| Literature DB >> 19689790 |
Ebru Aydar1, Syn Yeo, Mustafa Djamgoz, Christopher Palmer.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Ca2+ is known to be involved in a number of metastatic processes including motility and proliferation which can result in store-depletion of Ca2+. Up regulation of genes which contribute to store operated channel (SOC) activity may plausibly be necessary for these processes to take place efficiently. TRPC proteins constitute a family of conserved Ca2+-permeable channels that have been shown to contribute to SOC activity.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19689790 PMCID: PMC2737535 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2867-9-23
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Cell Int ISSN: 1475-2867 Impact factor: 5.722
Primers utilized in this investigation
| TRPC1 F | 5'-GTA AGT GGA TTT GCT CTC AT-3' | 298 for TRPC1B splice variant |
| TRPC1 R | 5'-TGG TTA ATT TCT TGG ATA AA-3' | |
| TRPC3 F | 5'-TAC TCA ACA TGC TAA TTG CTA TGA T-3' | 383 |
| TRPC3 R | 5'-CAC AGT TGC TTG GCT CTT GTC TTC C-3' | |
| TRPC4 F | 5'-CTC TGG TTG TTC TAC TCA ACA TG-3' | 781 |
| TRPC4 R | 5'-CCT GTT GAC GAG CAA CTT CTT CT-3' | |
| TRPC5 F | 5'-GCT CGC AGC CAC CCC AAA GGG AGG A-3' | 548 |
| TRPC5 R | 5'-CCA ATG TCC CTA CCC TGT TCT CCC AGC TCT C-3' | |
| TRPC6 F | 5'-GAA CTT AGC AAT GAA CTG GCA GT-3' | 625 or 277 |
| TRPC6 R | 5'-CAT ATC ATG CCT ATT ACC CAG GA-3' | |
| TRPC7 F | 5'-GTC CGA ATG CAA GGA AAT CT-3' | 477 |
| TRPC7 R | 5'-TGG GTT GTA TTT GGC ACC TC-3' | |
| TRPM7 F | 5'-AAA CCA GTT CTG CCT CCT CCA C-3' | 100 |
| TRPM7 R | 5'-GTC CAT CGG AAG TCT TAT CTT TCT TTC-3' | |
| TRPM8 F | 5'-GAT TTT CAC CAA TGA CCG CCG-3' | 502 |
| TRPM8 R | 5'-CCCCAGCAGCATTGATGTCG-3' | |
| TRPV6 F | 5'-GAG CAG TCC CTG CTG GAA CT-3' | 254 |
| TRPV6 R | 5'-GGT ACT TCG AGA CAC TGA GG-3' | |
| Cav3.2 F | 5'-GAA GGA CAC GCT GCG CGA GT-3' | 180 |
| Cav3.2 R | 5'-GCA TCC TCC CGT GCC TCC TT-3' | |
| β-actin F | 5'-ATG GAT GAT GAT ATC GCC GC-3' | 350 |
| β-actin R | 5'-ATC TTC TCG CGG TTG GCC TT-3' | |
| TRPC1 F nested | 5'-ATGGCGGCCCTGTACCCGAG-3' | |
| TRPC1 R nested | 5'-AACACAATGTGCATTCACAG-3' | |
| TRPC3 F nested | 5'-AAGTGACTTCCGTTGTGCTC-3' | |
| TRPC3 R nested | 5'-AGGTTGCTGCATCATTCACA-3' | |
| TRPC4 F nested | 5'-TGTGACCAATGTCAAAGCAC-3' | |
| TRPC4 R nested | 5'-CTAACACACATTGTTCACTG-3' | |
| TRPC5 F nested | 5'-CACATCACAACCACGACG-3' | |
| TRPC5 R nested | 5'-ACTTGCCTGTAACAGATCGG-3' | |
| TRPC6 F nested | 5'-CAA CCA GAA ACA GAA GCA TG-3' | |
| TRPC6 R nested | 5'-CTC GCA ATG AAT GAT GCT GC-3' | |
| TRPC7 F nested | 5'-CACAGTTCTCCTGGACAGAA-3' | |
| TRPC7 R nested | 5'-TTACTTCAGATAAGCCGAAT-3' | |
Figure 1Expression of TRPC mRNA in breast cancer biopsy tissue. (A) PCR amplification with TRPC subtype specific primers of cDNA prepared from breast biopsy tissue (normal [-], tumour [+] and negative control [c]). The PCR reactions were separated on an agarose gel. Molecular weight markers in base pairs are shown to the right of the gels. As a control for the integrity of each cDNA sample β-actin was also analysed. (B) Relative expression of TRPC subtype specific mRNA in cDNA prepared from normal and tumour breast biopsy tissue. All data normalized to TRPC6 expression in sample 4.
Figure 2Expression of TRPC mRNA in breast cancer epithelial cell lines. (A) PCR with TRPC subtype specific primers was utilized to examine the expression of TRPC mRNAs in cDNA prepared from MCF-10A, MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 cell lines. The PCR reactions were separated on an agarose gel. Molecular weight markers in base pairs are shown to the right of the gel. As a control for the integrity of each cDNA sample β-actin was also analysed. (B) Relative expression of TRPC subtype specific mRNAs in cDNA prepared from MCF-10A, MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 cells. All data normalized to TRPC3 expression in MCF-7 cells.
Relative expressions of TRPC channel sub-types in non-cancerous and cancerous breast cell lines
| 2.3 × 10-6 +/- 1.6 × 10-6 | 1.5 × 10-7 +/- 3.9 × 10-8 | 5.0 × 10-4 +/- 5.0 × 10-4 | |
| 0 | 0 | 0.36 +/- 0.19 | |
| 0 | 0 | ||
| 0 | 0.0012 +/- 7.3 × 10-4 | ||
| 0 | 1 (normalized) | 0.46 +/- 0.08 | |
| 0 | 0 | 0 | |
Figure 3Expression and immunoprecipitation of TRPC6 and TRPC3 protein in breast cancer epithelial cell lines. (A) SDS-PAGE separation and Western blot analysis of protein extracts prepared from MCF-10A, MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 cell lines. The blot was probed with a TRPC6 (top panel) or TRPC3 (lower panel) specific antibodies. As a TRPC6 or TRPC3 control protein extracts prepared from HEK cells transfected with a TRPC6 or TRPC3 expression plasmid and mock-transfected HEK cells were also separated. As a loading control the blots were also probed with an antibody to β-actin. (B) Immunopreciptation of TRPC6 and TRPC3 in MDA-MB-231 cells. Total protein extracts prepared from MDA-MB-231 cells were immunoprecipitated with specific antibodies to TRPC3 or TRPC6 or isotype antibody/no antibody as control. The total protein extracts and immunoprecipitations were separated on SDS-PAGE gels and Western blotted with antibodies to TRPC3 or TRPC6 (indicated below each blot). Sizes of marker proteins (kDa) are indicated to the right of all blots.
Figure 4Localization and co-localization of TRPC6 and TRPC3 in breast cancer epithelial cell lines. (A) Immunoflourescent confocal images of TRPC6 protein expression in MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 cell lines. Cells were treated with a concanavalin-FITC conjugate to stain the plasma membrane before permeabilization and probing with a TRPC6 specific antibody. Scale bar represents 20 μM. (B) Immunoflourescent confocal images of TRPC3 protein expression in MDA-MB-231 cells. Cells were treated with a concanavalin-FITC conjugate to stain the plasma membrane before permeabilization and probing with a TRPC3 specific antibody. The TRPC3/6 and conacavalin-FITC images were merged to indicate co-localization of the plasma membrane with TRPC3/6 expression. Scale bar represents 20 μM. (C) Immunoflourescent confocal images to determine TRPC6 protein expression in MCF-10A cells. Cells were treated with a concanavalin-FITC conjugate to stain the plasma membrane before permeabilization and probing with a TRPC6 specific antibody. Scale bar represents 40 μM. (D) Co-localization of TRPC6 and TRPC3 in MDA-MB-231 cells. Images were merged to indicate co-localization of TRPC3 and TRPC6 antibody staining. Scale bar represents 32 μM.
Figure 5Effect of TRPC6 activators and gene silencing of TRPC6 on growth of breast cancer epithelial cell lines. (A) MCF-10A, MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 cell lines were seeded into six-well plates and incubated for 24 hours at 37°C. Subsequently, hyperforin was added at a concentration of 10 and 1 μM and the cells were incubated at 37°C. As controls, cells were also mock-treated with DMSO (which was used to dissolve the hyperforin). At 0, 24, 48 and 72 hours post incubation cell growth was measured using a MTT assay (black square 10 μM, grey square 1 μM hyperforin and empty square mock-treated). (B) MCF-10A, MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 cell lines were seeded into six-well plates and incubated for 24 hours at 37°C. Subsequently, hyperforin was added at a concentration of 10 and 1 μM and the cells were incubated at 37°C. As controls, cells were also mock-treated with DMSO (which was used to dissolve the hyperforin). At 72 hours post incubation viability was measured and normalized against the mock-infected cells (black square 10 μM and grey square 1 μM hyperforin). (C) TRPC6 in MDA-MB-231 cells was silenced using a SiRNA double transfection method. At 72 hours post the second transfection the levels of TRPC6 was ascertained by protein extraction and Western blotting. As loading controls the lower part of the gel was removed and probed with an antibody to β-actin. Two SiRNAs were utilized and compared to a SiRNA control. (D) TRPC6 in MDA-MB-231 cells was silenced using siRNA transfection. At 72 hours post the second transfection cell growth was ascertained using a MTT assay. Two SiRNAs were utilized and compared to a SiRNA control.