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Cell Growth and Development

Antisense-fos RNA Causes Partial Reversion of the Transformed Phenotypes Induced by the c-Ha-ras Oncogene

, , , &
Pages 1545-1555 | Received 09 Jun 1989, Accepted 09 Dec 1989, Published online: 31 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

Several lines of evidence have suggested that c-fos may act downstream from c-Ha-ras in a growth-regulatory signal transduction pathway. We used antisense RNA to inhibit c-fos gene expression and investigated the effects of diminished c-fos expression on the phenotypes induced by the EJ c-Ha-ros oncogene in NIH 3T3 cells. Immunofluorescent staining demonstrated that the antisense RNA caused a marked reduction in the amount of c-fos protein expressed following serum stimulation. EJ cells containing antisense-fos RNA continued to overexpress ras and remained capable of proliferating in vitro. However, the antisense-fos RNA caused a partial reversion of the major transformed phenotypes of EJ cells, including a restoration of both densitydependent growth arrest and the ability to be rendered quiescent by serum deprivation, a reversion to a flat morphology, inhibition of anchorage-independent growth, and inhibition of tumorigenicity in nude mice. Our results indicate that inhibition of c-fos expression, to a level still supporting in vitro proliferation, prevents the transforming effects of the ras oncogene; they thus provide additional evidence for the participation of c-fos in ros-regulated signal transduction pathways.

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