Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P04155 (pS2)
1,234 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Tagging hormone receptors with the green fluorescent protein (GFP) has increased our knowledge of ligand dependent sub-cellular trafficking of hormone receptors. However, the effect of the tagged hormone receptor expression on the corresponding wild type hormone receptor and endogenous gene expression has not been investigated. In this study, we constructed a MCF-7 cell line stably expressing GFP-tagged human estrogen receptor-alpha (ER) under control of the tetracycline-on system to determine the effect of GFP-ER expression on cell proliferation and expression of endogenous ER and hormone-responsive genes. Further, the inducible system was applied to determine the ligand dependent turnover rates of GFP-ER protein and mRNA. Our results demonstrate that GFP-ER expression did not affect cell cycling. Independent of ligand, GFP-ER markedly reduced the level of endogenous ER mRNA and protein, suggesting that ER negatively autoregulates its expression. Cisplatin cross-linking studies showed that GFP-ER is associated with nuclear DNA in situ, suggesting that GFP-ER is partially replacing ER at estrogen response elements. Furthermore, GFP-ER expression did not affect the estradiol induced temporal expression of hormone responsive genes c-myc and pS2.
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PMID:Characterization of stably transfected fusion protein GFP-estrogen receptor-alpha in MCF-7 human breast cancer cells. 1211 6

SWI/SNF complexes are ATP-dependent chromatin remodelling enzymes that have been implicated in the regulation of gene expression in yeast and higher eukaryotes. BRG1, a catalytic subunit in the mammalian SWI/SNF complex, is required for transcriptional activation by the estrogen receptor, but the mechanisms by which the complex is recruited to estrogen target genes are unknown. Here, we have identified an interaction between the estrogen receptor and BAF57, a subunit present only in mammalian SWI/SNF complexes, which is stimulated by estrogen and requires both a functional hormone-binding domain and the DNA-binding region of the receptor. We also found an additional interaction between the p160 family of coactivators and BAF57 and demonstrate that the ability of p160 coactivators to potentiate transcription by the estrogen receptor is dependent on BAF57 in transfected cells. Moreover, chromatin immunoprecipitation assays demonstrated that BAF57 is recruited to the estrogen-responsive promoter, pS2, in a ligand-dependent manner. These results suggest that one of the mechanisms for recruiting SWI/SNF complexes to estrogen target genes is by means of BAF57.
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PMID:Targeting of SWI/SNF chromatin remodelling complexes to estrogen-responsive genes. 1214 9

It has been advanced that the trefoil factor (TFF) 1 gene is a candidate tumor-suppressor gene and may be involved in the development and/or progression of human gastric cancer. We aimed to clarify the putative role of TFF1 in gastric carcinogenesis. Ninety gastric carcinomas and eight gastric carcinoma-derived cell lines were screened for TFF1 mutations; subsets of the primary tumors and of the cell lines were subjected to loss of heterozygosity (LOH), immunohistochemistry, and promoter methylation analyses. TFF1 mutations were not detected in any of 90 gastric carcinomas. Eight (28%) of 28 informative cases displayed LOH at the TFF1 locus and absence of TFF1 staining by immunohistochemistry. These results indicate a frequent loss of TFF1 expression in gastric carcinomas through a mutation-independent mechanism. Extensive TFF1 promoter methylation was observed in nonexpressing gastric carcinoma-derived cell lines and tissues. Expressing cell lines, as well as normal gastric mucosa, presented little or no methylation of the promoter. Gastric carcinoma DNA presented de novo methylation of the promoter. These results point to the involvement of promoter methylation in the shutting down of TFF1. We conclude that TFF1 point mutations seem to be a rare event in gastric carcinogenesis. The loss of expression of TFF1 in a proportion of gastric carcinomas may be explained by LOH and methylation of the TFF1 promoter region. Our results further support the role of TFF1 inactivation in gastric carcinogenesis, in agreement with the results obtained in the Tff1-knockout mice model.
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PMID:Loss of heterozygosity and promoter methylation, but not mutation, may underlie loss of TFF1 in gastric carcinoma. 1237 66

Two soy sapogenols, soyasapogenol A (SA) and soyasapogenol B (SB) were tested for their estrogenic activities in estrogen responsive MCF-7 or estrogen-insensitive MDA-MB-231 (MDA) human breast cancer cells. SB and SA had differential actives on cell proliferation with 10 microM SB being growth inhibitory to MDA cells with no significant effect at any concentration on MCF-7 cells. SA also inhibited MDA cell proliferation at 10 micro, but at this same dose stimulated a 2.5-fold increase in MCF-7 proliferation. SA (0.1-10 microM) induced pS2 mRNA levels and the induction was blocked by co-treatment of cells with the anti-estrogen ICI 182,780. SA also induced the formation of an ER-ERE DNA complex measured by electrophoretic mobility shift assay. In summary, these results show that soyasapogenol A is estrogenic, whereas soyasapogenol B is growth inhibitory.
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PMID:Estrogenic and antiproliferative properties of soy sapogenols in human breast cancer cells in vitro. 1241 90

Breast cancer incidence increases with age but this relationship has not been fully explored with regard to expression of estrogen receptor (ER) and ER-inducible genes (PR, pS2, Bcl2, cathepsin D), or the age-dependence of oxidant stress markers that also affect ER-inducible gene expression. In this three-part study, we first correlated age at diagnosis with expression of breast cancer markers ER, PR, pS2, Bcl2, and cathepsin D, quantitated by enzyme immunoassays from a European collective of approximately 3000 cryobanked primary breast cancers and approximately 300 adjacent non-malignant breast tissues. Results were then compared with ER and PR data reported to the SEER registry for 83,541 US cancers diagnosed during 1992-1997. Lastly, a homogeneous subset of 70 ER-positive tumors preselected from the European collective was blindly analyzed for age-specific changes in the DNA-binding content of redox-sensitive transcriprtion factors, AP1 and Sp1, and the oxidant stress-activated protein kinase, phosphorylated(P)-Erk5. Increases in breast tumor ER from patients aged <30 to >80 years mirrored 10-fold lower increases in non-malignant breast tissue ER content up to age 60, rising faster thereafter and reaching a near 25-fold differential between malignant and non-malignant breast tissue by age 80. ER-inducible markers PR, pS2, Bcl2, and cathepsin D were overexpressed in tumors relative to non-malignant breast tissue but, unlike ER, did not increase with patient age. While SEER data demonstrated that the increase in US breast cancer incidence rates after age 50 is confined to ER-positive tumors in patients of all ethnic subsets, these patients also showed a striking increase in the proportion of higher-risk ER-positive/PR-negative breast cancers arising after age 50. Mechanistically essential for ER-inducible PR expression, Sp1 DNA-binding function (but not Sp1 content) was lost with age in ER-positive tumors; and this functional defect correlated with increased tumor content of the oxidant stress marker, P-Erk5. Altogether these findings support two hypotheses: (i) dysregulated ER expression underlies the age-specific increase in breast cancer incidence after age 50; and (ii) oxidative stress and loss of Sp1 DNA-binding may contribute to an increasing incidence in higher-risk ER-positive/PR-negative breast cancers with aging.
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PMID:Age-dependent changes in breast cancer hormone receptors and oxidant stress markers. 1246 83

Licorice root contains chemically diverse compounds that exhibit estrogenic effects in vitro and in vivo. The chalcone isoliquiritigenin (ISL) is a component of licorice extract exhibiting either antitumorigenic activity or estrogen receptor (ER) alpha-dependent growth promoting effects on breast cancer cells. In order to contribute to a better understanding of this apparent paradox, we synthesized and ascertained the estrogenic properties of ISL using, as model systems, the hormone-sensitive MCF7 breast cancer cells and the steroid-independent HeLa cells. Transfection experiments reveal that ISL is able to transactivate the endogenous ER alpha in MCF7 cells and this is supported by the capability to induce down-regulation of ER alpha protein levels and up-regulation of pS2 mRNA. Moreover, by using chimeric proteins consisting of the hormone binding domains of ER alpha and ER beta fused to the Gal4 DNA binding domain, we have determined that ISL is an estrogenic agonist of both ER isoforms. As a biological counterpart, low and intermediate ISL concentrations that induce substantial transcriptional activity stimulate the proliferation of MCF7 cells. However, high levels of ISL become cytotoxic even in steroid-receptor negative HeLa cells. Thus, the activity of ISL and the balance between risk or chemopreventive factor for estrogen-dependent breast cancer may depend on dietary intake.
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PMID:Estrogenic and antiproliferative activities of isoliquiritigenin in MCF7 breast cancer cells. 1258 38

Estrogen replacement therapy has been correlated with an increased risk for developing breast and endometrial cancers. One potential mechanism of estrogen carcinogenesis involves metabolism of estrogens to 2- and 4-hydroxylated catechols, which are further oxidized to electrophilic/redox active o-quinones that have the potential to both initiate and promote the carcinogenic process. Previously, we showed that the equine estrogens, equilin and equilenin, which are major components of the estrogen replacement formulation Premarin (Wyeth-Ayerst), are primarily metabolized to the catechol, 4-hydroxyequilenin. This catechol was found to autoxidize to an o-quinone causing oxidation and alkylation of DNA in vitro and in vivo. To block catechol formation from equilenin, 4-halogenated equilenin derivatives were synthesized. These derivatives were tested for their ability to bind to the estrogen receptor, induce estrogen sensitive genes, and their potential to form catechol metabolites. We found that the 4-fluoro derivatives were more estrogenic than the 4-chloro and 4-bromo derivatives as demonstrated by a higher binding affinity for estrogen receptors alpha and beta, an enhanced induction of alkaline phosphatase activity in Ishikawa cells, pS2 expression in S30 cells, and PR expression in Ishikawa cells. Incubation of these compounds with tyrosinase in the presence of GSH showed that the halogenated equilenin compounds formed less catechol GSH conjugates than the parent compounds, equilenin and 17beta-hydroxyequilenin. In addition, these halogenated compounds showed less cytotoxicity in the presence of tyrosinase than the parent compounds in S30 cells. Also, as stated above, the 4-fluoro derivatives showed similar estrogenic effects as compared with parent compounds; however, they were less toxic in S30 cells as compared to equilenin and 17beta-equilenin. Because 17beta-hydroxy-4-halogenated equilenin derivatives showed higher estrogenic effects than the halogenated equilenin derivatives in vitro, we studied the relative ability of the 17beta-hydroxy-4-halogenated equilenin derivatives to induce estrogenic effects in the ovariectomized rat model. The 4-fluoro derivative showed higher activity than 4-chloro and 4-bromo derivatives as demonstrated by inducing higher vaginal cellular differentiation, uterine growth, and mammary gland branching. However, 17beta-hydroxy-4-fluoroequilenin showed a lower estrogenic activity than 17beta-hydroxyequilenin and estradiol, which could be due to alternative pharmacokinetic properties for these compounds. These data suggest that the 4-fluoroequilenin derivatives have promise as alternatives to traditional estrogen replacement therapy due to their similar estrogenic properties with less overall toxicity.
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PMID:Effect of halogenated substituents on the metabolism and estrogenic effects of the equine estrogen, equilenin. 1280 57

Estrogen receptor beta (ERbeta) has been reported to have lower estradiol (E2)-induced transcriptional activity than human (h)ERalpha from estrogen response element (ERE)-driven reporters in transiently transfected cells. Conflicting data for activities of full-length and short hERbeta [hERbeta1, 530 amino acids (aa); and hERbeta1s, 477aa] have been reported. To test the hypothesis that hERbeta1 has higher transcriptional activity than hERbeta1s, we compared E2, 2,3-bis(4-hydroxyphenyl)propionitrile (a selective ERbeta agonist), and resveratrol-induced transcription by hERbeta1, hERbeta1s, and rat (r) ERbeta with hERalpha on different EREs in transiently transfected CHO-K1 and HEC-1A cells. Our results demonstrate for the first time that hERbeta1 has similar E2-induced activity to hERalpha and greater activity than rERbeta or hERbeta1s on a consensus palindromic ERE, either as a single or double copy; a minimal ERE; and the nonpalindromic pS2 ERE. 2,3-Bis(4-hydroxyphenyl)propionitrile showed greater efficacy with hERbeta1 and hERbeta1s than for rERbeta or hERalpha. We found that transcriptional differences between the ERbeta isoforms and ERalpha depend on the ERE sequence, confirming that the DNA sequence bound by ER is an allosteric effector of ER action. For the minimal 13-bp ERE and the pS2 ERE, the increase in transcriptional activity with hERbeta1 correlated with increased binding affinity. Coactivators steroid receptor coactivator-1 and cAMP response element binding protein-binding protein synergistically activated hERalpha and ERbeta transcription and showed reduced efficacy with rERbeta and hERbeta1s, suggesting a role for the N terminus of ERbeta1 in coactivator interaction. Collectively, these data indicate that the cellular expression of ERbeta isoforms may differentially impact ERE-regulated target gene expression in a ligand-dependent manner.
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PMID:Estrogen receptor beta isoforms exhibit differences in ligand-activated transcriptional activity in an estrogen response element sequence-dependent manner. 1450 May 65

The aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) is a ligand-activated transcription factor that forms a functional heterodimeric complex with the AhR nuclear translocator (Arnt) protein. The environmental toxin, 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD), is a high affinity ligand for the AhR and has been extensively used to investigate AhR-mediated biochemical and toxic responses. TCDD modulates several endocrine pathways including inhibition of 17beta-estradiol-induced responses in the immature and ovariectomized rodent uterus and mammary gland and in human breast cancer cell lines. TCDD inhibits formation and growth of mammary tumors in carcinogen-induced rodent models and relatively nontoxic selective AhR modulators (SAhRMs) are being developed for treatment of breast cancer. The mechanisms of inhibitory AhR-estrogen receptor (ER) crosstalk have been investigated in MCF-7 breast cancer cells by analysis of promoter regions of genes induced by E2 and inhibited by TCDD. AhR-mediated inhibition of E2-induced cathepsin D, pS2, c-fos, and heat shock protein 27 gene expression involves direct interaction of the AhR complex with inhibitory pentanucleotide (GCGTG) dioxin responsive elements (iDREs) resulting in disruption of interactions between proteins binding DNA elements required for ER action and the basal transcription machinery. Mechanisms of inhibitory AhR-ER crosstalk indicate that functional iDREs are required for inhibition of some genes; however, results indicate that other interaction pathways are important including AhR-mediated proteasome-dependent degradation of the ER.
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PMID:Mechanisms of inhibitory aryl hydrocarbon receptor-estrogen receptor crosstalk in human breast cancer cells. 1497 92

Multiple genetic and epigenetic alterations in oncogenes, tumour-suppressor genes, cell-cycle regulators, cell adhesion molecules, DNA repair genes and genetic instability as well as telomerase activation are implicated in the multistep process of human stomach carcinogenesis. However, particular combinations of these alterations differ in the two histological types of gastric cancer, indicating that well-differentiated or intestinal-type and poorly differentiated or diffuse-type carcinomas have distinct carcinogenetic pathways. In the multistep process of well-differentiated-type carcinogenesis, the genetic pathway can be divided into three subpathways: an intestinal metaplasia-->adenoma-->carcinoma sequence, an intestinal metaplasia-->carcinoma sequence and de novo. In the multistep process of well-differentiated-type or intestinal-type gastric carcinogenesis, infection with Helicobacter pylori may be a strong trigger for hyperplasia of hTERT-positive 'stem cells' in intestinal metaplasia. Genetic instability and hyperplasia of hTERT-positive stem cells precede replication error at the D1S191 locus, DNA hypermethylation at the D17S5 locus, pS2 loss, RARbeta loss, CD44 abnormal transcripts and p53 mutation, all of which accumulate in at least 30% of incomplete intestinal metaplasias. All of these epigenetic and genetic alterations are common events in intestinal-type gastric cancer. An adenoma-->carcinoma sequence is found in about 20% of gastric adenomas with APC mutations. In addition to these events, p53 mutation and loss of heterozygosity (LOH), reduced p27 expression, cyclin E expression and the presence of c-met 6.0-kb transcripts allow malignant transformation from the above precancerous lesions to intestinal-type gastric cancer. DCC loss, APC mutations, 1q LOH, p27 loss, reduced tumour growth factor (TGF)-beta type I receptor expression, reduced nm23 expression and c-erbB gene amplification are frequently associated with an advanced stage of intestinal-type gastric cancer. The de-novo pathway for carcinogenesis of well-differentiated gastric cancer involves LOH and abnormal expression of the p73 gene that is responsible for the development of foveolar-type gastric cancers with pS2 expression. On the other hand, LOH at chromosome 17p, mutation or LOH of p53 and mutation or loss of E-cadherin are preferentially involved in the development of poorly differentiated gastric cancers. In addition to these changes, gene amplification of K-sam, and c-met and p27 loss as well as reduced nm23 obviously confer progression, metastasis and diffusely productive fibrosis. Mixed gastric carcinomas composed of well-differentiated and poorly differentiated components exhibit some but not all of the molecular events described so far for each of the two types of gastric cancer. Besides these genetic and epigenetic events, well-differentiated and poorly differentiated gastric cancers also organize different patterns of interplay between cancer cells and stromal cells through the growth factor/cytokine receptor system, which plays an important role in cell growth, apoptosis, morphogenesis, angiogenesis, progression and metastasis. Meta-analysis of epidemiological studies and animal models show that both intestinal and diffuse types of gastric cancer are equally associated with H. pylori infection. However, H. pylori infection may play a role only in the initial steps of gastric carcinogenesis. Differences in H. pylori strain, patient age, exogenous or endogenous carcinogens and genetic factors such as DNA polymorphism and genetic instability may be implicated in two distinct major genetic pathways for gastric carcinogenesis.
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PMID:Genetic pathways of two types of gastric cancer. 1505 5


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