[HTML][HTML] Genomics of signaling crosstalk of estrogen receptor α in breast cancer cells

P Dudek, D Picard - PLoS One, 2008 - journals.plos.org
P Dudek, D Picard
PLoS One, 2008journals.plos.org
Background The estrogen receptor α (ERα) is a ligand-regulated transcription factor.
However, a wide variety of other extracellular signals can activate ERα in the absence of
estrogen. The impact of these alternate modes of activation on gene expression profiles has
not been characterized. Methodology/Principal Findings We show that estrogen, growth
factors and cAMP elicit surprisingly distinct ERα-dependent transcriptional responses in
human MCF7 breast cancer cells. In response to growth factors and cAMP, ERα primarily …
Background
The estrogen receptor α (ERα) is a ligand-regulated transcription factor. However, a wide variety of other extracellular signals can activate ERα in the absence of estrogen. The impact of these alternate modes of activation on gene expression profiles has not been characterized.
Methodology/Principal Findings
We show that estrogen, growth factors and cAMP elicit surprisingly distinct ERα-dependent transcriptional responses in human MCF7 breast cancer cells. In response to growth factors and cAMP, ERα primarily activates and represses genes, respectively. The combined treatments with the anti-estrogen tamoxifen and cAMP or growth factors regulate yet other sets of genes. In many cases, tamoxifen is perverted to an agonist, potentially mimicking what is happening in certain tamoxifen-resistant breast tumors and emphasizing the importance of the cellular signaling environment. Using a computational analysis, we predicted that a Hox protein might be involved in mediating such combinatorial effects, and then confirmed it experimentally. Although both tamoxifen and cAMP block the proliferation of MCF7 cells, their combined application stimulates it, and this can be blocked with a dominant-negative Hox mutant.
Conclusions/Significance
The activating signal dictates both target gene selection and regulation by ERα, and this has consequences on global gene expression patterns that may be relevant to understanding the progression of ERα-dependent carcinomas.
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