CYP26A1 knockout embryonic stem cells exhibit reduced differentiation and growth arrest in response to retinoic acid.

TitleCYP26A1 knockout embryonic stem cells exhibit reduced differentiation and growth arrest in response to retinoic acid.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2008
AuthorsLangton S, Gudas LJ
JournalDev Biol
Volume315
Issue2
Pagination331-54
Date Published2008 Mar 15
ISSN1095-564X
KeywordsAnimals, Base Sequence, Cell Differentiation, Cell Line, Cell Proliferation, Cytochrome P-450 Enzyme System, DNA Primers, Embryonic Stem Cells, Gene Expression, Gene Targeting, Homeodomain Proteins, Laminin, Leukemia Inhibitory Factor, Mice, Mice, Knockout, Models, Biological, Myocytes, Smooth Muscle, Neurons, Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis, Retinoic Acid 4-Hydroxylase, RNA, Messenger, Transcription Factors, Tretinoin
Abstract

CYP26A1, a cytochrome P450 enzyme, metabolizes all-trans-retinoic acid (RA) into polar metabolites, e.g. 4-oxo-RA and 4-OH-RA. To determine if altering RA metabolism affects embryonic stem (ES) cell differentiation, we disrupted both alleles of Cyp26a1 by homologous recombination. CYP26a1(-/-) ES cells had a 11.0+/-3.2-fold higher intracellular RA concentration than Wt ES cells after RA treatment for 48 h. RA-treated CYP26A1(-/-) ES cells exhibited 2-3 fold higher mRNA levels of Hoxa1, a primary RA target gene, than Wt ES cells. Despite increased intracellular RA levels, CYP26a1(-/-) ES cells were more resistant than Wt ES cells to RA-induced proliferation arrest. Transcripts for parietal endodermal differentiation markers, including laminin, J6(Hsp 47), and J31(SPARC, osteonectin) were expressed at lower levels in RA-treated CYP26a1(-/-) ES cells, indicating that the lack of CYP26A1 activity inhibits RA-associated differentiation. Microarray analyses revealed that RA-treated CYP26A1(-/-) ES cells exhibited lower mRNA levels than Wt ES cells for genes involved in differentiation, particularly in neural (Epha4, Pmp22, Nrp1, Gap43, Ndn) and smooth muscle differentiation (Madh3, Nrp1, Tagln Calponin, Caldesmon1). In contrast, genes involved in the stress response (e.g. Tlr2, Stk2, Fcgr2b, Bnip3, Pdk1) were expressed at higher levels in CYP26A1(-/-) than in Wt ES cells without RA. Collectively, our results show that CYP26A1 activity regulates intracellular RA levels, cell proliferation, transcriptional regulation of primary RA target genes, and ES cell differentiation to parietal endoderm.

DOI10.1016/j.ydbio.2007.12.021
Alternate JournalDev. Biol.
PubMed ID18241852
Grant ListR01 CA43796 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States