
Hu E, Mueller E, Oliviero S, Papaioannou VE, Johnson R, Spiegelman BM:
Targeted disruption of the c-fos gene demonstrates c-fos-dependent
and -independent pathways for gene expression stimulated by growth
factors or oncogenes.
EMBO Journal 1994 Jul 1;13(13):3094-103
ABSTRACT
The c-fos proto-oncogene is believed to play a pivotal role in
transducing growth factor-mediated signals from the extracellular
milieu into the nucleus. c-fos protein dimerizes with c-jun and
related proteins and mediates transcription via AP-1 sites. Using
c-fos-deficient mice generated through gene knockout techniques, we
derived 3T3-type cell lines from primary embryonic fibroblasts. The
c-fos-deficient cells grow normally under optimal culture conditions
and show only a slight reduction in growth rate in low serum culture
compared with control cells. They also express mRNA for most of the
Fos and Jun family members at normal levels. The overall levels of
AP-1 DNA binding activity are normal and several genes (c-jun, MCP1,
metallothionein) known to contain functional AP-1 sites are
expressed normally in the c-fos-deficient and control cells. In
contrast, mRNA for the metalloproteases stromelysin (MMP-3) and type
I collagenase (MMP-1), which are often induced by oncogenes and
growth factors and have been implicated in tumor invasiveness,
cannot be induced by epidermal growth factor or platelet-derived
growth factor in c-fos-deficient cells. Transformation of mutant
cells with polyoma middle T oncogene essentially restores wild-type
levels of stromelysin expression, while transformation with v-src
leads to only a weak induction of the metalloprotease. These results
clearly demonstrate that some AP-1-dependent genes require c-fos for
full expression while others do not; oncogenes may activate
expression of metalloproteases via either fos-dependent or
fos-independent mechanisms. These results also imply that c-fos may
play an important regulatory role in the invasive behavior of
malignant tumors, independent of any role this proto-oncogene might
play in cell growth per se.