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标题: MITF links differentiation with cell cycle arrest in melanocytes by transcriptio [打印本页]

作者: kato    时间: 2009-3-6 09:47     标题: MITF links differentiation with cell cycle arrest in melanocytes by transcriptio

Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO 63110
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) V. H1 H/ q5 c- U" Z& B  GCell cycle exit is required for proper differentiation in most cells and is critical for normal development, tissue homeostasis, and tumor suppression. However, the mechanisms that link cell cycle exit with differentiation remain poorly understood. Here, we show that the master melanocyte differentiation factor, microphthalmia transcription factor (MITF), regulates cell cycle exit by activating the cell cycle inhibitor INK4A, a tumor suppressor that frequently is mutated in melanomas. MITF binds the INK4A promoter, activates p16Ink4a mRNA and protein expression, and induces retinoblastoma protein hypophosphorylation, thereby triggering cell cycle arrest. This activation of INK4A was required for efficient melanocyte differentiation. Interestingly, MITF was also required for maintaining INK4A expression in mature melanocytes, creating a selective pressure to escape growth inhibition by inactivating INK4A. These findings demonstrate that INK4A can be regulated by a differentiation factor, establish a mechanistic link between melanocyte differentiation and cell cycle exit, and potentially explain the tissue-specific tendency for INK4A mutations to occur in melanoma.. W1 ^; J' l* K4 C8 t

! P2 c' u5 }/ ]8 HAbbreviations used in this paper: MEF, mouse embryonic fibroblast; MITF, microphthalmia transcription factor; Rb, retinoblastoma protein; siRNA, small interfering RNA." X; U$ |  |- J# @: \8 s
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Introduction: t+ U+ u+ g! ?: U& Q: C+ O' _

) r2 F% O- I+ R0 OTerminal differentiation is accompanied by cell cycle exit in most cell types, and this proclivity for mature cells to stop dividing is important for normal development, tissue homeostasis, and tumor suppression (Lipinski and Jacks, 1999). In fact, the normal cellular function of many tumor suppressors is to regulate differentiation and cell cycle exit (Lipinski and Jacks, 1999). Nevertheless, the mechanisms that link differentiation with cell cycle exit remain poorly understood.
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) t( D) Z; u% wMelanocytes are derived from neural crest and differentiate under the control of microphthalmia transcription factor (MITF), a basic helix-loop-helix leucine zipper transcription factor that activates genes involved in pigment production (e.g., DCT, TYR, and TRP1) and melanocyte survival (e.g., BCL2) (McGill et al., 2002; Bear et al., 2003; Widlund and Fisher, 2003). Whether MITF also regulates cell cycle exit and maintenance of the post-mitotic state in melanocytes is unclear. We address that question here by investigating how MITF affects the Rb-p16Ink4a pathway, which plays a key role in cell cycle exit and orderly progression through the differentiation process in many cell types (Lipinski and Jacks, 1999).
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Results and discussion# r8 c1 `: u+ @# _% e
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To examine the role of MITF in melanocyte cell cycle regulation, we studied embryonic fibroblasts that differentiate into melanocytes under the influence of ectopic MITF, as previously characterized (Tachibana et al., 1996; Bear et al., 2003). Expression of MITF in 10T1/2 cells, which produce negligible endogenous MITF protein (Fig. 1 A), resulted in marked growth inhibition and morphologic changes consistent with melanocyte differentiation (Fig. 1 B). BrdU incorporation assays indicated that this growth block was due to cell cycle arrest (Fig. 1 C). In contrast, no cell cycle alterations were observed in cells expressing a MITF mutant lacking DNA-binding activity (MITF-DB; Fig. 1 C), indicating that the ability of MITF to negatively regulate the cell cycle is dependent on its DNA-binding activity.9 K- h8 s4 e" Q  c' f, d1 q
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Consequently, we reasoned that the cell cycle inhibitory activity of MITF might be mediated through interaction of the MITF DNA-binding domain with cell cycle gene promoter elements. The canonical MITF recognition motif consists of a distal M box containing a consensus CATGTG near the center and a proximal E box (CANNTG) (Yasumoto et al., 1995). A search of cell cycle regulatory gene promoters revealed multiple M and E boxes in the promoter region of INK4A in both human and mouse (Fig. 2 A). This finding was particularly interesting because INK4A is a tumor suppressor that is frequently inactivated in melanoma (Chin et al., 1998). Using chromatin immunoprecipitation assays, endogenous MITF from normal melanocytes was detected at the INK4A promoter in vivo (Fig. 2 B). Consistent with this finding, gel mobility shift assays showed binding of endogenous MITF from Mel202 melanoma cells to M and E box elements from the INK4A promoter in vitro (Fig. S1, available at http://www.jcb.org/cgi/content/full/jcb.200410115/DC1). Competition with either the unlabeled M box or the unlabeled E box oligonucleotide inhibited binding of the other labeled oligonucleotides, suggesting that both elements are required for maximal binding of MITF to the INK4A promoter.
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The ability of MITF to activate the INK4A promoter was tested using an INK4A promoter driving a luciferase reporter in 10T1/2 cells. Expression of MITF in these cells caused a dose-dependent increase in luciferase activity, with up to 20-fold induction compared with cells transfected with MITF-DB expression plasmid or a control empty vector (Fig. 2 C). In contrast, no induction was seen when two nucleotides in the M box sequence were mutated, indicating that activation of the INK4A promoter by MITF requires the MITF-binding motif. Consistent with these results, ectopic expression of MITF (but not MITF-DB) resulted in a substantial increase in endogenous p16Ink4a protein and mRNA levels in 10T1/2 cells (Fig. 1 A and Fig. 3 A).% V4 v3 p. C* T) p9 s1 ~, a

; B% k% ?: o6 I* p( ~Because p16Ink4a induces a G1 cell cycle arrest by inhibiting Cdk4 and allowing the accumulation of hypophosphorylated retinoblastoma protein (Rb) (Serrano et al., 1993), we examined the Rb protein in 10T1/2 cells after ectopic expression of MITF or MITF-DB. Neither MITF nor MITF-DB affected total Rb protein levels in 10T1/2 cells, but only MITF induced an accumulation of hypophosphorylated Rb (Fig. 1 A). In particular, MITF expression resulted in loss of phosphorylation at Ser780, a CDK site that is preferentially phosphorylated by the p16Ink4a target Cdk4 and is known to be involved in regulation of cell division and differentiation (Kitagawa et al., 1996; Brugarolas et al., 1999; Ma et al., 2003).
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To investigate whether MITF is required to sustain endogenous p16Ink4a expression in melanocytic cells, we depleted MITF in early passage normal melanocytes by RNA interference. Compared with melanocytes transfected with control scrambled small interfering RNA (siRNA) expression vector, those transfected with MITF siRNA expression vector exhibited markedly reduced levels of MITF and p16Ink4a mRNA and protein (Fig. 3, A and B). These changes were accompanied by an accumulation of hyperphosphorylated Rb (Fig. 3 B). Consistent with these findings, depletion of MITF caused melanocytes to reenter the cell cycle, as evidenced by increased BrdU incorporation (Fig. 3 C), suggesting that the MITF-p16Ink4a-Rb pathway is also important for maintenance of the post-mitotic state in mature melanocytes. In contrast to normal melanocytes, depletion of MITF in Mel202 melanoma cells, which express low levels of p16Ink4a (Fig. 3 D) as a result of promoter methylation (van der Velden et al., 2001), had no effect on p16Ink4a or Rb protein levels, Rb phosphorylation, or BrdU incorporation (Fig. 3, E and F). Thus, MITF induces and maintains cell cycle exit in melanocytes, but this regulatory mechanism can be disrupted in melanoma cells by inactivation of INK4A.
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Next, we established colonies of 10T1/2 cells stably expressing MITF and passaged them every 3 d, monitoring for changes in growth rate. As described above, cells expressing MITF initially exhibited a dramatically reduced growth rate. However, after four or more passages occasional clones escaped the MITF-induced inhibition and began growing at a rate comparable to parental cells that did not express MITF (Fig. 4 A). In these escape clones, MITF mRNA and protein levels remained unchanged, but p16Ink4a mRNA and protein were markedly reduced (Fig. 4, B and C). Further, methylation-specific PCR assays revealed methylation of CpG islands (indicative of gene inactivation) within the INK4A promoter in the escape clones, but not in the growth-inhibited clones (Fig. 4 D). The level of methylation was similar to that observed in Mel202 melanoma cells. Thus, inactivation of INK4A provides an escape from MITF-induced growth inhibition, which may explain the strong selective pressure to silence INK4A during melanoma formation (Chin et al., 1998).: J0 w* J# K. S
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Next, we examined whether melanocyte differentiation and cell cycle arrest are independent processes. MITF and MITF-DB were expressed in wild-type and INK4A-null primary mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs), and then were monitored for growth rate and morphology. As expected, MITF (but not MITF-DB) inhibited the growth of wild-type cells, but it had no growth inhibitory effect on INK4A-null cells (Fig. 5 A). MITF efficiently blocked cell cycle progression in wild-type cells as measured by BrdU incorporation, whereas no cell cycle inhibition was observed in INK4A-null cells (Fig. 5 B). As with the 10T1/2 cells, MEFs expressing ectopic MITF exhibited morphologic changes consistent with melanocyte differentiation (Fig. 5 C), but MITF did not induce these changes in cells lacking INK4A (Fig. 5 C). Likewise, the melanocyte differentiation marker S100 was detected in MITF-expressing cells that were wild type for INK4A but not in those that were null for INK4A (Fig. 5 D). Importantly, ectopic MITF and MITF-DB levels were similar in wild-type and INK4A-null MEFs (Fig. S2, available at http://www.jcb.org/cgi/content/full/jcb.200410115/DC1). These results suggest that MITF requires INK4A not only for cell cycle inhibition, but also for efficient execution of the melanocyte differentiation program. Indeed, Sviderskaya and coworkers found that melanocytes lacking INK4A were more proliferative and less differentiated than melanocytes having one or both copies of INK4A (Sviderskaya et al., 2002).
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Figure 5 INK4A is required for MITF to execute the melanocyte differentiation program. (A) Growth rate of INK4A-wildtype and INK4A-null MEFs expressing ectopic MITF or MITF-DB. (B) BrdU incorporation assays in INK4A-wildtype and INK4A-null MEFs expressing ectopic MITF, MITF-DB, or empty control vector. (C) Phase-contrast photomicrographs (left panels) of INK4A-wildtype and INK4A-null MEFs expressing ectopic MITF or MITF-DB. Only MITF-expressing wild-type cells exhibit spindle morphology consistent with melanocyte differentiation. Immunofluorescence analysis (right panels) of INK4A-wildtype and INK4A-null MEFs expressing ectopic MITF. DAPI staining (blue) indicates cell nuclei, and green staining indicates expression of the melanocyte marker S100.
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These findings provide new mechanistic insights into several biological problems. First, they provide an example of how differentiation can be linked with cell cycle arrest. By activating genes involved in cell cycle exit (i.e., INK4A) as well as melanocyte cell fate, MITF efficiently coregulates these interrelated processes. Analogous to MITF, MyoD is a helix-loop-helix transcription factor that induces both cell cycle exit and differentiation in myoblasts (Sorrentino et al., 1990). However, unlike our findings for MITF, MyoD-induced cell cycle arrest does not appear to be a prerequisite for myoblast differentiation. Second, our results show that INK4A can be regulated directly by a differentiation factor. This is a particularly relevant point because surprisingly little is known about the transcriptional control of this important cell cycle regulator. Third, our results provide new insights into one of the most perplexing questions in cancer biology (Sherr, 2004): why are specific tumor suppressors (many of which are differentiation factors) associated with cancer in certain cell types but not others Our findings would suggest that at least part of the answer lies in the mechanisms linking differentiation and cell cycle exit in a given cell type. The direct link between MITF and INK4A provides an attractive explanation for the strong association between INK4A mutation and melanoma (Ranade et al., 1995; Monzon et al., 1998). Why do melanocytes mutate INK4A rather than MITF or Rb One potential explanation is that both MITF and Rb are required for melanocyte survival (Yavuzer et al., 1995; McGill et al., 2002; Yu et al., 2003), whereas INK4A appears only to regulate cell cycle.
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5 R  G" P! \: F3 c' ?- q6 m' {A critical question that remains unanswered is how differentiation is prohibited in the absence of cell cycle exit. One speculation, based on the observation that E2F1 becomes bound to hypophosphorylated Rb during differentiation (Ikeda et al., 1996; Kastner et al., 1998), is that free E2F inhibits the differentiation program. Rb-E2F may then serve as a checkpoint to allow differentiation only when Rb is hypophosphorylated and able to induce G1 arrest. Further work is underway to address this question.
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Materials and methods- \0 G. Y# f% D4 U+ h
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Cells and transfection
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  Y' f0 i* S3 D+ R# c& }. dMel202 human melanoma cells were a gift of B. Ksander (Harvard, Boston, MA). C3H 10T1/2 and primary MEFs were obtained from American Type Culture Collection. Normal human melanocytes were described previously (Harbour et al., 2002). INK4A-null MEFs were generated at E13.5 from FVB.129-CDKN2atm2.1Rdp mice (from Mouse Models of Human Cancers Consortium, Frederick, MD). Cells were maintained in DME with 10% FCS. MITF expression vector in pT7T3D-PacI was obtained from American Type Culture Collection. MITF-DB was generated by introducing a T-to-A nucleotide substitution in the MITF DNA-binding domain using site-directed mutagenesis with QuickChange II (Stratagene), resulting in an I212N substitution, which inhibits DNA binding (Takebayashi et al., 1996). RNA interference was achieved using pSilencer plasmid (Ambion) expressing MITF siRNA or scrambled control siRNA (Xeragon). Luciferase assays were performed as described previously (Ma et al., 2003) using INK4A promoter-luciferase reporter (a gift of G. Gores, Mayo Medical School, Rochester, MN) or a mutant promoter generated by mutation of two nucleotides in the M box (CAACTG) using site-directed mutagenesis. Constructs were verified by sequencing. Transfections were performed with 1 μg test plasmid DNA (unless otherwise indicated) using Effectene (QIAGEN).
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BrdU and immunofluorescence assays were performed as described previously (Ma et al., 2003). In brief, 105 cells were transfected with the indicated expression vectors, along with a GFP vector (10:1 ratio), on coverslips. For BrdU assays, cells were labeled with BrdU (1:1,000 dilution; Amersham Biosciences) 24–72 h after transfection. After a further 12–36 h, cells were rinsed with 1x PBS, fixed in 3.7% formaldehyde for 15 min, permeabilized in 0.3% Triton X-100 for 15 min, and probed with an anti-BrdU antibody (BD Biosciences) at 1:200 dilution in immunofluorescence buffer for 1 h at 37°C in a humidified chamber. After washing the coverslips twice with 1 ml/well PBS, the cells were incubated with Alexa Fluor–conjugated secondary antibody (Molecular Probes, Inc.) at 1:1,000 dilution for 1 h. Cells were stained with DAPI, mounted onto slides using Vectashield mounting medium (Vector Laboratories) and analyzed by fluorescence microscopy. The percentage of cells incorporating BrdU was calculated from the fraction of GFP-positive transfected cells that were positive for BrdU staining. For other immunofluorescence assays, cells were incubated with anti-S100, anti-DCT, or anti-TRP1 primary antibodies and FITC- or Texas red–conjugated secondary antibodies (all from Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc.) and analyzed by fluorescence microscopy in a similar fashion.+ {0 s- M2 c* e- L6 Q2 q7 W% h

/ {( j" I. g* P  k, k0 ]Image acquisition
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7 F5 Y5 x0 ^+ o6 o7 t6 ~Microscopy was performed with an Olympus BX40 microscope (brightfield) and an Olympus BH-2 microscope (fluorescence) using an Olympus UPlanFL 40x magnification objective lens with 0.75 aperture. Photomicrographs were obtained at RT under air using the Olympus DP70 camera (brightfield) and the Insight Spot RT camera (fluorescence). The fluorochrome was Oregon green 488 (Molecular Probes, Inc.). Image acquisition was achieved with Olympus DP controller software. Minimal image processing was performed with Adobe Photoshop.( ?1 o, y, \' i1 @/ D7 x

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! T( d1 r  s  C4 n2 t7 t3 B& pWestern blots were performed as described previously (Ma et al., 2003) using antibodies that recognize MITF (Oncogene Research Products), Rb (sc102; Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc.), Rb-phospho-Ser780 (Cell Signaling), p16Ink4a (Cell Signaling), and gamma-tubulin (Sigma-Aldrich).
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4 a7 o! `' o1 M9 @" PQuantitative PCR7 g  r% \6 O- S

9 u, e1 l% A9 e0 X. }Total RNA was collected using TRIzol (Invitrogen), cDNA was generated using Superscript First Strand Synthesis (Invitrogen), and amplification was performed using the Platinum Quantitative PCR SuperMix-UDG kit (Invitrogen) according to manufacturer's instructions in an iCycler (Bio-Rad Laboratories). LUX Fluorogenic primers for MITF-M and INK4A transcripts were: MITF-forward 5'-CCGTTGGGCTTGCTGCATGT-3', MITF-reverse 5'-CACCAACTACCGTCTCTACTGGATGG-3', INK4A forward 5'-CGGTCCCCTCCAGAGGATTTG-3', INK4A-reverse 5'-CACCGCTCCTCTTTCTTCCTCCGG-3'.( b( X& p9 `4 g' A; ^0 o
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Methylation-specific PCR
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Genomic DNA was isolated using the DNeasy Tissue kit (QIAGEN), was bisulfite modified, and was amplified with methylation-specific primers for INK4A promoter CpG islands. Primer sequences are as follows: methylated-forward 5'-TTTAAATACGTTTTTGTTGGTAGGC-3', methylated-reverse 5'-ACGAATATAACACCCCTAAAATCG-3', unmethylated-forward 5'-TAAATATGTTTTTGTTGGTAGGTGG-3', and unmethylated-reverse 5'-CAAATATAACACCCCTAAAATCACC-3'. PCR was performed using 0.5 μg template, 20 pmol each primer, 1.25 mM dNTP, 6.75 mM MgCl2, 10x PCR buffer (Invitrogen), and Taq Polymerase (Invitrogen). Reactions were run at 94°C for 5 min, followed by 35 cycles of 94°C (30 s), 53°C (30 s), and 72°C (30 s). PCR products were visualized on a 2.0% agarose gel containing ethidium bromide. Mel202 cells were used as a positive control.& z5 i' z- b6 b4 g0 b
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Chromatin immunoprecipitation assays
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ChIP assays were performed using a commercial kit (Upstate Biotechnology) as described by the manufacturer. In brief, 107 normal melanocytes were cross-linked in PBS containing proteinase inhibitors and 1% formaldehyde for 15 min at 37°C, scraped and centrifuged (4 min, 2,000 rpm, 4°C), resuspended in SDS lysis buffer with proteinase inhibitors, sonicated, and centrifuged (4 min, 2,000 rpm, RT). Dilution buffer was added, and supernatants were precleared with 75 μl salmon sperm DNA/protein A. 1 μl MITF antibody (Oncogene Research Products) or mouse IgG (negative control) was added overnight at 4°C, then 60 μl salmon sperm DNA/protein A was added for 1 h at 4°C. The slurry was pelleted (1 min, 1,000 rpm, 4°C), and was washed 5 min each with low salt wash, high salt wash, LiCl buffer, and TE buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, and 1 mM EDTA). Samples were treated with 250 μl elution buffer (1% SDS/0.1M NaHCO3) at RT for 15 min, then with 20 μl of 5M NaCl at 65°C for 4 h, then with 0.5M EDTA/Tris-HCl and 2 μg proteinase K at 45°C for 1 h. DNA was purified using the DNEasy kit (QIAGEN). PCR to detect the INK4A and SILV promoters was performed with the following primers: INK4A-5'-AGCATGTGCCTGTAATCCCAGCTA-3', INK4A-5'-TGGGAGACAAGAGCGAAACTTGGT-3', SILV-5'-CATGGAGAACTTCCAAAAGGTGG-3', and SILV-5'-TACTCTCCCCAGGGAGTATAAGT-3'.( w1 |9 Z. l; A- N5 q

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, O0 G) i' L, p. IGel mobility shift assay demonstrates that MITF binds to the INK4A promoter elements, and that efficient binding requires both the E box and the M box (Fig. S1). Western blot analysis (Fig. S2 A) and immunofluorescence assays (Fig. S2 B) demonstrate that ectopic MITF is expressed at similar levels in wild-type and INK4A-null MEFs. Online supplemental material available at http://www.jcb.org/cgi/content/full/jcb.200410115/DC1.
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Acknowledgments: w* p( e7 R+ C. x) i7 J  I$ L& j, m
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We thank L. Worley for technical assistance.
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- A! o% {" ?+ T  a. T7 J& f; E" OThis work was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health (EY13169 to J.W. Harbour), Research to Prevent Blindness, Inc. (to J.W. Harbour), the Macula Society (to J.W. Harbour), and a National Institutes of Health training grant (T32 EY13360 to A.E. Loercher). Core grants from the National Eye Institute and Research to Prevent Blindness, Inc. to the Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences were also used.
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; D. L. b; s' I/ @  R( n; Bvan der Velden, P.A., J.A. Metzelaar-Blok, W. Bergman, H. Monique, H. Hurks, R.R. Frants, N.A. Gruis, and M.J. Jager. 2001. Promoter hypermethylation: a common cause of reduced p16INK4a expression in uveal melanoma. Cancer Res. 61:5303–5306.$ g  D  H6 P/ V
; d& Q- Q; L9 _0 a# W  s
Widlund, H.R., and D.E. Fisher. 2003. Microphthalamia-associated transcription factor: a critical regulator of pigment cell development and survival. Oncogene. 22:3035–3041.6 ]6 ]1 {+ O& ~" ~2 w, ]
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Yasumoto, K., H. Mahalingam, H. Suzuki, M. Yoshizawa, and K. Yokoyama. 1995. Transcriptional activation of the melanocyte-specific genes by the human homolog of the mouse Microphthalmia protein. J. Biochem. (Tokyo). 118:874–881.
+ p7 p; |) {# P: _3 t# L/ x* _8 A/ f7 T8 E' V2 j2 E: Y* G
Yavuzer, U., E. Keenan, P. Lowings, J. Vachtenheim, G. Currie, and C.R. Goding. 1995. The Microphthalmia gene product interacts with the retinoblastoma protein in vitro and is a target for deregulation of melanocyte-specific transcription. Oncogene. 10:123–134.
6 Y% g% D! H+ w
# {3 m3 O, B0 C* F3 ]/ _( uYu, B.D., M. Becker-Hapak, E.L. Snyder, M. Vooijs, C. Denicourt, and S.F. Dowdy. 2003. Distinct and nonoverlapping roles for pRB and cyclin D:cyclin-dependent kinases 4/6 activity in melanocyte survival. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 100:14881–14886.(Amy E. Loercher, Elizabet)
作者: marysyq    时间: 2015-7-7 13:53

不错的东西  持续关注  
作者: dypnr    时间: 2015-8-7 07:41

晕死也不多加点分  
作者: beautylive    时间: 2015-8-23 17:19

每天到干细胞之家看看成了必做的事情
作者: 张佳    时间: 2015-9-1 08:43

彪悍的人生不需要解释。  
作者: biobio    时间: 2015-9-11 00:48

我毫不犹豫地把楼主的这个帖子收藏了  
作者: foxok    时间: 2015-9-13 10:43

谁都不容易啊 ~~  
作者: beautylive    时间: 2015-9-13 20:01

鉴定完毕.!  
作者: 橙味绿茶    时间: 2015-10-18 11:00

干细胞治疗糖尿病  
作者: txxxtyq    时间: 2015-10-24 14:01

干细胞我这辈子就是看好你
作者: aakkaa    时间: 2015-10-26 21:58

回个帖子支持一下!
作者: tuanzi    时间: 2015-11-13 11:18

干细胞抗衰老  
作者: 三星    时间: 2016-2-16 21:18

你还想说什么啊....  
作者: bioprotein    时间: 2016-2-24 04:25

真是有你的!  
作者: 123456zsz    时间: 2016-3-3 12:54

既然来了,就留个脚印  
作者: yukun    时间: 2016-3-15 13:00

哈哈,顶你了哦.  
作者: 123456zsz    时间: 2016-5-31 11:43

不要等到人人都说你丑时才发现自己真的丑。  
作者: 咕咚123    时间: 2016-6-13 16:01

呵呵 那就好好玩吧~~~~  
作者: 小小C    时间: 2016-8-11 15:10

肿瘤干细胞
作者: sshang    时间: 2016-8-11 18:52

太棒了!  
作者: 蚂蚁    时间: 2016-8-25 19:27

好帖子,要顶!
作者: ikiss    时间: 2016-9-8 15:10

真是天底下好事多多  
作者: biobio    时间: 2016-9-11 17:18

谢谢干细胞之家提供资料
作者: 狂奔的蜗牛    时间: 2016-9-12 12:27

都是那么过来的  
作者: 分子工程师    时间: 2016-10-3 16:10

回个帖子支持一下!
作者: 天蓝色    时间: 2016-10-30 19:26

昨晚多几分钟的准备,今天少几小时的麻烦。  
作者: pspvp    时间: 2016-12-26 18:11

病毒转染干细胞
作者: frogsays    时间: 2017-1-9 06:32

加油啊!!!!顶哦!!!!!  
作者: 依旧随遇而安    时间: 2017-1-10 14:10

彪悍的人生不需要解释。  
作者: kaikai    时间: 2017-1-10 19:08

不错!  
作者: xiao2014    时间: 2017-1-18 23:54

一个子 没看懂  
作者: 追风    时间: 2017-1-22 15:10

转基因动物
作者: 狂奔的蜗牛    时间: 2017-2-18 10:26

呵呵 大家好奇嘛 来观看下~~~~  
作者: 石头111    时间: 2017-3-10 02:16

转基因动物
作者: tuanzi    时间: 2017-3-10 22:41

好人一生平安  
作者: tian2006    时间: 2017-3-18 16:43

加油站加油  
作者: beautylive    时间: 2017-4-1 23:54

dc-cik nk  
作者: 温暖暖    时间: 2017-4-8 01:03

呵呵 大家好奇嘛 来观看下~~~~  
作者: lab2010    时间: 2017-4-26 05:27

不要等到人人都说你丑时才发现自己真的丑。  
作者: 陈晴    时间: 2017-4-29 19:28

不错的东西  持续关注  
作者: feixue66    时间: 2017-5-3 23:17

干细胞产业是朝阳产业
作者: renee    时间: 2017-5-22 22:18

站个位在说  
作者: 罗马星空    时间: 2017-5-25 22:16

必须顶  
作者: ikiss    时间: 2017-6-3 07:04

又看了一次  
作者: 水木清华    时间: 2017-6-9 03:30

不错 不错  比我强多了  
作者: frogsays    时间: 2017-6-18 01:18

原来这样也可以  
作者: www1202000    时间: 2017-6-18 21:18

其实回帖算是一种没德德,所以我快成圣人了  
作者: biodj    时间: 2017-6-23 06:17

不错啊! 一个字牛啊!  
作者: SCISCI    时间: 2017-7-6 00:35

干细胞疾病模型
作者: popobird    时间: 2017-7-13 21:52

HOHO~~~~~~  
作者: 蚂蚁    时间: 2017-8-1 17:58

不错啊! 一个字牛啊!  
作者: 狂奔的蜗牛    时间: 2017-8-6 07:26

造血干细胞
作者: 干细胞2014    时间: 2017-8-12 05:18

不错不错.,..我喜欢  
作者: alwaysniu    时间: 2017-8-24 16:33

帮顶  
作者: qibaobao    时间: 2017-9-5 17:32

真好。。。。。。。。。  
作者: 榴榴莲    时间: 2017-9-24 22:07

努力,努力,再努力!!!!!!!!!!!  
作者: dongmei    时间: 2017-10-3 20:56

免疫细胞疗法治疗肿瘤有效  
作者: 蚂蚁    时间: 2017-10-12 23:50

端粒酶研究
作者: 快乐小郎    时间: 2017-10-30 17:53

干细胞研究非常有前途
作者: 橙味绿茶    时间: 2017-11-4 04:47

不错,看看。  
作者: xuguofeng    时间: 2017-11-10 04:51

干细胞我这辈子就是看好你
作者: biobio    时间: 2017-11-11 13:18

勤奋真能造就财富吗?  
作者: 张佳    时间: 2017-11-13 08:54

干细胞美容
作者: 王者之道    时间: 2017-11-17 12:18

好 好帖 很好帖 确实好帖 少见的好帖  
作者: chinagalaxy    时间: 2017-11-22 11:43

我又回复了  
作者: 锦锦乐道    时间: 2017-12-3 20:15

好困啊  
作者: 石头111    时间: 2017-12-7 03:43

(*^__^*) 嘻嘻……  
作者: frogsays    时间: 2017-12-20 05:52

加油啊!偶一定会追随你左右,偶坚定此贴必然会起到抛砖引玉的作用~  
作者: myylove    时间: 2018-1-8 10:18

原来是这样  
作者: 983abc    时间: 2018-1-9 17:27

谁都不容易啊 ~~  
作者: biobio    时间: 2018-1-19 16:01

不错不错.,..我喜欢  
作者: pspvp    时间: 2018-1-20 03:28

回复一下  
作者: DAIMAND    时间: 2018-1-28 00:30

干细胞分化技术
作者: biobio    时间: 2018-2-7 08:35

干细胞治疗  
作者: qibaobao    时间: 2018-2-28 03:52

支持你一下下。。  
作者: Diary    时间: 2018-3-8 11:01

说的真有道理啊!
作者: htc728    时间: 2018-3-12 23:13

今天临床的资料更新很多呀
作者: 科研人    时间: 2018-3-13 11:27

胚胎干细胞
作者: na602    时间: 2018-3-29 16:10

努力~~各位。。。  
作者: heart10    时间: 2018-4-2 11:53

水至清则无鱼,人至贱则无敌!  
作者: 123456zsz    时间: 2018-4-11 08:18

皮肤干细胞
作者: nosoho    时间: 2018-4-24 15:41

我的妈呀,爱死你了  
作者: sky蓝    时间: 2018-5-7 11:19

不看白不看,看也不白看  
作者: 3344555    时间: 2018-5-13 08:00

我等你哟!  
作者: 安安    时间: 2018-5-23 03:05

你还想说什么啊....  
作者: 追风    时间: 2018-5-30 01:33

我在顶贴~!~  
作者: 我心飞翔    时间: 2018-6-11 17:35

今天的干细胞研究资料更新很多呀
作者: 海小鱼    时间: 2018-6-16 01:54

不错啊! 一个字牛啊!  
作者: DAIMAND    时间: 2018-6-17 22:14

先顶后看  
作者: 橙味绿茶    时间: 2018-6-26 21:42

ding   支持  
作者: 8666sea    时间: 2018-7-5 23:35

鉴定完毕.!  
作者: SCISCI    时间: 2018-7-10 14:43

活着,以死的姿态……  
作者: 橙味绿茶    时间: 2018-7-26 22:01

老大,我好崇拜你哟  
作者: ladybird    时间: 2018-8-3 06:40

顶你一下,好贴要顶!  
作者: 草长莺飞    时间: 2018-8-22 01:00

祝干细胞之家 越办越好~~~~~~~~~`  
作者: 多来咪    时间: 2018-8-25 15:18

顶你一下,好贴要顶!  
作者: tian2006    时间: 2018-8-31 07:31

哈哈,顶你了哦.  
作者: 苹果天堂    时间: 2018-9-7 13:27

皮肤干细胞
作者: netlover    时间: 2018-9-10 06:23

我在努力中  
作者: 兔兔    时间: 2018-9-25 08:19

不错不错.,..我喜欢  




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