Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10899552 | Cancer Letters | 2015 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
A comprehensive understanding of prolactin's (PRL's) role in breast cancer is complicated by disparate roles for alternatively-spliced PRL receptors (PRLR) and crosstalk between PRL and estrogen signaling. Among PRLRs, the short form 1b (SF1b) inhibits PRL-stimulated cell proliferation. In addition to ligand-dependent PRLRs, constitutively-active varieties, missing the S2 region of the extracellular domain (ÎS2), naturally occur. Expression analysis of the ÎS2 version of SF1b (ÎS2SF1b) showed higher expression in histologically-normal contiguous tissue versus invasive ductal carcinoma. To determine the function of ÎS2SF1b, a T47D breast cancer line with inducible expression was produced. Induction of ÎS2SF1b blocked estrogen-stimulated cell proliferation. Unlike intact SF1b, induction of ÎS2SF1b had no effect on PRL-mediated activation of Stat5a. However induction inhibited estrogen's stimulatory effects on serine-118 phosphorylation of estrogen receptor α, serine-473 phosphorylation of Akt, serine-9 phosphorylation of GSK3β, and c-myc expression. In addition, induction of ÎS2SF1b increased expression of the cell cycle-inhibiting protein, p21. Thus, increased expression of ÎS2SF1b, such as we demonstrate occurs with the selective PRLR modulator, S179D PRL, would create a physiological state in which estrogen-stimulated proliferation was inhibited, but differentiative responses to PRL were maintained.
Keywords
SDSSTAT5GSK3βMTSERKHEKDPBSGFPCHTNFBSc-MycEDTAEthylenediaminetetraacetic acidEstrogenbioluminescence resonance energy transferBRETsodium dodecyl sulfateBreast cancerfetal bovine serumhuman embryonic kidney cellsDulbecco's phosphate buffered salinegreen fluorescent proteinProlactinextracellularly regulated kinaseGasGlucGlycogen synthase kinase 3βGaussia luciferase
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Authors
Kuang-Tzu Huang, Dunyong Tan, Kuan-Hui E. Chen, Ameae M. Walker,