Abstract
The CaCo-2 cell line is used to study the molecular mechanisms underlying differentiation of intestinal epithelial cells. These cells undergo a gradual differentiation process that is growth-related and depends on cellular density. CaCo-2 cells acquire a morphological polarity and express such markers of mature enterocytes as sucrase-isomaltase, apolipoproteins, alkaline phosphatase, and H-ferritin. Because the NF-Y transcription factor is required for H-ferritin gene expression, we investigated whether it is involved in the expression of the other CaCo-2 differentiation markers. We observed that subunit NF-YA increases during CaCo-2 differentiation and that the constitutive expression of NF-YA, obtained in stably transfected CaCo-2 cells, results in the expression of differentiation markers. In fact, sucrase-isomaltase, apolipoprotein A1, and H-ferritin were constitutively expressed in NF-YA-transfected cells and their levels did not increase during prolonged culture, while these markers were not expressed in mock-transfected CaCo-2 cells or transfected with an inactive NF-YA expression vector until the onset of differentiation.
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