Volume 125, Issue 12 pp. 2829-2835
Cancer Cell Biology

Forced cytochrome B gene mutation expression induces mitochondrial proliferation and prevents apoptosis in human uroepithelial SV-HUC-1 cells

Santanu Dasgupta

Santanu Dasgupta

Department of Otolaryngology—Head and Neck Surgery, Division of Head and Neck Cancer Research, Johns Hopkins University, North Baltimore, MD

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Mohammad Obaidul Hoque

Mohammad Obaidul Hoque

Department of Otolaryngology—Head and Neck Surgery, Division of Head and Neck Cancer Research, Johns Hopkins University, North Baltimore, MD

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Sunil Upadhyay

Sunil Upadhyay

Department of Otolaryngology—Head and Neck Surgery, Division of Head and Neck Cancer Research, Johns Hopkins University, North Baltimore, MD

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David Sidransky

Corresponding Author

David Sidransky

Department of Otolaryngology—Head and Neck Surgery, Division of Head and Neck Cancer Research, Johns Hopkins University, North Baltimore, MD

Fax: +410-614-1411.

Department of Otolaryngology, Division of Head and Neck Cancer Research, Johns Hopkins University, 1550 Orleans Street 5, North Baltimore, MD 21231, USASearch for more papers by this author
First published: 30 June 2009
Citations: 36

This article is a US Government work, and, as such, is in the public domain in the United States of America.

This work is dedicated to the memory of Snehashis Kabiraj, Silverspring, Kolkata, India.

Financial disclosure: None.

Abstract

Mitochondria encoded Cytochrome B (CYTB) gene mutations were reported in tumors of different anatomic origin but the functional significance of these mutations are not well studied. Earlier, we found a 7-amino acid deletion mutation in the CYTB gene in a primary bladder cancer patient. In the present study, we overexpressed this 7-amino acid deletion mutation of CYTB gene in SV-40 transformed human uroepithelial HUC-1 cells. The nuclear transcribed mitochondrial CYTB (mtCYTB) was targeted into the mitochondria and generated increased copies of mitochondria and mitochondrial COX-I protein in the transfected HUC-1 cells. The proapoptotic protein Bax largely remained confined to the cytoplasm of the mtCYTB transfected HUC-1 cells without release of Cytochrome C. The downstream apoptotic proteins PARP also remained uncleaved along with increased Lamin B1 in the mtCYTB transfected cells. Our results demonstrate that forced overexpression of mtCYTB in transformed human uroepithelial HUC-1 cells triggered mitochondrial proliferation and induction of an antiapoptotic signaling cascade favoring sustained cellular growth. Coding mitochondrial DNA mutations appear to have significant functional contribution in tumor progression. Published 2009 UICC.

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