Short-term arginine deprivation results in large-scale modulation of hepatic gene expression in both normal and tumor cells: microarray bioinformatic analysis
title Short-term arginine deprivation results in large-scale modulation of hepatic gene expression in both normal and tumor cells: microarray bioinformatic analysis
title_full Short-term arginine deprivation results in large-scale modulation of hepatic gene expression in both normal and tumor cells: microarray bioinformatic analysis
title_fullStr Short-term arginine deprivation results in large-scale modulation of hepatic gene expression in both normal and tumor cells: microarray bioinformatic analysis
title_full_unstemmed Short-term arginine deprivation results in large-scale modulation of hepatic gene expression in both normal and tumor cells: microarray bioinformatic analysis
title_short Short-term arginine deprivation results in large-scale modulation of hepatic gene expression in both normal and tumor cells: microarray bioinformatic analysis
title_sort short-term arginine deprivation results in large-scale modulation of hepatic gene expression in both normal and tumor cells: microarray bioinformatic analysis
topic Brief Communication
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1613245/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16961918
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1743-7075-3-37
work_keys_str_mv AT leonghweixian shorttermargininedeprivationresultsinlargescalemodulationofhepaticgeneexpressioninbothnormalandtumorcellsmicroarraybioinformaticanalysis
AT simkevichcarl shorttermargininedeprivationresultsinlargescalemodulationofhepaticgeneexpressioninbothnormalandtumorcellsmicroarraybioinformaticanalysis
AT lesieurbrooksanne shorttermargininedeprivationresultsinlargescalemodulationofhepaticgeneexpressioninbothnormalandtumorcellsmicroarraybioinformaticanalysis
AT laubonniew shorttermargininedeprivationresultsinlargescalemodulationofhepaticgeneexpressioninbothnormalandtumorcellsmicroarraybioinformaticanalysis
AT fugereceline shorttermargininedeprivationresultsinlargescalemodulationofhepaticgeneexpressioninbothnormalandtumorcellsmicroarraybioinformaticanalysis
AT saboedmond shorttermargininedeprivationresultsinlargescalemodulationofhepaticgeneexpressioninbothnormalandtumorcellsmicroarraybioinformaticanalysis
AT thompsonnancyl shorttermargininedeprivationresultsinlargescalemodulationofhepaticgeneexpressioninbothnormalandtumorcellsmicroarraybioinformaticanalysis