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Clues to Estrogen and Breast Cancer Cell Survival Involve NEDD8, SENP8, SirT1, NFκB and a Breast Cancer Associated Protein BCA3
volume 5 | issue 10
october 2006Page 1253
This is an open-access article
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After years of research, scientists at The University of Texas M. D. Anderson
Cancer Center are now able to explain, in exquisite molecular detail, how the
estrogen hormone can help keep breast cancer cells alive.
In the Sept. 24 online issue of the journal, Nature Cell Biology, they assign
roles to a number of genes and proteins thought to play a part in breast cancer
cell survival, and in the process, have identified potential molecular drug
targets.
"It's a very complex story, but we have been able to bring together a number of
basic discoveries from different fields of research to work out the basic
mechanism by which estrogen can exert a pro-life effect on cancer cells," said
the study's lead author, Edward T. H. Yeh, M.D., professor and chair of The
University of Texas M. D. Anderson's Department of Cardiology.
Along the way, the researchers have provided some novel insights. One is that
they have provided a role for breast cancer-associated protein 3 (BCA3), which
had been recently found to be over-expressed in both breast and prostate
cancers. Yeh and his team show that this protein, by itself, doesn't have any
relationship to the cancer, but when modified by the protein NEDD8, can act
like a tumor suppressor.
The researchers also found that SIRT1, a key protein involved in this molecular
pathway, is a member of a family of proteins responsible for prolonging life
span in both yeast and worms. "The fact that these molecules, which maintain
life span in other species, has been found to be involved in suppressing cancer
development seems important to us," Yeh said. "The reason people live longer is
that they don't develop cancer as readily."
Players in this newly defined pathway are:
* BCA3, which had no known function.
* NEDD8, a protein that can bind to other proteins and alter their function.
* SENP8, a protease (enzyme) that can break bonds between other molecules.
SIRT1
* NFkB (Nuclear Factor kappa B), a family of proteins that turn on genes
involved in cell death (apoptosis) and cell proliferation. When over-expressed,
NFkB can protect cells from undergoing apoptosis, and in general, the more NFkB
is expressed, the more resistant the cell is to apoptosis.
* Estrogen, a hormone that acts as growth fuel for about 70 percent of breast
cancers.
Researchers are interested in ways that cells can efficiently turn genes on or
off, and one of the newest mechanisms is dubbed "NEDDylation," which Yeh helped
to find 10 years ago. This process requires multiple enzymes to attach NEDD8 to
other proteins.
To find proteins that can be altered by NEDD8, the four-member research team
used yeast as their experimental platform, and SENP8 as a tool. This enzyme is
known to be able to separate NEDD8 from the proteins it binds to. In this way,
they could use SNEP8 "as bait" to fish for protein complexes held together by
NEDD8.
They first found that BCA3 binds to SENP8 and was modified byNEDD8, and then
discovered that this complex affects NFkB signaling. It does this by binding on
to p65, one of the two proteins that make up NFkB proteins, the researchers
say. "NEDD8 modified BCA3 regulates the activity of NFkB, but BCA3 alone does
not have any impact on NFkB," says Yeh.
Then they looked at how this NEDDylation further works to suppress the ability
of NFkB to transcribe (activate) other genes. Here the investigators found
SITR1, the molecule known to prolong life span in several other species. SITR1
is a histone deacetylase, a protein that blocks transcription factors from
regulating genes. "When NEDD8 modified BCA3, it binds to p65 and recruits SITR1
to suppress NFkB-mediated transcription," Yeh said.
Finally, the researchers discovered that estrogen blocks NEDD8 from modifying
BCA3, a finding which goes some way to "explaining estrogen's pro-life effect
in breast cancer cells," Yeh says. "Estrogen could enhance the survival of
breast cancer cells by silencing BCA3, through eliminating its hold on NFkB
transcription."
Now that this cancer-promoting molecular pathway has been described, Yeh says
it might be possible to interfere with a number of the players to inhibit
cancer growth. "NEDD8 is key," he said. "It may be possible to design drugs
that block the removal of NEDD8 from BCA3." By increasing the amount of NEDD8-
modified BCA3, there will be a corresponding decrease in the level of NFkB and
the cancer cells will be more sensitive to chemotherapy, Yeh says.
"There is a lot we need to sort out, of course, but this is a model of how
estrogen may function to promote growth in breast cancer that we can all now
work from," Yeh says.
The study was supported by grants from National Institutes of Health. The
first author, Fei Gao, M.D., Ph.D. was a post-doctoral fellow with Yeh at the
Brown Foundation Institute of Molecular Medicine for the Prevention of Human
Diseases at the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston and is an
associate professor and vice-director, Department of Cell Biology and Vice-
Director, Science and Technology Division at the Shanghai Jiao-Tong University,
School of Medicine, at Shanghai, China.
Other co-authors include Jinke Cheng, Ph.D., assistant professor from the
Department of Cardiology, M. D. Anderson, and Tong Shi, M.D. from the Shanghai
Jiao-Tong University School of Medicine, in Shanghai, China. Yeh is also
director of the Research Center for Cardiovascular Diseases at the Brown
Foundation Institute of Molecular Medicine and a member of the Texas Heart
Institute.
This is an open-access article
If the document does not open, please right-click on the link (control-click on a Macintosh) and select the option to save the file to disk.




