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Mechanism of Induced Resistance to Protein Inhibitors of Proliferation

A. I. Bozhkov,1,2 M. Ya. Shevtsova,1 A. B. Malyshev,1 and E. A. Shentseva1

1Institute of Biology, Kharkov State University, pl. Svobody 4, Kharkov, 310077 Ukraine; E-mail: bozhkov@geron.kharkov.ua

2To whom correspondence should be addressed.

Submitted March 14, 1997.
A 12 kD protein (IHP-12) was isolated from the cytosol of liver cells; IHP-12 inhibited proliferation of the liver cells by 50% when injected at 2.5 mg/100 g animal weight. Repeated injections of IHP-12 induced resistance of the liver cells to its anti-proliferative effect. After intraperitoneal injection, IHP-12 is localized in the cytosol and to a lesser extent, in cell nuclei. IHP-12 is degraded in the cytosol but in nuclei it retained its native structure for at least 8 h. The mechanism of induced resistance to IHP-12 was not related to a change in cell binding of IHP-12, its distribution in cellular compartments, and intracellular metabolism. The induced resistance may be associated with a change in the direction of IHP-12 activity, i.e., change in its function in the animal.
KEY WORDS: proliferation, protein inhibitor IHP-12, liver, induction of resistance.