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Modulation of Estrogen Receptor α Protein Level and Survival Function by DBC-1
Author(s) -
Amy M. Trauernicht,
Se Jin Kim,
Nam Hee Kim,
Thomas Boyer
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
molecular endocrinology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1944-9917
pISSN - 0888-8809
DOI - 10.1210/me.2007-0064
Subject(s) - dbc , tamoxifen , estrogen receptor , biology , estrogen , cancer research , breast cancer , estrogen receptor alpha , progesterone receptor , endocrinology , cancer , medicine , materials science , genetics , optoelectronics , cmos
Acquired resistance to endocrine therapy represents a major clinical obstacle to the successful management of estrogen-dependent breast cancers expressing estrogen receptor alpha (ERalpha). Because a switch from ligand-dependent to ligand-independent activation of ERalpha-regulated breast cancer cell growth and survival may define a path to endocrine resistance, enhanced mechanistic insight concerning the ligand-independent fate and function of ERalpha, including a more complete inventory of its ligand-independent cofactors, could identify novel markers of endocrine resistance and possible targets for therapeutic intervention in breast cancer. Here, we identify the deleted in breast cancer 1 gene product DBC-1 (KIAA1967) to be a principal determinant of unliganded ERalpha expression and survival function in human breast cancer cells. The DBC-1 amino terminus binds directly to the ERalpha hormone-binding domain both in vitro and in vivo in a strict ligand-independent manner. Furthermore, like estrogen, the antiestrogens tamoxifen and ICI 182,780 (7alpha,17beta-[9-[(4,4,5,5,5-pentafluoropentyl)sulfinyl]nonyl]estra-1,3,5(10)-triene-3,17-diol) disrupt the DBC-1/ERalpha interaction, thus revealing the DBC-1/ERalpha interface to be a heretofore-unrecognized target of endocrine compounds commonly used in hormonal therapy. Notably, RNA interference-mediated DBC-1 depletion reduces the steady-state level of unliganded but not liganded ERalpha protein, suggesting that DBC-1 may stabilize unliganded ERalpha by virtue of their direct association. Finally, DBC-1 depletion promotes hormone-independent apoptosis of ERalpha-positive, but not ERalpha-negative, breast cancer cells in a manner reversible by endocrine agents that disrupt the DBC-1/ERalpha interaction. Collectively, these findings establish a principal biological function for DBC-1 in the modulation of ERalpha expression and hormone-independent breast cancer cell survival.

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