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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Bone morphogenetic protein-5, -6 and -7 inhibit growth and induce apoptosis in human myeloma cells.

Previously, bone morphogenetic protein (BMP)-2 and -4 have been shown to inhibit proliferation and induce apoptosis in human myeloma cells. BMP-2 and -4 belong to a subgroup of BMPs using the BMP receptors Alk-3 or -6. In this study, we examined the effects on human myeloma cells of BMP-6 and -7, members of a different BMP subgroup, which mainly utilize Alk-2 as their receptor. All cell lines examined expressed mRNA for the BMP-6 and -7 receptor Alk-2. We did not detect transcripts for the BMP-2 and -4 receptors Alk-3 or Alk-6 in INA-6 and RPMI-8226 cells by RT-PCR. Accordingly, the intracellular signalling molecules Smad-1, -5 and -8 were not phosphorylated by BMP-4 in INA-6 and RPMI-8226 cells. The expression patterns of various BMP receptors in the myeloma cell lines explained the differences in responses to the various BMPs. Alk-2-expressing cell lines responded with growth inhibition and apoptosis to BMP-6 and -7, whereas cell lines lacking both Alk-3 and -6 were resistant to BMP-4. Soluble Alk-3 and -6 were able to neutralize the BMP-4 effects in BMP-4-responsive cell lines. All BMPs reduced viability in more than 70% of purified primary myeloma cell samples. BMPs have intriguing antitumor effects in vitro. Importantly, myeloma cells not responsive to BMP-2 and -4 may still be sensitive to BMP-6 or -7. It is possible that therapeutic use of BMP or BMP analogues could have an impact on both myeloma bone disease and myeloma cell growth.[1]

References

  1. Bone morphogenetic protein-5, -6 and -7 inhibit growth and induce apoptosis in human myeloma cells. Ro, T.B., Holt, R.U., Brenne, A.T., Hjorth-Hansen, H., Waage, A., Hjertner, O., Sundan, A., Borset, M. Oncogene (2004) [Pubmed]
 
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