Background: Humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy is a paraneoplastic syndrome associated with a variety of solid neoplasms including squamous cell carcinomas of various sites. Parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP) is a newly recognized hormone that has been implicated as one of the major causative factors in the pathogenesis of this syndrome. A canine oral squamous carcinoma cell line (SCC 2/88) was used to investigate the regulation of production of PTHrP in response to agents that alter keratinocyte differentiation/proliferation in vitro.
Experimental design: SCC 2/88 cells grown in serum-free media were exposed to various factors and PTHrP production was measured by radioimmunoassay. This cell line spontaneously produced substantial amounts of PTHrP (up to 7,000 pg/ml) without the need for a fibroblast-feeder layer. Production of PTHrP decreased at cellular confluence, and with increasing passage number.
Results: Epidermal growth factor, cholera toxin, calcium, 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D, ionomycin, trans-retinoic acid, transforming growth factor-beta 1 and hydrocortisone stimulated production of PTHrP by SCC 2/88 cells to various degrees. Transforming growth factor-beta 1 was the most potent stimulator of PTHrP production, with a maximal stimulation of 25-fold over control. Monensin decreased PTHrP secretion as early as 6 hours post-treatment and by 48 hours, there was no detectable PTHrP in the conditioned cell culture medium. Calcium, cholera toxin, ionomycin, and transforming growth factor-beta 1 decreased keratinocyte proliferation as measured by cell counts at all doses tested.
Conclusions: The results of this study revealed that SCC 2/88 cells spontaneously produced substantial amounts of PTHrP under baseline conditions and that compounds known to affect keratinocyte differentiation/proliferation up-regulated production of PTHrP. These cells will be valuable to investigate the molecular regulation of PTHrP production by squamous cell carcinomas.