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Journal of Virology, September 2000, p. 8151-8158, Vol. 74, No. 17
Department of Molecular Biology and
Biochemistry and Cancer Research Institute, University of
California, Irvine, California 92697
Received 14 February 2000/Accepted 7 June 2000
Moloney murine leukemia virus (M-MuLV) is a replication-competent,
simple retrovirus that induces T-cell lymphomas when inoculated into
neonatal mice. The tumor cells are typically derived from immature T
cells. During preleukemic times, a marked decrease in thymic size is
apparent in M-MuLV-inoculated mice. We previously demonstrated that
this thymic regression is correlated with enhanced levels of thymocyte
apoptosis (C. Bonzon and H. Fan, J. Virol. 73:2434-2441, 1999). In this study, we investigated the
apoptotic state of M-MuLV-induced tumors. M-MuLV-induced tumors were
screened for expression of the apoptotic proteins Fas and Bcl-2 by
three-color flow cytometric analysis. Single-positive (SP;
CD4+ CD8
0022-538X/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Moloney Murine Leukemia Virus-Induced Tumors Show
Altered Levels of Proapoptotic and Antiapoptotic Proteins
and CD4
CD8+) tumor cells generally displayed lower cell surface
expression of Fas than SP thymocytes from uninoculated control mice.
Double-positive (DP; CD4+ CD8+) M-MuLV-induced
tumor cells fell into two categories: those with normal high levels of
Fas and those with low levels of Fas. Additionally, the vast majority
of DP tumors showed elevated Bcl-2 levels. The DP tumor cells retaining
normal/high Fas expression were capable of transducing an apoptotic
signal upon anti-Fas engagement. In addition, DP and CD4+
SP tumor populations displayed higher levels of Fas ligand than normal
thymocytes with the same phenotypes. In contrast, CD8+ SP
and CD4
CD8
tumors did not show elevated
Fas ligand expression. There was no significant correlation between Fas
and Fas ligand expression in the DP tumors, suggesting that Fas Ligand
expression was not the driving force behind Fas down-regulation. These
results suggest that both the Fas death receptor and mitochondrial
pathways of apoptotic death are active in M-MuLV-induced tumors and
that they must be modulated to permit cell survival and tumor outgrowth.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Molecular Biology and Biochemistry, Cancer Research Institute,
University of California, 3221 Biological Sciences II, Irvine, CA
92697-3905. Phone: (949) 824-5554. Fax: (949) 824-4023. E-mail:
hyfan{at}uci.edu.
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