Dual role of insulin-like growth factor-1 in acetyl-CoA carboxylase-alpha activity in human colon cancer cells HCT-8: downregulating its expression and phosphorylation

Author: Luo Di-Xian   Peng Xu-hong   Xiong Yan   Liao Duan-Fang   Cao Deliang   Li Longjiang  

Publisher: Springer Publishing Company

ISSN: 0300-8177

Source: Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry, Vol.357, Iss.1-2, 2011-11, pp. : 255-262

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Abstract

Insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) plays the role in cellular lipid synthesis and cell proliferation. However, the role of IGF-1 on the growth of colon cancer cell line HCT-8 is not clear. In this study, HCT-8 cells were exposed to IGF-1 at 0, 10, 50, or 100 ng/ml in serum-free medium. Fatty acid/lipid synthesis in HCT-8 cells was examined by 2-14C-acetate incorporation. HCT-8 cell growth and proliferation were determined by MTT assay and Trypan blue exclusive viable cell counting. We found that in serum starvation conditions, IGF-1 at 10–100 ng/ml induced dose-dependent down regulation of both the ACCα expression and the phosphorylation in HCT-8 cells, maintaining a balance in ACCα activity and lipid synthesis. IGF-1 reduced p-ATM, p-AMPK, and then p-ACCα protein levels in HCT-8 cells. IGF-1 increased p-Akt levels, but decreased p-ERK1/2 levels, leading to the decrease in ACCα protein and mRNA levels. Similarly, ERK1/2 inhibitor PD98059 reduced ACCα expression. IGF-1 influences neither HCT-8 cell growth nor their p53 protein levels and PARP cleavage. In a word, IGF-1 reduced ACCα phosphorylation via an ATM/AMPK signaling pathway and suppressed ACCα expression through an ERK1/2 transduction, playing a dual role in regulating ACCα activity and lipogenesis. This may render a cell with survival advantages under a serum starvation crisis, representing a novel mitogenic role of IGF-1.

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