Background Growth Regulation by Estrogen in Breast cancer (GREB1) was an estrogen receptor (ER) target gene, and GREB1 expression inversely correlated with HER2 status, possibly as a surrogate marker for ER status and a predictor for tamoxifen resistance in breast cancer patients. In the present study, we examine the function and regulation of GREB1 in breast cancer, with the goal to develop GREB1 as a biomarker in breast cancer with de novo and acquired tamoxifen resistance. Methods We overexpressed GREB1 using adenovirus containing the full length GREB1 cDNA (Ad-GREB1) in breast cancer cell lines. The soft agar assay was used as a measure of anchorage independent growth. The effects of GREB1 on cell proliferation in MCF-7 cells transduced with Ad-GREB1 were also measured by the me olic activity using AlamarBlue assay. We tested whether there was interaction between STAT3 and ER, which could repress GREB1 expression by immunoprecipitation assay. The effects of IL-6/JAK/STAT3 cascade activation on estrogen-induced GREB1 promoter activity were determined by luciferase assay and those on gene expression were measured by real time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR). Results We found that the ability of breast cancer cells to grow in soft agar is enhanced following GREB1 transfection. In MCF-7 cells transduced with Ad-GREB1 or transfected with siRNA GREB1, the metabolic activity was increased or completely abolished, suggesting that GREB1 may function as a growth promoter in breast cancer. E2 treatment increased GREB1 promoter luciferase activity. IL-6 inhibited E2-induced GREB1 transcription activity and GREB1 mRNA expression. Constitutively expressing active STAT3 construct (STAT3-C) dramatically decreased GREB1 transcription. Conclusions These data indicate that overexpression of GREB1 promotes cell proliferation and increases the clonogenic ability in breast cancer cells. Moreover, Il6/STAT3 modulates estrogen-induced GREB1 transcriptional activity in breast cancer cells.
References
[1]
Gee JM, Robertson JF, Gutteridge E, Ellis IO, Pinder SE, et al. (2005) Epidermal growth factor receptor/HER2/insulin-like growth factor receptor signalling and oestrogen receptor activity in clinical breast cancer. Endocr Relat Cancer 12 Suppl 1: S99–S111.
[2]
Fennessy M, Bates T, MacRae K, Riley D, Houghton J, et al. (2004) Late follow-up of a randomized trial of surgery plus tamoxifen versus tamoxifen alone in women aged over 70 years with operable breast cancer. Br J Surg 91: 699–704.
[3]
Horobin JM, Preece PE, Dewar JA, Wood RA, Cuschieri A (1991) Long-term follow-up of elderly patients with locoregional breast cancer treated with tamoxifen only. Br J Surg 78: 213–217.
[4]
Clarke R, Leonessa F, Welch JN, Skaar TC (2001) Cellular and molecular pharmacology of antiestrogen action and resistance. Pharmacol Rev 53: 25–71.
[5]
Riggins RB, Lan JP, Klimach U, Zwart A, Cavalli LR, et al. (2008) ERRgamma mediates tamoxifen resistance in novel models of invasive lobular breast cancer. Cancer Res 68: 8908–8917.
[6]
Ring A, Dowsett M (2004) Mechanisms of tamoxifen resistance. Endocr Relat Cancer 11: 643–658.
[7]
Dowsett M, Dunbier AK (2008) Emerging biomarkers and new understanding of traditional markers in personalized therapy for breast cancer. Clin Cancer Res 14: 8019–8026.
[8]
Osborne CK, Schiff R, Arpino G, Lee AS, Hilsenbeck VG (2005) Endocrine responsiveness: understanding how progesterone receptor can be used to select endocrine therapy. Breast 14: 458–465.
[9]
Taylor KM, Morgan HE, Smart K, Zahari NM, Pumford S, et al. (2007) The emerging role of the LIV-1 subfamily of zinc transporters in breast cancer. Mol Med 13: 396–406.
[10]
Zhou Y, Eppenberger-Castori S, Eppenberger U, Benz CC (2005) The NFkappaB pathway and endocrine-resistant breast cancer. Endocr Relat Cancer 12 Suppl 1: S37–46.
[11]
Zhou Y, Yau C, Gray JW, Chew K, Dairkee SH, et al. (2007) Enhanced NF kappa B and AP-1 transcriptional activity associated with antiestrogen resistant breast cancer. BMC Cancer 7: 59.
[12]
Hamburger AW (2008) The role of ErbB3 and its binding partners in breast cancer progression and resistance to hormone and tyrosine kinase directed therapies. J Mammary Gland Biol Neoplasia 13: 225–233.
[13]
Loi S, Haibe-Kains B, Desmedt C, Wirapati P, Lallemand F, et al. (2008) Predicting prognosis using molecular profiling in estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer treated with tamoxifen. BMC Genomics 9: 239.
[14]
Loi S, Piccart M, Sotiriou C (2007) The use of gene-expression profiling to better understand the clinical heterogeneity of estrogen receptor positive breast cancers and tamoxifen response. Crit Rev Oncol Hematol 61: 187–194.
[15]
Vendrell JA, Robertson KE, Ravel P, Bray SE, Bajard A, et al. (2008) A candidate molecular signature associated with tamoxifen failure in primary breast cancer. Breast Cancer Res 10: R88.
[16]
Liu M, Hilger A, Herbert L, Gomez-Fernandez CR, Jorda M, et al. (2010) Correlation of GREB1 mRNA with protein expression in breast cancer: validation of a novel GREB1 monoclonal antibody. Breast Cancer Res Treat 122: 371–380.
[17]
Osborne CK, Shou J, Massarweh S, Schiff R (2005) Crosstalk between estrogen receptor and growth factor receptor pathways as a cause for endocrine therapy resistance in breast cancer. Clin Cancer Res 11: 865s–870s.
[18]
Benz CC, Scott GK, Sarup JC, Johnson RM, Tripathy D, et al. (1992) Estrogen-dependent, tamoxifen-resistant tumorigenic growth of MCF-7 cells transfected with HER2/neu. Breast Cancer Res Treat 24: 85–95.
[19]
Hurtado A, Holmes KA, Geistlinger TR, Hutcheson IR, Nicholson RI, et al. (2008) Regulation of ERBB2 by oestrogen receptor-PAX2 determines response to tamoxifen. Nature 456: 663–666.
[20]
Osborne CK, Bardou V, Hopp TA, Chamness GC, Hilsenbeck SG, et al. (2003) Role of the estrogen receptor coactivator AIB1 (SRC-3) and HER-2/neu in tamoxifen resistance in breast cancer. J Natl Cancer Inst 95: 353–361.
[21]
Mingli Liu CG-F, M Jorda (2010) Correlation of GREB1 mRNA with protein expression in breast cancer: validation of a novel GREB1 monoclonal antibody. Breast Cancer Res Treat 122: 371–380.
[22]
Lippman ME, Rae JM, Chinnaiyan AM (2008) An expression signature of estrogen-regulated genes predicts disease-free survival in tamoxifen-treated patients better than progesterone receptor status. Trans Am Clin Climatol Assoc 119: 77–90; discussion 90–72.
[23]
Singer CF, Kostler WJ, Hudelist G (2008) Predicting the efficacy of trastuzumab-based therapy in breast cancer: current standards and future strategies. Biochim Biophys Acta 1786: 105–113.
[24]
Fernandes A, Hamburger AW, Gerwin BI (1999) ErbB-2 kinase is required for constitutive stat 3 activation in malignant human lung epithelial cells. Int J Cancer 83: 564–570.
[25]
Berishaj M, Gao SP, Ahmed S, Leslie K, Al-Ahmadie H, et al. (2007) Stat3 is tyrosine-phosphorylated through the interleukin-6/glycoprotein 130/Janus kinase pathway in breast cancer. Breast Cancer Res 9: R32.
[26]
Wang Y, Cheng CH (2004) ERalpha and STAT5a cross-talk: interaction through C-terminal portions of the proteins decreases STAT5a phosphorylation, nuclear translocation and DNA-binding. FEBS Lett 572: 238–244.
[27]
Yamamoto T, Matsuda T, Junicho A, Kishi H, Saatcioglu F, et al. (2000) Cross-talk between signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 and estrogen receptor signaling. FEBS Lett 486: 143–148.
[28]
Rae JM, Johnson MD, Scheys JO, Cordero KE, Larios JM, et al. (2005) GREB 1 is a critical regulator of hormone dependent breast cancer growth. Breast Cancer Res Treat 92: 141–149.
[29]
Ghosh MG, Thompson DA, Weigel RJ (2000) PDZK1 and GREB1 are estrogen-regulated genes expressed in hormone-responsive breast cancer. Cancer Res 60: 6367–6375.
[30]
Sun J, Nawaz Z, Slingerland JM (2007) Long-range activation of GREB1 by estrogen receptor via three distal consensus estrogen-responsive elements in breast cancer cells. Mol Endocrinol 21: 2651–2662.
[31]
Deschenes J, Bourdeau V, White JH, Mader S (2007) Regulation of GREB1 transcription by estrogen receptor alpha through a multipartite enhancer spread over 20 kb of upstream flanking sequences. J Biol Chem 282: 17335–17339.
[32]
Rhodes DR, Yu J, Shanker K, Deshpande N, Varambally R, et al. (2004) ONCOMINE: a cancer microarray database and integrated data-mining platform. Neoplasia 6: 1–6.
[33]
Rhodes DR, Yu J, Shanker K, Deshpande N, Varambally R, et al. (2004) Large-scale meta-analysis of cancer microarray data identifies common transcriptional profiles of neoplastic transformation and progression. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 101: 9309–9314.
[34]
Richardson AL, Wang ZC, De Nicolo A, Lu X, Brown M, et al. (2006) X chromosomal abnormalities in basal-like human breast cancer. Cancer Cell 9: 121–132.
[35]
Bild AH, Yao G, Chang JT, Wang Q, Potti A, et al. (2006) Oncogenic pathway signatures in human cancers as a guide to targeted therapies. Nature 439: 353–357.
[36]
Boersma BJ, Reimers M, Yi M, Ludwig JA, Luke BT, et al. (2008) A stromal gene signature associated with inflammatory breast cancer. Int J Cancer 122: 1324–1332.
[37]
Chin K, DeVries S, Fridlyand J, Spellman PT, Roydasgupta R, et al. (2006) Genomic and transcriptional aberrations linked to breast cancer pathophysiologies. Cancer Cell 10: 529–541.
[38]
Desmedt C, Piette F, Loi S, Wang Y, Lallemand F, et al. (2007) Strong time dependence of the 76-gene prognostic signature for node-negative breast cancer patients in the TRANSBIG multicenter independent validation series. Clin Cancer Res 13: 3207–3214.
[39]
Ginestier C, Cervera N, Finetti P, Esteyries S, Esterni B, et al. (2006) Prognosis and gene expression profiling of 20q13-amplified breast cancers. Clin Cancer Res 12: 4533–4544.
[40]
Hess KR, Anderson K, Symmans WF, Valero V, Ibrahim N, et al. (2006) Pharmacogenomic predictor of sensitivity to preoperative chemotherapy with paclitaxel and fluorouracil, doxorubicin, and cyclophosphamide in breast cancer. J Clin Oncol 24: 4236–4244.
[41]
Huang E, Cheng SH, Dressman H, Pittman J, Tsou MH, et al. (2003) Gene expression predictors of breast cancer outcomes. Lancet 361: 1590–1596.
[42]
Ivshina AV, George J, Senko O, Mow B, Putti TC, et al. (2006) Genetic reclassification of histologic grade delineates new clinical subtypes of breast cancer. Cancer Res 66: 10292–10301.
[43]
Miller LD, Smeds J, George J, Vega VB, Vergara L, et al. (2005) An expression signature for p53 status in human breast cancer predicts mutation status, transcriptional effects, and patient survival. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 102: 13550–13555.
[44]
Minn AJ, Gupta GP, Siegel PM, Bos PD, Shu W, et al. (2005) Genes that mediate breast cancer metastasis to lung. Nature 436: 518–524.
[45]
van de Vijver MJ, He YD, van’t Veer LJ, Dai H, Hart AA, et al. (2002) A gene-expression signature as a predictor of survival in breast cancer. N Engl J Med 347: 1999–2009.
[46]
Wang Y, Klijn JG, Zhang Y, Sieuwerts AM, Look MP, et al. (2005) Gene-expression profiles to predict distant metastasis of lymph-node-negative primary breast cancer. Lancet 365: 671–679.
[47]
Zhao H, Langerod A, Ji Y, Nowels KW, Nesland JM, et al. (2004) Different gene expression patterns in invasive lobular and ductal carcinomas of the breast. Mol Biol Cell 15: 2523–2536.
[48]
Goetz MP, Suman VJ, Couch FJ, Ames MM, Rae JM, et al. (2008) Cytochrome P450 2D6 and homeobox 13/interleukin-17B receptor: combining inherited and tumor gene markers for prediction of tamoxifen resistance. Clin Cancer Res 14: 5864–5868.
[49]
Goetz MP, Suman VJ, Ingle JN, Nibbe AM, Visscher DW, et al. (2006) A two-gene expression ratio of homeobox 13 and interleukin-17B receptor for prediction of recurrence and survival in women receiving adjuvant tamoxifen. Clin Cancer Res 12: 2080–2087.
[50]
Ingle JN, Suman VJ, Mailliard JA, Kugler JW, Krook JE, et al. (2006) Randomized trial of tamoxifen alone or combined with fluoxymesterone as adjuvant therapy in postmenopausal women with resected estrogen receptor positive breast cancer. North Central Cancer Treatment Group Trial 89–30–52. Breast Cancer Res Treat 98: 217–222.
[51]
Clark GM, McGuire WL (1983) Progesterone receptors and human breast cancer. Breast Cancer Res Treat 3: 157–163.
[52]
Henriksen KL, Sonne-Hansen K, Kirkegaard T, Frogne T, Lykkesfeldt AE (2008) Development of new predictive markers for endocrine therapy and resistance in breast cancer. Acta Oncol 47: 795–801.
[53]
Gyorffy B, Lanczky A, Eklund AC, Denkert C, Budczies J, et al. (2010) An online survival analysis tool to rapidly assess the effect of 22,277 genes on breast cancer prognosis using microarray data of 1,809 patients. Breast Cancer Res Treat 123: 725–731.
[54]
Yamashita H (2008) Current research topics in endocrine therapy for breast cancer. Int J Clin Oncol 13: 380–383.
[55]
Jordan VC, Wolf MF, Mirecki DM, Whitford DA, Welshons WV (1988) Hormone receptor assays: clinical usefulness in the management of carcinoma of the breast. Crit Rev Clin Lab Sci 26: 97–152.
[56]
Rae JM, Johnson MD, Cordero KE, Scheys JO, Larios JM, et al. (2006) GREB1 is a novel androgen-regulated gene required for prostate cancer growth. Prostate 66: 886–894.
[57]
Danforth DN Jr, Sgagias MK (1993) Interleukin-1 alpha and interleukin-6 act additively to inhibit growth of MCF-7 breast cancer cells in vitro. Cancer Res 53: 1538–1545.
[58]
Dolled-Filhart M, Camp RL, Kowalski DP, Smith BL, Rimm DL (2003) Tissue microarray analysis of signal transducers and activators of transcription 3 (Stat3) and phospho-Stat3 (Tyr705) in node-negative breast cancer shows nuclear localization is associated with a better prognosis. Clin Cancer Res 9: 594–600.
[59]
Gupta N, Grebhardt S, Mayer D (2012) Janus kinase 2–a novel negative regulator of estrogen receptor alpha function. Cell Signal 24: 151–161.
[60]
Wilson BJ, Giguere V (2008) Meta-analysis of human cancer microarrays reveals GATA3 is integral to the estrogen receptor alpha pathway. Mol Cancer 7: 49.
[61]
Johnson MD, Zuo H, Lee KH, Trebley JP, Rae JM, et al. (2004) Pharmacological characterization of 4-hydroxy-N-desmethyl tamoxifen, a novel active metabolite of tamoxifen. Breast Cancer Res Treat 85: 151–159.
[62]
Zabel U, Henkel T, Silva MS, Baeuerle PA (1993) Nuclear uptake control of NF-kappa B by MAD-3, an I kappa B protein present in the nucleus. EMBO J 12: 201–211.
[63]
Nedergaard L, Christensen L, Rasmussen BB, Jacobsen GK (1996) Comparison of two monoclonal antibodies for the detection of estrogen receptors in primary breast carcinomas. Pathol Res Pract 192: 983–988.