| Literature DB >> 14641918 |
Michael J Fay1, Kenneth A Longo, George A Karathanasis, David M Shope, Craig J Mandernach, Jason R Leong, Alfred Hicks, Kenneth Pherson, Amyna Husain.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The chromosomal location of CUL-5 (11q 22-23) is associated with LOH in breast cancer, suggesting that CUL-5 may be a tumor suppressor. The purpose of this research was to determine if there is differential expression of CUL-5 in breast epithelial cells versus breast cancer cell lines, and normal human tissues versus human tumors. The expression of CUL-5 in breast epithelial cells (HMEC, MCF-10A), and breast cancer cells (MCF-7, MDA-MB-231) was examined using RT-PCR, Northern blot analysis, and Western blot analysis. The expression of mRNA for other CUL family members (CUL-1, -2, -3, -4A, and -4B) in these cells was evaluated by RT-PCR. A normal human tissue expression array and a cancer profiling array were used to examine CUL-5 expression in normal human tissues and matched normal tissues versus tumor tissues, respectively.Entities:
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Year: 2003 PMID: 14641918 PMCID: PMC317354 DOI: 10.1186/1476-4598-2-40
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cancer ISSN: 1476-4598 Impact factor: 27.401
Figure 1RT-PCR analysis for Semiquantitative RT-PCR was performed using 1 μg of total RNA with 20, 25, and 29 cycles of PCR using primers for (A) CUL-5, or (B) ribosomal protein S9; (C) The CUL-5 PCR products from HMEC, MCF-10A, MCF-7, and MDA-MB-231 cells were confirmed by restriction endonuclease digestion with EcoRI. The results shown are representative of triplicate experiments using independent RNA samples.
Primers used for RT-PCR analysis of CUL family members
| Primer Sequences | Primer Location | Annealing | Restriction |
| nt 1510 – 1529 | 58°C | ||
| nt 1351 – 1374 | 54°C | ||
| nt 833 – 856 | 53°C | ||
| nt 346 – 368 | 58°C | ||
| nt 1400 – 1417 | 54°C | ||
| nt 1521 – 1544 | 58°C | ||
| nt 6 – 25 | 62°C |
Figure 2RT-PCR analysis for RT-PCR was performed using 1 μg of total RNA and 25 cycles of PCR. For all of the cells examined, a 560-bp cDNA for CUL-1, a 358-bp cDNA for CUL-2, a 613-bp cDNA for CUL-3, a 512-bp cDNA for CUL-4A, a 593-bp cDNA for CUL-4B, a 674-bp cDNA for CUL-5, and a 411-bp cDNA for ribosomal protein S9 were amplified by RT-PCR. The results shown are representative of duplicate experiments using independent RNA samples.
Figure 3Northern blot analysis for Approximately 10 μg of total RNA from HMEC, MCF-10A, MCF-7, MDA-MB-231 was electrophoresed and transferred to a Nytran® supercharge membrane. The blots were hybridized with a 32P-labeled 674-bp CUL-5 cDNA or a 905-bp GAPDH cDNA. The results shown are from a 4-day exposure to x-ray film for CUL-5 and a 5-hr exposure to x-ray film for GAPDH. A major CUL-5 transcript of ~7.4 kb was present in all of the cells examined. The results shown are representative of triplicate experiments using independent RNA samples.
Figure 4Western blot analysis for CUL-5 in HMEC, MCF-10A, MCF-7, MDA-MB-231, and sol8 mouse myoblast cells. Approximately 50 μg of protein from each cell type, and 25 μg of protein from sol8 mouse myoblasts was fractionated by SDS-PAGE. The primary antibody was affinity purified anti-CUL-5 (378–393) at ~1.14 μg/ml for 1 hr at room temperature. The secondary antibody was an Immunopure® peroxidase goat anti-rabbit IgG (1:40,000, 1 hr at room temperature). The blots were visualized using the Supersignal® west pico chemiluminescent substrate and exposure to x-ray film. Blots were stripped and reprobed with rabbit polyclonal anti-actin (1:1,000, Sigma) to evaluate loading differences and the integrity of the Western blotting procedure. Duplicate experiments yielded similar results.
Analysis of CUL-5 expression in normal human tissues and cancer cell lines using a multiple human tissue expression array. The array was hybridized with the 32P-labeled (2 × 107 cpm) 674-bp CUL-5 cDNA for 20 hrs. Analysis of the array was performed using a PhosphorImager and ImageQuant software. The background-adjusted volumes for each sample are reported for the 2-day exposure of the array to a phosphor-screen.
| whole brain 77451 | cerebellum left 67297 | substantia nigra 41295 | heart 97252 | esophagus 44513 | colon, transverse 62300 | kidney 137204 | lung 58777 | liver 85484 | leukemia, HL-60 48972 | fetal brain 43774 | yeast total RNA | |
| cerebral cortex 73105 | cerebellum right 110567 | accumbens nucleus 82337 | aorta 31370 | stomach 63062 | colon, descending 60792 | skeletal muscle 163430 | placenta 80932 | pancreas 79718 | HeLa S3 32213 | fetal heart 55979 | yeast tRNA | |
| frontal lobe 68310 | corpus callosum 63455 | thalamus 76840 | atrium, left 83350 | duodenum 54191 | rectum 49102 | spleen 53685 | bladder 61953 | adrenal gland 70467 | leukemia, K-562 58024 | fetal kidney 63966 | E. coli rRNA | |
| parietal lobe 63575 | amygdala 72591 | pituitary gland 65881 | atrium, right 71626 | jejunum 75472 | thymus 50578 | uterus 46700 | thyroid gland 62460 | leukemia, MOLT-4 40827 | fetal liver 47640 | E. coli DNA | ||
| occipital lobe 78745 | caudate nucleus 84064 | spinal cord 28621 | ventricle, left 76376 | ileum 66144 | peripheral blood leukocyte 29858 | prostate 57159 | salivary gland 73592 | Burkitt's lymphoma, Raji 31147 | fetal spleen 62971 | poly r(A) | ||
| temporal lobe 55023 | hippocampus 52220 | ventricle, right 62321 | ileocecum 45452 | lymph node 48852 | testis 48162 | mammary gland 28970 | Burkitt's lymphoma, Daudi 30413 | fetal thymus 53776 | human C0t-1 DNA | |||
| paracentral gyrus of cerebral cortex 48569 | medulla oblongata 60577 | inter-ventricular septum 89675 | appendix 56027 | bone morrow 37152 | ovary 11139 | colorectal adenocarcinoma, SW480 54931 | fetal lung 64933 | human DNA 100 ng 6117 | ||||
| pons 55401 | putamen 70937 | apex of the heart 91122 | colon, ascending 40405 | trachea 38285 | lung, carcinoma, A549 27590 | human DNA 500 ng 9541 |
Clinical information and fold-change in CUL-5 expression for the 50 cases of matched normal tissue and breast tumor tissue. The fold-increase (↑) or fold-decrease (↓) in CUL-5 expression in the tumor tissue compared to the matched normal tissue is shown for each individual matched pair.
| #1 | 1A/2A | 39-yr-old Caucasian, noninfiltrating intraductal carcinoma | ↓1.89 |
| #2 | 1B/2B | 78-yr-old Caucasian, lobular carcinoma | ↓1.79 |
| #3 | 1C/2C | 49-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating intraductal carcinoma | ↓1.66 |
| #4 | 1D/2D | 52-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating intraductal carcinoma | ↓1.90 |
| #5 | 1E/2E | 66-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating intraductal carcinoma | ↑1.01 |
| #6 | 1F/2F | 65-yr-old Caucasian, lobular carcinoma | ↓3.48 |
| #7 | 1G/2G | 44-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating ductal carcinoma | ↓2.07 |
| #8 | 1H/2H | 33-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating ductal carcinoma | ↓3.00 |
| #9 | 1I/2I | 40-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating ductal carcinoma | ↓2.26 |
| #10 | 1J/2J | 49-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating ductal carcinoma | ↓1.26 |
| #11 | 1K/2K | 41-yr-old Caucasian, lobular carcinoma | ↓2.34 |
| #12 | 1L/2L | 50-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating ductal carcinoma | ↓1.66 |
| #13 | 1M/2M | 61-yr-old Caucasian, lobular carcinoma | ↓4.87 |
| #14 | 1N/2N | 64-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating ductal carcinoma | ↓4.85 |
| #15 | 1O/2O | 40-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating ductal carcinoma | ↓4.66 |
| #16 | 1P/2P | 50-yr old Caucasian, infiltrating ductal carcinoma | ↓2.10 |
| #17 | 1Q/2Q | 44-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating ductal carcinoma | ↑1.34 |
| #18 | 1R/2R | 52-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating ductal carcinoma | ↓1.41 |
| #19 | 1S/2S | 47-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating ductal carcinoma | ↓1.95 |
| #20 | 1T/2T | 59-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating ductal carcinoma | ↓1.67 |
| #21 | 1U/2U | 50-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating ductal carcinoma | ↑1.24 |
| #22 | 1V/2V | 68-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating ductal carcinoma | ↓2.45 |
| #23 | 1W/2W | 63-yr-old Caucasian, tubular carcinoma | ↓1.51 |
| #24 | 1X/2X | 44-yr-old Caucasian, fibrosarcoma | ↓2.52 |
| #25 | 1Y/2Y | 49-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating lobular carcinoma | ↓1.84 |
| #26 | 1Z/2Z | 64-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating ductal carcinoma | ↓4.08 |
| #27 | 1AA/2AA | 50-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating ductal carcinoma | ↓2.63 |
| #28 | 1BB/2BB | 39-yr-old Caucasian, mixed lobular-ductal carcinoma | ↓3.15 |
| #29 | 1CC/2CC | 66-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating lobular carcinoma | ↑1.07 |
| #30 | 1DD/2DD | 65-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating lobular carcinoma | ↓4.68 |
| #31 | 1EE/2EE | 61-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating lobular carcinoma | ↓7.41 |
| #32 | 1FF/2FF | 38-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating lobular carcinoma | ↓5.19 |
| #33 | 3A/4A | 58-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating ductal carcinoma | ↓1.88 |
| #34 | 3B/4B | 64-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating ductal carcinoma | ↓2.72 |
| #35 | 3C/4C | 47-yr-old Caucasian, tubular adenocarcinoma | ↓2.61 |
| #36 | 3D/4D | 40-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating ductal carcinoma | ↓1.87 |
| #37 | 3E/4E | 60-yr-old Caucasian, lobular carcinoma | ↓6.37 |
| #38 | 3F/4F | 62-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating ductal carcinoma | ↓5.01 |
| #39 | 3G/4H | 71-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating ductal carcinoma | ↓4.51 |
| #40 | 3I/4J | 52-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating ductal carcinoma | ↓4.16 |
| #41 | 3K/4L | 57-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating ductal carcinoma | ↓4.42 |
| #42 | 3M/4M | 43-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating ductal carcinoma | ↓5.08 |
| #43 | 3N/4N | 40-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating ductal carcinoma | ↓1.30 |
| #44 | 3O/4O | 48-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating ductal carcinoma | ↓2.65 |
| #45 | 3P/4P | 45-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating ductal carcinoma | ↑2.28 |
| #46 | 3Q/4Q | 47-yr-old Caucasian, medullary carcinoma | ↑1.52 |
| #47 | 3R/4R | 60-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating ductal carcinoma | ↑2.69 |
| #48 | 3S/4S | 71-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating ductal carcinoma | ↑1.06 |
| #49 | 3T/4T | 53-yr-old Caucasian, mucinous adenocarcinoma | ↑1.41 |
| #50 | 3U/4U | 42-yr-old Caucasian, infiltrating ductal carcinoma | ↓1.44 |
Figure 5Location of samples on the cancer profiling array. Information concerning the patient samples on this array is available at (N = normal tissue; T = tumor tissue; a box indicates a matched normal/tumor pair with an associated metastatic sample).
Figure 6Expression of The cancer profiling array was hybribized with the 32P-labeled (2 × 107 cpm) 674-bp CUL-5 cDNA for 20 hrs. The results shown represent the 2-day exposure to the phosphor screen. The location of individual samples on the array is shown in Figure 5.
Figure 7Expression of The data in this figure was derived from quantification of the data in Figure 6 using a PhosphorImager and ImageQuant software, and the background adjusted volumes are shown for each sample. 41 of the 50 cases of breast tissue (82%) exhibited a decrease in CUL-5 expression in the tumor tissue versus the matched normal tissue. Three of the 50 cases had a matched metastatic sample (cases 39, 40, and 41), and the level of CUL-5 expression in the metastatic samples was similar to that seen in the associated tumor tissues.
Figure 8Expression of The data in this figure was derived by quantification of the data in Figure 6 using a PhosphorImager and ImageQuant software. The mean volumes ± the SEM are shown. An asterisk indicates a statistically significant difference between the matched normal versus tumor tissue as determined by two-way paired t-tests (P ≤ 0.05). A statistically significant decrease in CUL-5 expression was found in breast tumor tissue (~2.2 fold decrease, P < 0.0001, n = 50), uterine tumor tissue (~1.5 fold decrease, P = 0.0021, n = 42), colon tumor tissue (~1.4 fold decrease, P = 0.0012, n = 35), and kidney tumor tissue (~1.5 fold decrease, P = 0.0034, n = 20), compared to matched normal tissues. A significant increase in CUL-5 expression was found in prostate tumor tissue compared to matched normal tissue (~1.5 fold increase, P = 0.0335, n = 4).