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

Paradoxical actions of endogenous and exogenous insulin-like growth factor-binding protein-5 revealed by RNA interference analysis.

Insulin-like growth factor-binding protein-5 (IGFBP-5) is abundantly expressed in bone cells. To determine the physiological role(s) of endogenous IGFBP-5 in regulating bone cell growth, differentiation, and survival, we used short double-stranded RNA (siRNA) to trigger RNA interference of IGFBP-5 in human osteosarcoma cells. The IGFBP-5 siRNA, targeting against a sequence unique to the IGFBP-5 middle domain, efficiently reduced IGFBP-5 mRNA and protein levels. The IGFBP-5 siRNA did not change the levels of IGFBP-4, a structurally related protein, or glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, a housekeeping gene. Knock-down of IGFBP-5 resulted in a significant increase in the number of transferase-mediated dUTP nick end labeling-positive cells and a decrease in a bone differentiation parameter (alkaline phosphatase activity) but had little effect on basal or insulin-like growth factor I-induced proliferation. Overexpression of a siRNA-resistant IGFBP-5 mutant in the IGFBP-5 knock-down cells restored the levels of survival to the control level; overexpression of IGFBP-4 or wild type IGFBP-5 had no such effect. Paradoxically, the addition of exogenous IGFBP-5 not only failed to rescue IGFBP-5 knock-down-induced apoptosis, it caused a further increase in apoptosis. Furthermore, the addition of exogenous IGFBP-5 alone increased apoptosis. This pro-apoptotic action of exogenous IGFBP-5 was abolished when IGF-I was added in excess, suggesting that exogenous IGFBP-5 increases apoptosis by binding to and inhibiting the activities of insulin-like growth factors. These results indicate that endogenous and exogenous IGFBP-5 exhibits opposing biological actions on cell survival and underscore the necessity and utility of studying IGFBP functions through loss-of-function approaches.[1]

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