| Literature DB >> 11292179 |
Abstract
Sodium butyrate is well known in stimulating growth and differentiation of cancer cells. In the present study, butyrate treatment caused decreases in thymidine incorporation in the early passages (45-60) of C6 glioma cells. In addition, butyrate also caused decreases in inositol incorporation and transient ATP-stimulated Ca2+ mobilization suggesting that butyrate altered general mechanisms of Ca2+ signaling in these cells. To gain direct insight into the crosstalk between sodium butyrate and Ca2+ signaling in transcriptional regulation, we investigated the induction of the Ca2+-sensitive immediate early genes (IEGs), c-fos, nur77 and c-myc. Sodium butyrate per se enhanced the expression of c-fos mRNA, and the enhanced levels were maintained for 24 h, but over the same time period, the initially increased levels of nur77 expression tailed off, while c-myc expression was slightly reduced. Increasing intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) by thapsgargin and A23187 induced the expression of both c-fos and nur77 mRNA expression, and synergistic effects were observed when cells were incubated with sodium butyrate plus thapsgargin and A23187. However, removal of both extracellular Ca2+ by EGTA, or intracellular free Ca2+ with BAPTA did not affect the sodium butyrate-induced c-fos and nur77 mRNA. These results suggest that although sodium butyrate altered Ca2+ signaling which is an important regulatory mechanism for c-fos and nur77 expression, nevertheless the sodium butyrate-induced c-fos and nur77 expression may be not in fact mediated through Ca2+ signaling.Entities:
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Year: 2000 PMID: 11292179
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chin J Physiol ISSN: 0304-4920 Impact factor: 1.764