1. ERα directly activated the MDR1 transcription to increase paclitaxel-resistance of ERα-positive breast cancer cells in vitro and in vivo
- Author
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Junfeng Shi, Xiao Han, Hai-Jian Ding, Nan Yang, Jiexin Zhang, Yan Leng, Yujie Sun, and Mei-Ling Hu
- Subjects
ATP Binding Cassette Transporter, Subfamily B ,Paclitaxel ,Transcription, Genetic ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Breast Neoplasms ,Drug resistance ,Biochemistry ,Mice ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Breast cancer ,In vivo ,Animals ,Humans ,Medicine ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,Gene knockdown ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,Estrogen Receptor alpha ,Cell Biology ,medicine.disease ,In vitro ,chemistry ,Drug Resistance, Neoplasm ,Immunology ,MCF-7 Cells ,Cancer research ,Female ,business ,Estrogen receptor alpha - Abstract
Chemotherapy is commonly used to treat early-stage invasive and advanced-stage breast cancer either before or after surgery. Increasing evidence from clinical analysis and in vitro studies has shown that ER-positive breast cancer cells are insensitive to chemotherapy. Complete understanding of how ERα mediates drug resistance is prerequisite to improvement of the chemotherapeutic efficacy. Over-expression of P-glycoprotein (P-gp) encoded by MDR1 gene is one of the major causes of drug resistance. The association between ERα and MDR1 in breast cancer is still unclear and the limited reports are conflict. This study systematically explored intrinsic link between ERα and the P-gp over-expression in paclitaxel-resistant ERα(+) breast cancer cell lines and mouse model in molecular details. Our data showed that ERα activated the MDR1 transcription in MCF-7/PTX breast cancer cells by binding to ERE1/2 and interacting with Sp1 that bridged to the downstream CG-rich element within the MDR1 promoter. Knockdown of MDR1 restrained the effect of ERα in MCF-7 cells and sensitized the cells to paclitaxel. Treatment of ICI 182,780 that selectively suppressed ERα significantly decreased the MDR1 expression and increased the sensitivity of drug resistant breast cancer cells and xenograft tumors to paclitaxel. Our data strongly demonstrated that ERα was able to increase drug resistance of breast cancer cells through activating MDR1 transcription. This novel mechanism provides new insight to how the ERα signaling regulates response of ERα(+) breast tumors to chemotherapy, which may be exploited for developing novel therapeutic strategies for breast cancer in the future.
- Published
- 2014
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