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Research Article

CCAAT/Enhancer Binding Protein α Regulates p21 Protein and Hepatocyte Proliferation in Newborn Mice

, , , , , & show all
Pages 7353-7361 | Received 07 Jul 1997, Accepted 19 Sep 1997, Published online: 29 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

CCAAT/enhancer binding protein α (C/EBPα) is expressed at high levels in quiescent hepatocytes and in differentiated adipocytes. In cultured cells, C/EBPα inhibits cell proliferation in part via stabilization of the p21 protein. The role of C/EBPα in regulating hepatocyte proliferation in vivo is presented herein. In C/EBPα knockout newborn mice, p21 protein levels are reduced in the liver, and the fraction of hepatocytes synthesizing DNA is increased. Greater than 30% of the hepatocytes in C/EBPα knockout animals continue to proliferate at day 17 of postnatal life when cell division in wild-type littermates is low (3%). p21 protein levels are relatively high in wild-type neonates but undetectable in C/EBPα knockout mice. The reduction of p21 protein in the highly proliferating livers that lack C/EBPα suggests that p21 is responsible for C/EBPα-mediated control of liver proliferation in newborn mice. During rat liver regeneration, the amounts of both C/EBPα and p21 proteins are decreased before DNA synthesis (6 to 12 h) and then return to presurgery levels at 48 h. Although C/EBPα controls p21 protein levels, p21 mRNA is not influenced by C/EBPα in liver. Using coimmunoprecipitation and a mammalian two-hybrid assay system, we have shown the interaction of C/EBPα and p21 proteins. Study of p21 stability in liver nuclear extracts showed that C/EBPα blocks proteolytic degradation of p21. Our data demonstrate that C/EBPα regulates hepatocyte proliferation in newborn mice and that in liver, the level of p21 protein is under posttranscriptional control, consistent with the hypothesis that protein-protein interaction with C/EBPα determines p21 levels.

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