Literature DB >> 10999774

HET/SAF-B overexpression causes growth arrest and multinuclearity and is associated with aneuploidy in human breast cancer.

S M Townson1, T Sullivan, Q Zhang, G M Clark, C K Osborne, A V Lee, S Oesterreich.   

Abstract

HET/SAF-B was originally cloned as a nuclear matrix protein that bound to matrix attachment regions and as a transcriptional repressor of the small heat shock protein hsp27. In addition, we have found recently that HET/SAF-B is also a corepressor of estrogen receptor activity. Estrogen receptor has a very well-described role in breast cancer, and aberrant expression of nuclear matrix and heat shock proteins has also been implicated in breast tumorigenesis. Therefore, we asked whether HET/SAF-B itself could be important in breast cancer. Toward this goal we examined its expression in breast cancer cell lines and asked whether HET/SAF-B can affect breast cancer cell proliferation. Finally, we studied HET/SAF-B expression in clinical breast cancer samples. HET/SAF-B protein and mRNA were detected at varying levels in all of the eight breast cancer cell lines examined. Using a number of different approaches to modulate the level of HET/SAF-B protein in the cell, we found that HET/SAF-B levels are inversely correlated with cell proliferation. In addition,transfection of HET/SAF-B fused to the green fluorescent protein led to the formation of multinucleated cells not observed in cells transfected with green fluorescent protein alone, suggesting that this effect is a direct result of HET/SAF-B overexpression. Western blot analysis of HET/SAF-B in 61 human breast tumors revealed widely varying levels of HET/SAF-B expression, with some tumors (16%) lacking any detectable HET/SAF-B. Statistical analysis showed that high HET/SAF-B expression in these tumors was associated with low S-phase fraction and with aneuploidy, consistent with our results from transfection experiments in tissue culture cells. We conclude that HET/SAF-B plays an important role in breast cancer, and we discuss possible mechanisms of the involvement of HET/SAF-B in cell proliferation and division.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10999774

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Cancer Res        ISSN: 1078-0432            Impact factor:   12.531


  14 in total

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4.  Co-repressor activity of scaffold attachment factor B1 requires sumoylation.

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6.  Drosophila SAF-B links the nuclear matrix, chromosomes, and transcriptional activity.

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9.  Subcellular dynamics of estrogen-related receptors involved in transrepression through interactions with scaffold attachment factor B1.

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Review 10.  Tissue polarity-dependent control of mammary epithelial homeostasis and cancer development: an epigenetic perspective.

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