Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1984244 The International Journal of Biochemistry & Cell Biology 2010 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

Transcription factor Stat5a/b is critical for prostate cancer cell survival and for prostate xenograft tumor growth. In addition, the Stat5a/b signaling pathway may contribute to progression of organ-confined prostate cancer to castration-resistant and/or metastatic disease. Expression of nuclear Stat5a/b is clustered to high grade human prostate cancers, and nuclear Stat5a/b in primary prostate cancer predicts early disease recurrence after initial treatment. Here, we show by Western blotting and electromobility shift assay that Stat5a/b protein in human prostate cancer is N-terminally truncated. This short form of Stat5a/b is generated post-translationally in vivo in prostate cancer cells and is the predominant form of Stat5a/b that binds to DNA. We further demonstrate by mutagenesis and co-immunoprecipitations that the N-domain of Stat5a/b is required for binding to PIAS3, and that PIAS3 inhibits transcriptional activity of Stat5a/b in breast cancer cells but not in prostate cancer cells. Thus, the proteolytic cleavage of the N-terminus of Stat5a/b may be a mechanism by which Stat5 evades the transcriptional repression by PIAS3 in prostate cancer cells, and results in increased Stat5-driven gene expression and prostate cancer progression.

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Life Sciences Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology Biochemistry
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