Progression of mouse skin carcinogenesis is associated with increased ERα levels and is repressed by a dominant negative form of ERα.
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Authors
Logotheti, Stella
Papaevangeliou, Dimitra
Michalopoulos, Ioannis
Sideridou, Maria
Tsimaratou, Katerina
Christodoulou, Ioannis
Gorgoulis, Vassilis
Vlahopoulos, Spiros
Zoumpourlis, Vassilis
Publication Date
2012Journal Title
PLoS One
ISSN
1932-6203
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Volume
7
Issue
8
Pages
e41957
Language
eng
Type
Article
Physical Medium
Print-Electronic
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Logotheti, S., Papaevangeliou, D., Michalopoulos, I., Sideridou, M., Tsimaratou, K., Christodoulou, I., Pyrillou, K., et al. (2012). Progression of mouse skin carcinogenesis is associated with increased ERα levels and is repressed by a dominant negative form of ERα.. PLoS One, 7 (8), e41957. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0041957
Abstract
Estrogen receptors (ER), namely ERα and ERβ, are hormone-activated transcription factors with an important role in carcinogenesis. In the present study, we aimed at elucidating the implication of ERα in skin cancer, using chemically-induced mouse skin tumours, as well as cell lines representing distinct stages of mouse skin oncogenesis. First, using immunohistochemical staining we showed that ERα is markedly increased in aggressive mouse skin tumours in vivo as compared to the papilloma tumours, whereas ERβ levels are low and become even lower in the aggressive spindle tumours of carcinogen-treated mice. Then, using the multistage mouse skin carcinogenesis model, we showed that ERα gradually increases during promotion and progression stages of mouse skin carcinogenesis, peaking at the most aggressive stage, whereas ERβ levels only slightly change throughout skin carcinogenesis. Stable transfection of the aggressive, spindle CarB cells with a dominant negative form of ERα (dnERα) resulted in reduced ERα levels and reduced binding to estrogen responsive elements (ERE)-containing sequences. We characterized two highly conserved EREs on the mouse ERα promoter through which dnERα decreased endogenous ERα levels. The dnERα-transfected CarB cells presented altered protein levels of cytoskeletal and cell adhesion molecules, slower growth rate and impaired anchorage-independent growth in vitro, whereas they gave smaller tumours with extended latency period of tumour onset in vivo. Our findings suggest an implication of ERα in the aggressiveness of spindle mouse skin cancer cells, possibly through regulation of genes affecting cell shape and adhesion, and they also provide hints for the effective targeting of spindle cancer cells by dnERα.
Keywords
9,10-Dimethyl-1,2-benzanthracene, Animals, Carcinogens, Cell Adhesion, Cell Line, Cell Transformation, Neoplastic, Cytoskeleton, Estrogen Receptor alpha, Estrogen Receptor beta, Genes, Dominant, Mice, Neoplasm Proteins, Skin Neoplasms, Transfection
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0041957
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/283116
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