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CD99 drives terminal differentiation of osteosarcoma cells by acting as a spatial regulator of ERK 1/2.


ABSTRACT: Differentiation therapy is an attractive treatment for osteosarcoma (OS). CD99 is a cell surface molecule expressed in mesenchymal stem cells and osteoblasts that is maintained during osteoblast differentiation while lost in OS. Herein, we show that whenever OS cells regain CD99, they become prone to reactivate the terminal differentiation program. In differentiating conditions, CD99-transfected OS cells express osteocyte markers, halt proliferation, and largely die by apoptosis, resembling the fate of mature osteoblasts. CD99 induces ERK activation, increasing its membrane-bound/cytoplasmic form rather than affecting its nuclear localization. Through cytoplasmic ERK, CD99 promotes activity of the main osteogenic transcriptional factors AP1 and RUNX2, which in turn enhance osteocalcin and p21(WAF1/CIP1) , leading to G0 /G1 arrest. These data underscore the alternative positions of active ERK into distinct subcellular compartments as key events for determining OS fate.

SUBMITTER: Sciandra M 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4255300 | biostudies-literature | 2014

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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CD99 drives terminal differentiation of osteosarcoma cells by acting as a spatial regulator of ERK 1/2.

Sciandra Marika M   Marino Maria Teresa MT   Manara Maria Cristina MC   Guerzoni Clara C   Grano Maria M   Oranger Angela A   Lucarelli Enrico E   Lollini Pier-Luigi PL   Dozza Barbara B   Pratelli Loredana L   Renzo Maria Flavia Di MF   Colombo Mario Paolo MP   Picci Piero P   Scotlandi Katia K  

Journal of bone and mineral research : the official journal of the American Society for Bone and Mineral Research 20140101 5


Differentiation therapy is an attractive treatment for osteosarcoma (OS). CD99 is a cell surface molecule expressed in mesenchymal stem cells and osteoblasts that is maintained during osteoblast differentiation while lost in OS. Herein, we show that whenever OS cells regain CD99, they become prone to reactivate the terminal differentiation program. In differentiating conditions, CD99-transfected OS cells express osteocyte markers, halt proliferation, and largely die by apoptosis, resembling the  ...[more]

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