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Loss of Estrogen Receptor Signaling Triggers Epigenetic Silencing of Downstream Targets in Breast Cancer

Authors :
Yu-Wei Leu
Wade V. Welshons
Pearlly S. Yan
Edward M. Curran
Ramana V. Davuluri
Tim H M Huang
Meiyun Fan
Joseph Liu
Christoph Plass
Susan H. Wei
Victor X. Jin
Kenneth P. Nephew
Source :
Cancer Research. 64:8184-8192
Publication Year :
2004
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2004.

Abstract

Alterations in histones, chromatin-related proteins, and DNA methylation contribute to transcriptional silencing in cancer, but the sequence of these molecular events is not well understood. Here we demonstrate that on disruption of estrogen receptor (ER) α signaling by small interfering RNA, polycomb repressors and histone deacetylases are recruited to initiate stable repression of the progesterone receptor (PR) gene, a known ERα target, in breast cancer cells. The event is accompanied by acquired DNA methylation of the PR promoter, leaving a stable mark that can be inherited by cancer cell progeny. Reestablishing ERα signaling alone was not sufficient to reactivate the PR gene; reactivation of the PR gene also requires DNA demethylation. Methylation microarray analysis further showed that progressive DNA methylation occurs in multiple ERα targets in breast cancer genomes. The results imply, for the first time, the significance of epigenetic regulation on ERα target genes, providing new direction for research in this classical signaling pathway.

Details

ISSN :
15387445 and 00085472
Volume :
64
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4d766c482586837ddb8b3f8ddc85d514
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.can-04-2045