Long-term fate of terminally differentiated skeletal muscle cells following E1A-initiated cell cycle reactivation
- 1 February 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Cell Death & Differentiation
- Vol. 7 (2), 145-154
- https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.cdd.4400592
Abstract
We have previously shown that E1A reactivates the cell cycle in ‘irreversibly’ growth arrested, terminally differentiated (TD) cells. The molecular events following E1A-mediated reactivation of TD skeletal muscle cells have been extensively investigated. However, the long-term fate of the reactivated cells has not been directly determined. In this paper, E1A is used to reactivate TD myotubes derived from established cell lines or primary myoblasts. We show that the reactivated muscle cells continue proliferating beyond the end of the first cell cycle and progress through at least a second one. Experiments performed with an inducible E1A/estrogen receptor chimera indicate that the reactivated cell cycle is self-sustained, since E1A is exclusively necessary to reactivate TD cells, but is dispensable for both the continuation of the first cycle and the progression into the following one. Finally, we report that E1A-mediated reactivation of muscle cells results in apoptotic cell death that can be delayed by the antiapoptotic, adenoviral E1B 55 kDa oncogene.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Expression of E1A in Terminally Differentiated Muscle Cells Reactivates the Cell Cycle and Suppresses Tissue-Specific Genes by Separable Mechanisms†Molecular and Cellular Biology, 1996
- Adenovirus E1A Represses Cardiac Gene Transcription and Reactivates DNA Synthesis in Ventricular Myocytes, via Alternative Pocket Protein- and p300-binding DomainsPublished by Elsevier ,1995
- Mitotic cycle reactivation in terminally differentiated cells by adenovirus infectionJournal of Cellular Physiology, 1995
- An Adenovirus Vector for Gene Transfer into Neurons and Glia in the BrainScience, 1993
- Adenovirus as an expression vector in muscle cells in vivo.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1992
- Adenovirus E1A products suppress myogenic differentiation and inhibit transcription from muscle-specific promotersNature, 1988
- The relationship of polyoma virus-induced tumor (T) antigen to activation of DNA synthesis in rat myotubesDevelopmental Biology, 1973
- Infection of muscle cultures from various species with oncogenic DNA viruses (SV40 and polyoma).Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1967
- Multinucleated Muscle Fibres: Induction of DNA Synthesis and Mitosis by Polyoma Virus InfectionNature, 1967
- Myogenesis: fusion, myosin synthesis, and the mitotic cycle.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1966