The inhibin/activin signalling pathway in human gonadal and adrenal cancers
Author(s) -
Francesco Elia Marino,
Gail P. Risbridger,
Elspeth Gold
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
molecular human reproduction
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.143
H-Index - 122
eISSN - 1460-2407
pISSN - 1360-9947
DOI - 10.1093/molehr/gau074
Subject(s) - inha , biology , endocrinology , activin type 2 receptors , medicine , activin receptor , acvr2b , smad , cancer research , tgf beta signaling pathway , transforming growth factor , pathology , tuberculosis , isoniazid
The biological function of the inhibin-α subunit (INHA) in gonadal tumorigenesis is different in humans compared with mouse. The INHA subunit is up-regulated in most human ovarian and testicular cancers but knock-out studies in mice showed the INHA subunit is a tumour suppressor with gonadal and adrenal specificity. The INHA subunit is a component of the inhibin/activin signalling pathway, which includes activin receptors ActRIIA/IIB and intracellular Smads-2/3. To resolve the incongruity in function in humans versus mouse, we re-evaluated the inhibin/activin pathway in human gonadal and adrenal cancers using contemporary protein and mRNA expression data for multiple pathway components rather than INHA alone. We used an INHA antibody raised against the N-terminal domain to compare immunoreactivity with the more commonly used antibody raised against the C-terminal domain. This study also described, for the first time, a comprehensive protein expression profile of activin-βC in reproductive and adrenal cancers, and its effect on a human granulosa cell line, providing evidence for a role in ovarian, testis and adrenal tumour biology. Our data show reduced INHA expression at both protein and mRNA levels, and increased activin signalling in human testicular, ovarian and malignant versus benign forms of adrenal cancer. We also found that activin-C acts as an activin-A antagonist by binding to activin receptor subunits IIA and IIB and modulating the canonical Smad pathway. In conclusion, analysis of the inhibin/activin signalling pathway helps to explain discrepancies arising from studies of only one hormone or subunit and suggests that altered expression of the inhibin and activin subunits is associated with reproductive and adrenal cancer biology.
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