Literature DB >> 10974076

Activation of the estrogen-signaling pathway by p21(WAF1/CIP1) in estrogen receptor-negative breast cancer cells.

X Chen1, C Danes, M Lowe, T W Herliczek, K Keyomarsi.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Estrogen stimulates the proliferation of cells in normal mammary glands and most estrogen receptor (ER)-positive mammary carcinomas by binding to the ER and promoting the transcription of ER-responsive genes. In cells with functional ERs, estrogen mediates the transition of cells from the G(1) to S phase of the cell cycle. Several cell cycle regulatory proteins have been implicated in the ER-signaling pathway involved in estrogen-mediated growth stimulation and antiestrogen-mediated growth arrest. We sought to determine whether p21, a cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor, is a component of this pathway and, if so, whether it can mediate estrogen's action in ER-negative breast cancer cells.
METHODS: We overexpressed p21 with a tetracycline-inducible system in ER-negative, p21-negative breast cancer cells. Activity of the ER-signaling pathway was monitored in transient transfection assays by using constructs in which the ER promoter or the estrogen-response element (ERE) controls Luciferase expression. The growth-modulating effects of estradiol and antiestrogens on p21-overexpressing clones were assessed. All P: values are from two-sided tests.
RESULTS: A strong positive association was found between the expression of p21 and ER in nine breast cancer cell lines and in tumor samples from 60 patients with breast cancer (P:<. 001). Overexpression of p21 in a p21-negative, ER-negative cell line induced both the ER and ERE promoters in an estrogen-responsive manner. Last, stable p21 clones that also lack the expression of wild-type ER were responsive to the growth-inhibitory effects of ICI 182,780, a potent antiestrogen, and the growth-stimulatory effects of 17beta-estradiol.
CONCLUSION: The ability of p21 to mediate the activation of the estrogen-signaling pathway in ER-negative tumor cells suggests that p21 plays a novel role in this pathway, a finding that also has important clinical implications.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10974076     DOI: 10.1093/jnci/92.17.1403

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Natl Cancer Inst        ISSN: 0027-8874            Impact factor:   13.506


  12 in total

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