Estrogen Receptor β2 Induces Hypoxia Signature of Gene Expression by Stabilizing HIF-1α in Prostate Cancer
Author(s) -
Prasenjit Dey,
Laura A. VelázquezVillegas,
Michelle Faria,
Anthony Turner,
Philip Jonsson,
Paul Webb,
Cecilia Williams,
Jan-Åke Gustafsson,
Anders Ström
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0128239
Subject(s) - prostate cancer , estrogen receptor , cancer research , metastasis , hif1a , microrna , estrogen receptor alpha , estrogen receptor beta , hypoxia (environmental) , estrogen , promoter , gene expression , biology , regulation of gene expression , prostate , gene , cancer , medicine , endocrinology , breast cancer , chemistry , angiogenesis , genetics , organic chemistry , oxygen
The estrogen receptor (ER) β variant ERβ2 is expressed in aggressive castration-resistant prostate cancer and has been shown to correlate with decreased overall survival. Genome-wide expression analysis after ERβ2 expression in prostate cancer cells revealed that hypoxia was an overrepresented theme. Here we show that ERβ2 interacts with and stabilizes HIF-1α protein in normoxia, thereby inducing a hypoxic gene expression signature. HIF-1α is known to stimulate metastasis by increasing expression of Twist1 and increasing vascularization by directly activating VEGF expression. We found that ERβ2 interacts with HIF-1α and piggybacks to the HIF-1α response element present on the proximal Twist1 and VEGF promoters. These findings suggest that at least part of the oncogenic effects of ERβ2 is mediated by HIF-1α and that targeting of this ERβ2 – HIF-1α interaction may be a strategy to treat prostate cancer.
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