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Publication : Alterations in NF-kappaB function in transgenic epithelial tissue demonstrate a growth inhibitory role for NF-kappaB.

First Author  Seitz CS Year  1998
Journal  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Volume  95
Issue  5 Pages  2307-12
PubMed ID  9482881 Mgi Jnum  J:46240
Mgi Id  MGI:1197400 Doi  10.1073/pnas.95.5.2307
Citation  Seitz CS, et al. (1998) Alterations in NF-kappaB function in transgenic epithelial tissue demonstrate a growth inhibitory role for NF-kappaB. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 95(5):2307-12
abstractText  Stratified epithelium contains a mitotically active basal layer of cells that cease proliferating, then migrate outwards and undergo terminal differentiation. The control of this process, which is abnormal in cutaneous neoplasia and inflammation, is not well understood. In normal epidermis, NF-kappaB proteins were found to exist in the cytoplasm of basal cells and then to localize in the nuclei of suprabasal cells, suggesting a role for NF-kappaB in the switch from proliferation to growth arrest and differentiation. Functional blockade of NF-kappaB by expressing dominant-negative NF-kappaB inhibitory proteins in transgenic murine and human epidermis produced hyperplastic epithelium in vivo. Consistent with this, application of a pharmacologic inhibitor of NF-kappaB to intact skin induced epidermal hyperplasia. In contrast, overexpression of active p50 and p65 NF- kappaB subunits in transgenic epithelium produced hypoplasia and growth inhibition. These data suggest that spatially restricted NF-kappaB activation occurs in stratified epithelium and indicate that NF-kappaB activation in this tissue, in contrast to its role in other settings, is important for cellular growth inhibition.
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