학술논문

ZNF217, a candidate breast cancer oncogene amplified at 20q13, regulates expression of the ErbB3 receptor tyrosine kinase in breast cancer cells
Document Type
article
Source
Oncogene. 29(40)
Subject
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Oncology and Carcinogenesis
Biological Sciences
Genetics
Cancer
Breast Cancer
Biotechnology
Women's Health
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Animals
Breast Neoplasms
Cell Line
Tumor
Chromatin Immunoprecipitation
Chromosomes
Human
Pair 20
Female
Gene Expression
Gene Expression Regulation
Neoplastic
Genes
erbB
Humans
Mice
Mice
Transgenic
Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis
Oncogenes
Promoter Regions
Genetic
Receptor
ErbB-3
Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction
Signal Transduction
Trans-Activators
ZNF217
ErbB3
CtBP2
20q13
breast cancer
Receptor
erbB-3
Clinical Sciences
Oncology & Carcinogenesis
Biochemistry and cell biology
Oncology and carcinogenesis
Language
Abstract
Understanding the mechanisms underlying ErbB3 overexpression in breast cancer will facilitate the rational design of therapies to disrupt ErbB2-ErbB3 oncogenic function. Although ErbB3 overexpression is frequently observed in breast cancer, the factors mediating its aberrant expression are poorly understood. In particular, the ErbB3 gene is not significantly amplified, raising the question as to how ErbB3 overexpression is achieved. In this study we showed that the ZNF217 transcription factor, amplified at 20q13 in ∼20% of breast tumors, regulates ErbB3 expression. Analysis of a panel of human breast cancer cell lines (n = 50) and primary human breast tumors (n = 15) showed a strong positive correlation between ZNF217 and ErbB3 expression. Ectopic expression of ZNF217 in human mammary epithelial cells induced ErbB3 expression, whereas ZNF217 silencing in breast cancer cells resulted in decreased ErbB3 expression. Although ZNF217 has previously been linked with transcriptional repression because of its close association with C-terminal-binding protein (CtBP)1/2 repressor complexes, our results show that ZNF217 also activates gene expression. We showed that ZNF217 recruitment to the ErbB3 promoter is CtBP1/2-independent and that ZNF217 and CtBP1/2 have opposite roles in regulating ErbB3 expression. In addition, we identify ErbB3 as one of the mechanisms by which ZNF217 augments PI-3K/Akt signaling.