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Molecular Biology and Genetics |
Division of Radiation and Cancer Biology, Department of Radiation Oncology, New England Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts 02111 [G. P. D., J-L. M., D. E. W., V. B.]; and Department of Biochemistry, Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts 02111 [V. B.]; Division of Molecular Genetics, The Netherlands Cancer Institute, 1066 CX Amsterdam, the Netherlands [J. J. L. J., P. K., M. v. L.]; and Life Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California 94720 [K. I., J. C.]
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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Telomerase is repressed in most human somatic cells. This enzyme is a ribonucleoprotein complex containing an RNA component and an essential protein catalytic subunit (hTERT)3 that has reverse transcriptase motifs (9) . Although the RNA component is expressed in most cell types, hTERT is generally expressed in only a few cell types, including the germ line (5 , 9, 10, 11, 12) . hTERT is frequently induced during immortalization (13) , and ectopic expression of hTERT can restore telomerase activity and prevent telomere erosion in many cell types (14, 15, 16) . These findings suggest that hTERT is the only limiting factor for telomerase activity in most normal cells, and its expression is the most common means by which cells acquire replicative immortality.
The cellular proto-oncogene c-myc was found recently to induce telomerase activity and immortalize certain human MECs and fibroblasts (17)
. Direct support for c-Myc as an inducer of telomerase came from studies of the hTERT promoter. The hTERT promoter contains several c-Myc-binding sites (CACGTG) through which c-Myc can activate hTERT transcription (18
, 19)
. Despite being the only cellular gene identified thus far that can activate telomerase, c-myc is amplified or overexpressed in only
15% of breast cancers (reviewed in Ref. 20
). However, the majority of breast cancers express telomerase. These findings suggest that additional pathways of telomerase induction must exist.
Bmi-1 was cloned as a c-myc cooperating oncogene in murine lymphomas (21 , 22) . It was shown subsequently to be a transcriptional repressor belonging to the PcG of proteins (Ref. 23 ; reviewed in Ref. 24 ). Consistent with its oncogenic potential, Bmi-1 also regulates cell proliferation (25) . Bmi-1-deficient MEFs overexpressed the INK4a encoded genes p16 and p19ARF (mouse homologue of human p14ARF) and underwent premature senescence in culture. Conversely, overexpression of Bmi-1 reduced expression of p16, and to a lesser extent p19ARF, and immortalized MEFs. Bmi-1 overexpression in human fibroblasts also extended the replicative life span but did not result in immortalization. The mechanism by which Bmi-1 represses p16 and p19ARF in MEFs appears to be transcriptional but is not well understood (25) . Recently, it was shown that by repressing p19ARF, Bmi-1 inhibits the proapoptotic function of c-Myc and thus collaborates with c-Myc in tumorigenesis (26) .
Bmi-1 contains a conserved RF domain at the NH2 terminus, which is required for its ability to cooperate with c-Myc in tumorigenesis and regulate cell proliferation (27) . Bmi-1 also contains a conserved centrally located helix-turn-helix-turn (H-T-H-T) motif (22) , which is required for transcriptional repression but not transformation, in rat embryo fibroblasts (28) . Bmi-1 was recently reported amplified in certain mantle cell lymphomas (29) , providing evidence for a role in human tumorigenesis. In addition, Bmi-1 is overexpressed in other human cancers, such as non-small cell lung cancer and B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma (30 , 31) .
In human fibroblasts, where senescence mechanisms have been studied extensively, intact pRb/p16 and p53/p21 checkpoints are required to establish and maintain the senescent phenotype (32, 33, 34) . Inactivation of either checkpoint results in an extension of replicative life span but not immortalization (32 , 33) . These checkpoints appear to contribute to the limited replicative life span of MECs as well (35) . Overexpression of hTERT alone can immortalize certain human fibroblasts and retinal epithelial cells without inactivating the pRb/p16 or p53/p21 pathways (14) . It has therefore been argued that inactivation of these checkpoints is not necessary for immortalization by telomerase (3) .
When mammary tissue is explanted into tissue culture medium (DFCI-1 or an equivalent), a heterogeneous population of MECs, termed preselection cells, emerges (reviewed in Ref. 36 ). This population proliferates for 1015 doublings before the majority of cells undergo senescence. However, regular feeding of preselection cells eventually gives rise to a homogeneous population, termed postselection MECs, which appear to arise from relatively rare cells in the preselection population (36, 37, 38) . The emergence of postselection MECs is associated with, and believed attributable to, progressive methylation of the p16 gene (39 , 40) . Thus, p16 is silenced and not expressed in postselection MECs. Nonetheless, postselection MECs eventually undergo replicative senescence, after an additional 3040 doublings, and do not spontaneously immortalize (36, 37, 38) . Recently, it was reported that postselection MECs display signs of genetic instability as they approach senescence (41) . However, consistent with earlier reports, neither the preselection nor the postselection MECs underwent spontaneous immortalization (36 , 41) .
Ectopic expression of hTERT failed to immortalize preselection MECs or keratinocytes that contained an intact p16/pRb pathway but readily immortalized postselection MECs and keratinocytes in which the p16/Rb pathway was inactivated because of p16 methylation or expression of the HPV E7 oncogene (36 , 42 , 43) . We have shown that the HPV E6 oncogene, which abrogates the p53/p21 checkpoint, efficiently immortalizes postselection MECs (44 , 45) . E6 also targets other tumor suppressors, which may contribute to its immortalizing activity (reviewed in Ref. 36 ). For example, E6-induced degradation of a Rap GAP protein (E6TP1) strongly correlates with its immortalization of MECs (46) . Moreover, E6 can induce telomerase activity, which also correlates well with its ability to immortalize cells (47) . The mechanism by which E6 induces telomerase activity is unknown.
Here, we report that Bmi-1 is overexpressed in several human breast cancer cell lines, suggesting a possible role for this gene in breast cancer and MEC immortalization. Consistent with this notion, we show that overexpression of an exogenous Bmi-1 gene extends the replicative life span of postselection MECs, leading to immortalization. Bmi-1 overexpression induced telomerase activity at an early stage in MEC immortalization and appeared to do so by transcriptional activation of hTERT that was independent of c-Myc binding sites present in the hTERT promoter.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Human Bmi-1 was amplified by the PCR using cDNA from normal human fibroblasts (WI-38). Bmi-1 deletion MTs, generated by PCR, were:
RF, deletion of the NH2-terminal RF domain;
HT, deletion of the H-T-H-T domain;
HTNLS2, deletion of the H-T-H-T domain and NLS2. WT and MT Bmi-1 cDNAs were cloned into the pBabe-puro retroviral vector (pB0), obtained from Dr. H. Land (Imperial Cancer Research Fund, London, United Kingdom). Retroviruses were produced by transient transfection, as described (50)
. Virus-containing supernatants were centrifuged to remove cell debris and stored at -70°C. pB0 control or pB-Bmi-1 retroviral supernatants were quick thawed at 37°C and used to infect MECs and fibroblasts for three sequential infections, each for 4 h, in the presence of Polybrene (4 µg/ml). Virally transduced cells were selected in 0.5 µg/ml puromycin for 35 days. This protocol typically yielded 6080% infection efficiency. Cells were passaged every 57 days at 2 x 105/25-cm2 flask and plated at 5 x 104/35-mm dish to determine the percentage of cells that incorporated [3H]thymidine over a 48-h interval (%LN) and/or stained for SA-ß-gal, as described (49)
.
Western Blotting, Antibodies, and Immunostaining.
Denatured protein lysates (40 µg) in Laemmli loading buffer were analyzed by gradient (415%) SDS-PAGE and Western blotting, as described (50)
. Western blots were probed with F6, a mouse mAb against Bmi-1 (51)
, mAb anti-
-tubulin (Calbiochem, Cambridge, MA), polyclonal anti-p14ARF (Ab-1), or mAb anti-p16 (Ab-1; NeoMarkers, Union City, CA), mAb anti-p53 (DO-1), polyclonal anti-Mad1 (C-19), or mAb (9E10) or polyclonal (N-262) anti-c-Myc (Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc., Santa Cruz, CA). Immunostaining was carried out using anti-Bmi-1 F6 mAb, as described (51)
.
Northern and RT-PCR Analyses.
Total cellular RNA was prepared using the RNAeasy midi kit (Qiagen, Inc., Valencia, CA) and quantified; 10 µg of RNA were separated on 1% agarose-formaldehyde gels, transferred to Hybond-N membranes (Amersham), and hybridized to 32P-labeled cDNA probes. Bmi-1 and 36B4 probes were made by digesting, and gel purifying fragments from, pB-Bmi-1 and pGEM5/36B4, respectively. To monitor hTERT expression, total RNA was isolated from control and Bmi-1 overexpressing cells at passages 1 and 50. RT-PCR was performed using hTERT primers (sense, 5'-GACTCGACACCGTGTCACCTACGT-3'; antisense, 5'-TGACAGGGCTGCTGGTGTCTGCTCTC-3'), which amplify a 193-bp cDNA fragment and 733-bp genomic fragment, and ß-Actin primers, as described (50)
. The hTERT signal was detected by Southern blot analysis of the PCR products using a labeled hTERT cDNA probe.
DNA Damage Checkpoint Analysis.
To determine the DNA damage checkpoint response, cells were treated with 0.5 µg/ml ADM or solvent (DMSO) for 24 h. Total cell lysates were prepared and analyzed for p53 and p21 by Western blotting (50)
. To determine the %LN, cells were pulsed with [3H]thymidine for 6 h, fixed, and processed for autoradiography as described (49)
.
Measurement of Telomerase Activity.
Telomerase activity was determined using a TRAP (10)
assay kit (Intergen Co., Purchase, NY).
Reporter Assays.
Reporter assays were performed as described (52)
. Transient transfections were carried out using the FuGENE transfection reagent, as described by the manufacturer (Roche Molecular Biochemicals, Indianapolis, IN). The hTERT promoter-luciferase vector and a derivative with mutations in the c-Myc binding sites of the promoter (19)
were obtained from Dr. R. Dalla-Favera (Columbia University, New York, NY). Reporter vectors were cotransfected with a bacterial ß-galactosidase (pH 7.5) reporter vector for normalization. Cell extracts were prepared 48-h after transfection, analyzed using commercial kits for luciferase (Promega Corp., Wisconsin, WI) and ß-galactosidase (Clontech Laboratories, Palo Alto, CA) activities and normalized as described (52)
.
Telomere Length Assay.
Telomere lengths were analyzed as described (7
, 14)
. Briefly, genomic DNA was isolated using a kit (Qiagen), 25 µg of DNA digested with HinfI and RsaI, and analyzed by Southern blotting using a labeled telomeric (TTAGGG)3 probe. The size ranges and intensities of the telomeric signals were analyzed using a PhosphorImager (Molecular Dynamics).
| RESULTS |
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We regularly subcultured 76N cells overexpressing Bmi-1 in D2 medium at 1:4 (initial passages) to 1:10 (later passages) cell-splitting ratios. The cells were capable of continuous proliferation over >100 PDs without any features of senescence and thus appear to be immortal (Fig. 2D)
. At present, they have undergone well over 200 PDs (not shown). Similarly, Bmi-1 overexpression in normal 184 cells caused a significant extension of replicative life span (Fig. 2E)
. Bmi-1-overexpressing 184 cells also continue to proliferate (presently at PD 100), whereas control cells proliferated for only 810 PDs after drug selection.
The emergence of continuously proliferating Bmi-1-overexpressing MECs occurred without a significant lengthy crisis period. However, a mixture of small, tightly clustered, mitotically active colonies among large senescing cells were noticeable during early passages (Fig. 2F
, upper panel). As cells expressing higher levels of Bmi-1 may have a growth advantage and retroviruses integrate randomly into genomic sites with varying transcriptional activities, the rapidly growing, mitotically active colonies may derive from those cells in which the retrovirus integration site produced optimal levels of Bmi-1. At later passages, Bmi-1-overexpressing cells had a uniform distinct morphology. Notably, they were small in size and grew in tighter colonies (Fig. 2F
, lower panel), similar to the morphology of epithelial cells immortalized by MT p53 (53)
.
Bmi-1 Overexpression Does Not Down-Regulate p14ARF in MECs.
Bmi-1 down-regulates the expression of two important tumor suppressors, p16 and p19ARF (25)
, which are encoded by a single locus, Ink4a (reviewed in Ref. 54
). Mutation or inactivation of Ink4a is associated with extension of replicative life span and cell immortalization (55)
. In postselection MECs, the p16 promoter is methylated and thus inactive. We therefore assessed expression of p14ARF (human homologue of mouse p19ARF) in control and Bmi-1-overexpressing cells by Western analysis. The results of three independent experiments indicated that p14ARF is expressed at equally low levels in control and Bmi-1-overexpressing cells (Fig. 3)
. Because endogenous levels of p14ARF are very low in MECs, we used extracts from p14ARF-overexpressing cells as a positive control for the analysis. Thus, Bmi-1 does not appear to act by down-regulating p14ARF expression in postselection MECs.
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To determine the effect of Bmi-1 overexpression on the endogenous hTERT gene, RNA was isolated from control and Bmi-1-overexpressing cells at passages 1 and 50 and analyzed by RT-PCR. These results confirmed that Bmi-1 overexpression leads to activation of transcription of the endogenous hTERT gene (Fig. 4C)
.
The above results indicate that telomerase is derepressed in Bmi-1-overexpressing cells and suggest that Bmi-1 acts upstream of telomerase in the immortalization process. We therefore measured Bmi-1 expression in 76N cells that had been immortalized by hTERT, E6 or E7, and an
-irradiation transformed 76N cell line, 76-R30 (56)
. Northern analysis indicated that, although Bmi-1 was overexpressed to varying degrees in all immortalized cells compared with 76N cells, it was not overexpressed in the hTERT-immortalized 76N cells. Thus, there was no selection for Bmi-1 overexpression when hTERT was ectopically expressed (Fig. 4D)
. Bmi-1 expression was particularly prominent in E7-immortalized cells, which may be attributable to further up-regulation of Bmi-1 through inactivation of the pRb pathway by E7. Taken together, the lack of Bmi-1 overexpression in hTERT-immortalized cells, its overexpression in other immortalized and tumor cells (Figs. 1
and 4D
), and the increased hTERT reporter activity in Bmi-1-overexpressing cells indicate that Bmi-1 acts upstream of telomerase.
Telomerase Activity in Bmi-1-overexpressing Cells Increases with Passage.
Our RT-PCR analysis suggested that hTERT mRNA levels increase as Bmi-1-overexpressing cells are passaged. To determine whether there was a similar increase in telomerase activity, we performed TRAP assays at different passages. Indeed, telomerase activity increased with increasing passages (Fig. 4E)
. Quantification of the TRAP products by densitometry (normalized to the internal control band) indicated that, compared with cells at passage 1, telomerase activity was roughly 12-fold higher in cells at passage 20, 14-fold higher at passage 30, and 19-fold higher at passage 50 (Fig. 4E)
. The activity remained relatively constant thereafter (not shown).
Bmi-1 Induction of Telomerase Is Cell Type Specific.
Bmi-1 was reported to extend the replicative life span of human fibroblasts, but contrary to its activity in MECs, it did not immortalize these cells (25)
.4
We therefore asked whether the differential ability of Bmi-1 to immortalize cells was attributable to a cell type-specific ability to induce telomerase. Two different strains of commonly used human fibroblasts, WI-38 (from fetal lung) and BJ (from neonatal foreskin), were infected with control (pB0) or Bmi-1-expressing (pB-Bmi-1) retroviruses. After puromycin selection, total cells extracts were prepared, overexpression of Bmi-1 was confirmed by Western blot analysis (not shown), and telomerase activity was measured. The results indicated that Bmi-1 did not induce telomerase in human fibroblasts (Fig. 4F)
.
Bmi-1 Induction of Telomerase in MECs Is Not Mediated by c-Myc Binding Sites Present in the hTERT Promoter.
c-Myc is known to activate hTERT transcription, and Bmi-1 cooperates with c-Myc in cancer development. It was therefore possible that induction of hTERT transcription by Bmi-1 was mediated by c-Myc. To address this possibility, we compared luciferase activity driven by the WT hTERT promoter (WT) with an hTERT promoter in which the c-Myc binding sites were mutated (MT). The MT hTERT promoter was even more active than the WT hTERT promoter in Bmi-1-overexpressing cells (Fig. 5A)
. To confirm that, in 76N MECs, the WT hTERT promoter is c-Myc responsive whereas a MT hTERT promoter is not, we transiently transfected the hTERT reporter vector into pB0 (control) and c-Myc-overexpressing (pBabe-c-Myc) MECs. After 48 h, luciferase activity was measured and normalized to the transfection control vector (pCMVß-gal). The results indicated that indeed the WT hTERT promoter is c-Myc responsive, whereas the MT hTERT promoter is truly insensitive to c-Myc in the MECs used in our study (Fig. 5B)
. Similar results were obtained in Bmi-1-immortalized MECs (not shown).
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Bmi-1 Immortalized Cells Maintain Stable Telomere Lengths.
Ectopic expression of telomerase can increase telomere length, although telomerase-positive, tumor-derived cells frequently have shorter telomeres than normal cells. These findings suggest that telomerase can maintain telomere length, without necessarily increasing it. To assess the effect of Bmi-1-induced telomerase on telomeres, we measured telomere lengths in Bmi-1-overexpressing 76N cells using TRF assay. Initially, the Bmi-1-overexpressing cells had an average telomere length of 69 kb, similar to that of early-passage 76N cells; however, after passage 11, cells have shorter telomeres (34 kb; Fig. 6
). These data suggest that telomerase activity induced by Bmi-1 does not result in a net increase in telomere length but may maintain telomeres at a certain specific length. Indeed, a TRF length assay of Bmi-1-overexpressing cells at different passages suggests that the average telomere length that initially exhibits shortening is stabilized at about 34 kb at later passages (Fig. 6)
. Bmi-1-immortalized cells (currently at passage 130) maintained this 34 kb telomere length in subsequent passages (not shown).
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RF), H-T-H-T domain (
HT), or both the H-T-H-T domain and NLS2 (
HTNLS2; Fig. 8A
HT proteins retain both NLS1 and NLS2; the
RF1 MT lacks NLS1, and
HT-NLS2 retains NLS1 but lacks NLS2. These MTs were introduced into 76N cells using retroviruses. Western analysis showed that the MT proteins were overexpressed and had the expected sizes (Fig. 8B)
HT-NLS2, showed prominent nuclear staining. The
HT-NLS2 MT showed mostly cytoplasmic staining with some nuclear staining, which may be attributable to endogenous Bmi-1 (Fig. 8C)
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HT and
RF proteins, underwent senescence and completely ceased growth within 10 PDs after selection. Thus, both the RF and H-T-H-T domains of Bmi-1 appear to be required for the immortalization of MECs.
We next examined the ability of WT and MT Bmi-1 proteins to induce telomerase activity. Telomerase activity was determined by TRAP assay immediately after puromycin selection (passage 1). Only WT Bmi-1 was capable of inducing significant activity; cells expressing the
RF and
HT proteins, similar to control cells, were devoid of telomerase activity (not shown). Taken together, these data suggest that both the RF and H-T-H-T domains of Bmi-1 are required for telomerase induction, as well as MEC immortalization, supporting a critical role for these conserved domains in mediating the oncogenic capacity of Bmi-1 (21
, 25
, 27) .
| DISCUSSION |
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Bmi-1 is known to immortalize and cooperate with c-Myc in transforming MEFs (25
, 26)
. In contrast, Bmi-1 overexpression only extends the replicative life span of human fibroblasts and does not immortalize them (25)
. Our data also indicate that Bmi-1 cannot induce telomerase in human fibroblasts (Fig. 5F)
.4
In this respect, Bmi-1 differs from c-Myc, which has been reported to activate telomerase in human MECs as well as fibroblasts (17)
but functions similarly to the HPV E6 oncoprotein, which also cannot activate telomerase in human fibroblasts (47)
. Telomerase induction by Bmi-1, thus, is cell type specific. Differential regulation of telomerase by Bmi-1 is very likely responsible for its failure to immortalize human fibroblasts. The reason for this cell type specificity is not yet known. One possibility is that Bmi-1down-regulates an epithelial-specific repressor of telomerase, because Bmi-1 is a member of the PcG family of transcription repressors. This observation may have important implication for cancer development, because it would suggest that Bmi-1 may be able to induce cancers of epithelial origin but not mesenchymal origin (fibroblasts). This may also shed light on the prevalence of carcinomas, as opposed to sarcomas, in humans, because there may be other genes that can function similarly to Bmi-1 by inducing telomerase selectively in epithelial cells.
Bmi-1 effects on the replicative life span of mouse and human fibroblasts are apparently the result of its ability to repress the INK4a locus, which encodes the p16 and p19ARF genes (26) . The postselection MECs used in our study do not express p16. They do, however, express low levels of p14ARF, but Bmi-1 did not down-regulate p14ARF in these cells. Thus, there appear to be cell type- and species-specific differences in the pathways that prevent immortalization. We are currently determining whether down-regulation of p16 in postselection MECs confers susceptibility to immortalization by Bmi-1. Our preliminary data using preselection MECs indicate that Bmi-1 can repress p16, induce weak telomerase activity, and extend the replicative life span of these cells.
In preselection MECs, senescence (termed M0; Ref. 40
) is presumed because of the expression of p16. Recent findings suggest that M0 senescence may also reflect inadequate culture conditions (60)
. Thus, M0 senescence is independent of telomere length. In postselection MECs, senescence is associated with telomere attrition. Although it is possible that genes other than p16 are methylated in postselection cells, hTERT expression is sufficient to immortalize them (17
, 36
, 42)
. Thus far, the only other cellular gene reported to immortalize postselection MECs is c-myc, apparently acting through its ability to induce telomerase (17)
. The E6 viral oncoprotein is highly efficient at immortalization and also induces telomerase in MECs (36
, 47)
. In this respect, it is of interest that Bmi-1 was overexpressed in E6-immortalized MECs (Figs. 1
and 4C
). In contrast, dominant-negative MTs of p53 immortalize postselection MECs inefficiently (53
, 59)
, as does overexpression of ZNF-217, which encodes a zinc finger protein and is amplified in breast cancer (61)
. Apparently, induction of telomerase is a late event in these cases, which may explain the infrequent immortalization. Here, we show that Bmi-1 overexpression efficiently immortalizes MECs, apparently via early activation of hTERT transcription and induction of telomerase activity.
Unlike E6, Bmi-1 overexpression did not abrogate the DNA damage checkpoint, and p53 and p21 remained inducible by DNA damage. Bmi-1 overexpression also did not confer anchorage-independent growth (not shown), suggesting that Bmi-1 can immortalize but not transform MECs. In this respect, immortalization by Bmi-1 is similar to that induced by hTERT, which also does not cause transformation (19 , 43) . Nonetheless, Bmi-1 was overexpressed in all breast cancer cell lines tested and also in MECs immortalized by HPV E6 and E7. However, Bmi-1 was not overexpressed in MECs immortalized by exogenous hTERT. Because, in cells expressing exogenous hTERT, telomerase expression is independent of its native promoter/regulation, up-regulation of Bmi-1 would not confer a growth advantage. Although E6 has numerous biological activities, it is possible that E6 induces telomerase by up-regulating Bmi-1. Together, these data suggest that Bmi-1 functions upstream of hTERT in mediating immortalization.
Telomerase induction by Bmi-1 appears to be attributable to transcriptional activation of the gene encoding the catalytic subunit, hTERT, which is rate-limiting for telomerase activity in most somatic cells. This conclusion is based on results of hTERT promoter-reporter assays. Compared with control cells, hTERT promoter activity was substantially higher in Bmi-1-overexpressing cells. Among several cellular genes that were tested, only c-myc was able to induce telomerase in postselection MECs (17)
. Although telomerase regulation by c-Myc may depend on the cell type (62)
, c-Myc is a transcription activator and has been shown to bind and activate the hTERT promoter (18
, 19)
. Moreover, telomerase appears to be at least partially regulated by c-Myc in the MECs used in our study. However, we found that Bmi-1 induces telomerase independent of the c-Myc binding sites in hTERT promoter. Our studies do not rule out a possible indirect involvement of c-Myc in Bmi-1-mediated induction of telomerase. Interestingly, the hTERT promoter that contained MT c-Myc binding sites was more active than the WT promoter in both Bmi-1-immortalized cells (Fig. 5A)
and normal cells (Fig. 5B)
. It is possible that these c-Myc binding sites function as repressor elements in MECs. This possibility is consistent with the recent finding that Max-Mad complexes compete with Max-Myc complexes for c-Myc binding sites, and Max-Mad complexes inhibit hTERT transcription (63, 64, 65)
.
Although Bmi-1 induced hTERT transcription independently of c-Myc binding sites, it is possible that c-Myc and Bmi-1 cooperate to induce high levels of telomerase activity in late-passage cells and immortalization. Indeed, our preliminary data suggest that late-passage cells have 35-fold higher c-Myc levels compared with early passage Bmi-1-overexpressing cells. It is also possible that Bmi-1-overexpressing cells accumulate additional epigenetic changes or mutations that cooperate with Bmi-1 in inducing full immortalization. Such changes could be responsible for the increased c-Myc expression and altered composition of Max-Myc and Max-Mad complexes and contribute to the increased telomerase activity seen at late passage.
Bmi-1 is a member of the family of PcG proteins, which form repressor complexes. These complexes are thought to bind PcG response elements and silence the expression of neighboring genes (24 , 66) . Thus, it is unlikely that Bmi-1 binds the hTERT promoter directly and activates it. Preliminary chromatin-immunoprecipitation linked PCR assays failed to demonstrate Bmi-1 at the hTERT promoter (not shown). We speculate that Bmi-1 represses the expression of another gene, the product of which negatively regulates hTERT expression.
Although other functions of Bmi-1 may contribute to MEC immortalization, it is likely that induction of telomerase activity plays an important role. Indeed, telomeres initially shortened in Bmi-1-overexpressing cells but then stabilized at 34 kb and did not undergo the further shortening characteristic of telomerase-negative MECs undergoing senescence. E6 and c-Myc immortalized MECs and breast cancer cells show similar telomere dynamics (17 , 42) . The reason for the initial telomere shortening, despite telomerase activity, is not clear. Recent data suggest that a limiting level of telomerase activity produced by exogenous hTERT preferentially maintains the shortest telomeres, allowing cells with very short telomeres to proliferate (67) . Similarly, it is possible that the limited telomerase induced by Bmi-1 in early-passage MECs is just sufficient to maintain the shortest telomeres, whereas other telomeres shorten. At later passages, other mechanisms, such as c-Myc up-regulation, might increase telomerase activity and stabilize all of the telomeres. On the other hand, telomere end-binding proteins and negative regulators of telomerase might counteract the telomerase induced by Bmi-1 in early-passage cultures (68, 69, 70, 71) . Regardless of the mechanism, induction of telomerase by Bmi-1 in MECs, similar to the situation in many tumor cells, led to maintenance of a short but stable telomere length.
Mutational analysis of Bmi-1 indicated that the H-T-H-T and RF domains of Bmi-1 are essential for telomerase activation as well as immortalization of MECs. The RF domain is thought to mediate interactions with other PcG proteins, such as human Polycomb 2 (HPC2), RING1, and human polyhomeotic, to assemble a repressor complex (Ref. 51 ; reviewed in Ref. 66 ). We envision that targets of the Bmi-1 repressor complex may include a telomerase repressor, and down-regulation of this repressor results in induction of the hTERT gene. Future work will be needed to test the validity of this model.
In conclusion, we demonstrated that overexpression of the PcG transcriptional repressor Bmi-1 immortalizes human MECs and induces telomerase, apparently via transcriptional up-regulation of the hTERT gene. Similar to hTERT-immortalized MECs, Bmi-1 immortalized MECs have an intact DNA damage checkpoint. Our data also suggest that Bmi-1 regulates hTERT independent of the c-Myc binding sites in its promoter. We speculate that this may add to the powerful collaboration between c-Myc and Bmi-1 in tumorigenesis. Finally, the availability of Bmi-1-immortalized MECs should help elucidate the sequence of events that occur during the neoplastic transformation of human mammary epithelial cells.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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| FOOTNOTES |
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1 Supported by a startup fund from New England Medical Center Cancer Center (to G. P. D.); in part by Grants AG16851 (to G. P. D.), CA70195 (to V. B.), and AG09909 (to J. C.) from the NIH; and a fellowship from the Dutch Cancer Society (to J. J. L. and P. K.). ![]()
2 To whom requests for reprints should be addressed, at Department of Radiation Oncology, New England Medical Center, 750 Washington Street, NEMC #824, Boston, MA 02111. Phone: (617) 636-9002; Fax: (617) 636-6205; E-mail: GDimri{at}Lifespan.org ![]()
3 The abbreviations used are: hTERT, human telomerase reverse transcriptase; MEC, mammary epithelial cell; PcG, Polycomb group; MEF, mouse embryo fibroblast; HPV, human papillomavirus; D2, DFCI-2; SA-ß-gal, senescence-associated ß-galactosidase; NLS2, nuclear localization signal 2; mAb, monoclonal antibody; ADM, Adriamycin; TRAP, telomere repeat amplification protocol; PD, population doubling; RT-PCR, reverse transcription-PCR; TRF, terminal restriction fragment; RF, RING finger; H-T-H-T, helix-turn-helix-turn; WT, wild type; MT, mutant. ![]()
4 Itahana, K., Zou, Y., Itahana, Y., Martinez, J-L., Beausejour, C., Jacobs, J. J. L., Van Lohuizen, M., Band, V., Campisi, J., and Dimri, G. P. Control of replicative life span of human fibroblasts by the polycomb protein Bmi-1 and p16IMK4a, manuscript in preparation. ![]()
Received 1/30/02. Accepted 6/10/02.
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