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Keratin 18 attenuates estrogen receptor α-mediated signaling by sequestering LRP16 in cytoplasm

BACKGROUND: Oncogenesis in breast cancer is often associated with excess estrogen receptor α(ERα) activation and overexpression of its coactivators. LRP16 is both an ERα target gene and an ERα coactivator, and plays a crucial role in ERα activation and proliferation of MCF-7 breast cancer cells. How...

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Autores principales: Meng, Yuanguang, Wu, Zhiqiang, Yin, Xiaoyun, Zhao, Yali, Chen, Meixia, Si, Yiling, Yang, Jie, Fu, Xiaobing, Han, Weidong
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2804594/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20035625
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2121-10-96
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author Meng, Yuanguang
Wu, Zhiqiang
Yin, Xiaoyun
Zhao, Yali
Chen, Meixia
Si, Yiling
Yang, Jie
Fu, Xiaobing
Han, Weidong
author_facet Meng, Yuanguang
Wu, Zhiqiang
Yin, Xiaoyun
Zhao, Yali
Chen, Meixia
Si, Yiling
Yang, Jie
Fu, Xiaobing
Han, Weidong
author_sort Meng, Yuanguang
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Oncogenesis in breast cancer is often associated with excess estrogen receptor α(ERα) activation and overexpression of its coactivators. LRP16 is both an ERα target gene and an ERα coactivator, and plays a crucial role in ERα activation and proliferation of MCF-7 breast cancer cells. However, the regulation of the functional availability of this coactivator protein is not yet clear. RESULTS: Yeast two-hybrid screening, GST pulldown and coimmunoprecipitation (CoIP) identified the cytoplasmic intermediate filament protein keratin 18 (K18) as a novel LRP16-interacting protein. Fluorescence analysis revealed that GFP-tagged LRP16 was primarily localized in the nuclei of mock-transfected MCF-7 cells but was predominantly present in the cytoplasm of K18-transfected cells. Immunoblotting analysis demonstrated that the amount of cytoplasmic LRP16 was markedly increased in cells overexpressing K18 whereas nuclear levels were depressed. Conversely, knockdown of endogenous K18 expression in MCF-7 cells significantly decreased the cytoplasmic levels of LRP16 and increased levels in the nucleus. CoIP failed to detect any interaction between K18 and ERα, but ectopic expression of K18 in MCF-7 cells significantly blunted the association of LRP16 with ERα, attenuated ERα-activated reporter gene activity, and decreased estrogen-stimulated target gene expression by inhibiting ERα recruitment to DNA. Furthermore, BrdU incorporation assays revealed that K18 overexpression blunted the estrogen-stimulated increase of S-phase entry of MCF-7 cells. By contrast, knockdown of K18 in MCF-7 cells significantly increased ERα-mediated signaling and promoted cell cycle progression. CONCLUSIONS: K18 can effectively associate with and sequester LRP16 in the cytoplasm, thus attenuating the final output of ERα-mediated signaling and estrogen-stimulated cell cycle progression of MCF-7 breast cancer cells. Loss of K18 increases the functional availability of LRP16 to ERα and promotes the proliferation of ERα-positive breast tumor cells. K18 plays an important functional role in regulating the ERα signaling pathway.
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spelling pubmed-28045942010-01-12 Keratin 18 attenuates estrogen receptor α-mediated signaling by sequestering LRP16 in cytoplasm Meng, Yuanguang Wu, Zhiqiang Yin, Xiaoyun Zhao, Yali Chen, Meixia Si, Yiling Yang, Jie Fu, Xiaobing Han, Weidong BMC Cell Biol Research article BACKGROUND: Oncogenesis in breast cancer is often associated with excess estrogen receptor α(ERα) activation and overexpression of its coactivators. LRP16 is both an ERα target gene and an ERα coactivator, and plays a crucial role in ERα activation and proliferation of MCF-7 breast cancer cells. However, the regulation of the functional availability of this coactivator protein is not yet clear. RESULTS: Yeast two-hybrid screening, GST pulldown and coimmunoprecipitation (CoIP) identified the cytoplasmic intermediate filament protein keratin 18 (K18) as a novel LRP16-interacting protein. Fluorescence analysis revealed that GFP-tagged LRP16 was primarily localized in the nuclei of mock-transfected MCF-7 cells but was predominantly present in the cytoplasm of K18-transfected cells. Immunoblotting analysis demonstrated that the amount of cytoplasmic LRP16 was markedly increased in cells overexpressing K18 whereas nuclear levels were depressed. Conversely, knockdown of endogenous K18 expression in MCF-7 cells significantly decreased the cytoplasmic levels of LRP16 and increased levels in the nucleus. CoIP failed to detect any interaction between K18 and ERα, but ectopic expression of K18 in MCF-7 cells significantly blunted the association of LRP16 with ERα, attenuated ERα-activated reporter gene activity, and decreased estrogen-stimulated target gene expression by inhibiting ERα recruitment to DNA. Furthermore, BrdU incorporation assays revealed that K18 overexpression blunted the estrogen-stimulated increase of S-phase entry of MCF-7 cells. By contrast, knockdown of K18 in MCF-7 cells significantly increased ERα-mediated signaling and promoted cell cycle progression. CONCLUSIONS: K18 can effectively associate with and sequester LRP16 in the cytoplasm, thus attenuating the final output of ERα-mediated signaling and estrogen-stimulated cell cycle progression of MCF-7 breast cancer cells. Loss of K18 increases the functional availability of LRP16 to ERα and promotes the proliferation of ERα-positive breast tumor cells. K18 plays an important functional role in regulating the ERα signaling pathway. BioMed Central 2009-12-26 /pmc/articles/PMC2804594/ /pubmed/20035625 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2121-10-96 Text en Copyright ©2009 Meng et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research article
Meng, Yuanguang
Wu, Zhiqiang
Yin, Xiaoyun
Zhao, Yali
Chen, Meixia
Si, Yiling
Yang, Jie
Fu, Xiaobing
Han, Weidong
Keratin 18 attenuates estrogen receptor α-mediated signaling by sequestering LRP16 in cytoplasm
title Keratin 18 attenuates estrogen receptor α-mediated signaling by sequestering LRP16 in cytoplasm
title_full Keratin 18 attenuates estrogen receptor α-mediated signaling by sequestering LRP16 in cytoplasm
title_fullStr Keratin 18 attenuates estrogen receptor α-mediated signaling by sequestering LRP16 in cytoplasm
title_full_unstemmed Keratin 18 attenuates estrogen receptor α-mediated signaling by sequestering LRP16 in cytoplasm
title_short Keratin 18 attenuates estrogen receptor α-mediated signaling by sequestering LRP16 in cytoplasm
title_sort keratin 18 attenuates estrogen receptor α-mediated signaling by sequestering lrp16 in cytoplasm
topic Research article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2804594/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20035625
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2121-10-96
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