Literature DB >> 9415404

Loss of an estrogen receptor isoform (ER alpha delta 3) in breast cancer and the consequences of its reexpression: interference with estrogen-stimulated properties of malignant transformation.

I Erenburg1, B Schachter, R Mira y Lopez, L Ossowski.   

Abstract

Comparison of mRNA ratios of a non-DNA-binding estrogen receptor (ER(alpha)) isoform, missing exon 3 (ER(alpha)delta3), to the full-length ER(alpha), in normal breast epithelium to that in primary breast cancers and breast cancer cell lines revealed a 30-fold reduction of this ratio in cancer cells (P < 0.0001). To test what functions may have been affected by the loss of ER(alpha)delta3, stable clones of MCF-7 cells expressing ectopic ER(alpha)delta3 protein, at the range of physiological ER(alpha), were generated. In vector-transfected controls the ER(alpha)delta3-mRNA and protein were less than 10% while in the ER(alpha)delta3-expressing clones, ER(alpha)delta3-mRNA and protein ranged from 36-76% of the total ER(alpha). Estrogen (E2) stimulated the expression of pS2-mRNA in pMV7 vector control cells, but the stimulation was reduced by up to 93% in ER(alpha)delta3-expressing clones. In addition, several properties associated with the transformed phenotype were also strongly affected when ER(alpha)delta3 protein was reexpressed. Compared with vector-transfected control cells, the saturation density of the ER(alpha)delta3-expressing clones was reduced by 50-68%, while their exponential growth rate was only slightly (14.5 +/- 5%) lower. The in vivo invasiveness of the ER(alpha)delta3-expressing cells was significantly reduced (P = 0.007) by up to 79%. E2 stimulated anchorage-independent growth of the pMV7 vector control cells, but reduced it to below baseline levels in ER(alpha)delta3 clones. The reduction of the pS2 response to E2 in the ER(alpha)delta3-expressing clones and the E2 block of anchorage-independent growth to below baseline were more pronounced than expected from the dominant negative function of ER(alpha)delta3. These observations suggest that E2 may activate an additional ER(alpha)delta3-dependent inhibitory pathway. The drastic reduction of ER(alpha)delta3 to ER(alpha) ratio in breast cancer, and the fact that when present in breast cancer cells this isoform leads to a suppression, rather than enhancement, of the transformed phenotype by E2 suggests that the regulation of ER(alpha)-mRNA splicing may need to be altered for the breast carcinogenesis to proceed.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9415404     DOI: 10.1210/mend.11.13.0031

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Endocrinol        ISSN: 0888-8809


  10 in total

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3.  Inhibition of Neu-induced mammary carcinogenesis in transgenic mice expressing ERΔ3, a dominant negative estrogen receptor α variant.

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4.  Expression of a dominant negative estrogen receptor alpha variant in transgenic mice accelerates uterine cancer induced by the potent estrogen diethylstilbestrol.

Authors:  Vicki L Davis; Retha R Newbold; John F Couse; Sheri L Rea; Katie M Gallagher; Katherine J Hamilton; Eugenia H Goulding; Wendy Jefferson; E M Eddy; Bill C Bullock; Kenneth S Korach
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5.  Role of estrogens and their receptors in adhesion and invasiveness of breast cancer cells.

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6.  Transcriptional interaction of an estrogen receptor splice variant and ErbB4 suggests convergence in gene susceptibility pathways in schizophrenia.

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7.  Quantitative profiles of the mRNAs of ER-alpha and its novel variant ER-alpha36 in breast cancers and matched normal tissues.

Authors:  Yi Zheng; Jing Zhang; Zhen-zhen Xu; Jian-ming Sheng; Xiao-chen Zhang; Hao-hao Wang; Xiao-dong Teng; Xiao-jiao Liu; Jiang Cao; Li-song Teng
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8.  Expression of ERα, its ERαΔ3 Splice Variant and γ-SYNUCLEIN in Ovarian Cancer: A Pilot Study.

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9.  Altered expression of estrogen receptor-alpha variant messenger RNAs between adjacent normal breast and breast tumor tissues.

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  10 in total

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