| Literature DB >> 16510592 |
Alexei Y Savinov1, Albert G Remacle, Vladislav S Golubkov, Maryla Krajewska, Susan Kennedy, Michael J Duffy, Dmitri V Rozanov, Stan Krajewski, Alex Y Strongin.
Abstract
Estrogens have many cellular functions, including their interactions with estrogen receptors alpha and beta (ERalpha and ERbeta). Earlier, we determined that the estrogen-ER complex stimulates the transcriptional activity of the matrix metalloproteinase 26 (MMP-26) gene promoter. We then determined that ERbeta is susceptible to MMP-26 proteolysis whereas ERalpha is resistant to the protease. MMP-26 targets the NH(2)-terminal region of ERbeta coding for the divergent NH(2)-terminal A/B domain that is responsible for the ligand-independent transactivation function. As a result, MMP-26 proteolysis generates the COOH-terminal fragments of ERbeta. Immunohistochemical analysis of tissue microarrays derived from 121 cancer patients corroborated these data and revealed an inverse correlation between the ERalpha-dependent expression of MMP-26 and the levels of the intact ERbeta in breast carcinomas. MMP-26 is not expressed in normal mammary epithelium. The levels of MMP-26 are strongly up-regulated in ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS). In the course of further disease progression through stages I to III, the expression of MMP-26 decreases. In contrast to many tumor-promoting MMPs, the expression of MMP-26 in DCIS correlated with a longer patient survival. Our data suggest the existence of an MMP-26-mediated intracellular pathway that targets ERbeta and that MMP-26, a novel and valuable cancer marker, contributes favorably to the survival of the ERalpha/beta-positive cohort of breast cancer patients.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 16510592 DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-05-3592
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Res ISSN: 0008-5472 Impact factor: 12.701