Abstract

IntroductionHigh prion protein (PrP) levels are associated with breast, colon and gastric cancer resistance to treatment and with a poor prognosis for the patients. However, little is known about the underlying molecular mechanism(s) regulating human PrP gene (PRNP) expression in cancers. Because endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress is associated with solid tumors, we investigated a possible regulation of PRNP gene expression by ER stress.MethodsPublished microarray databases of breast cancer tissues and breast carcinoma cell lines were analyzed for PrP mRNA and ER stress marker immunoglobulin heavy chain binding protein (BiP) levels. Breast cancer tissue microarrays (TMA) were immunostained for BiP and PrP. Breast carcinoma MCF-7, MDA-MB-231, HS578T and HCC1500 cells were treated with three different ER stressors - Brefeldin A, Tunicamycin, Thapsigargin - and levels of PrP mRNA or protein assessed by RT-PCR and Western blot analyses. A human PRNP promoter-luciferase reporter was used to assess transcriptional activation by ER stressors. Site-directed mutagenesis identified the ER stress response elements (ERSE). Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) analyses were done to identify the ER stress-mediated transcriptional regulators. The role of cleaved activating transcription factor 6α (ΔATF6α) and spliced X-box protein-1 (sXBP1) in PRNP gene expression was assessed with over-expression or silencing techniques. The role of PrP protection against ER stress was assessed with PrP siRNA and by using Prnp null cell lines.ResultsWe find that mRNA levels of BiP correlated with PrP transcript levels in breast cancer tissues and breast carcinoma cell lines. PrP mRNA levels were enriched in the basal subtype and were associated with poor prognosis in breast cancer patients. Higher PrP and BiP levels correlated with increasing tumor grade in TMA. ER stress was a positive regulator of PRNP gene transcription in MCF-7 cells and luciferase reporter assays identified one ER stress response element (ERSE) conserved among primates and rodents and three primate-specific ERSEs that regulated PRNP gene expression. Among the various transactivators of the ER stress-regulated unfolded protein response (UPR), ATF6α and XBP1 transactivated PRNP gene expression, but the ability of these varied in different cell types. Functionally, PrP delayed ER stress-induced cell death.ConclusionsThese results establish PRNP as a novel ER stress-regulated gene that could increase survival in breast cancers.

Highlights

  • High prion protein (PrP) levels are associated with breast, colon and gastric cancer resistance to treatment and with a poor prognosis for the patients

  • These results indicate that high PrP mRNA levels are associated with poorer prognosis breast cancers

  • Using chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assays, we further showed that both X-Box protein-1 (XBP1) and activating transcription factor 6a (ATF6a) bound to the Human prion protein gene (PRNP) promoter in Brefeldin A (BFA)-treated MCF-7 cells (Figure 6D)

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Summary

Introduction

High prion protein (PrP) levels are associated with breast, colon and gastric cancer resistance to treatment and with a poor prognosis for the patients. Little is known about the underlying molecular mechanism(s) regulating human PrP gene (PRNP) expression in cancers. PrP is over-expressed in gastric cancers [17], associated with resistance to chemotherapy and poor prognosis [18], and promotes proliferation, invasion and metastasis [19,20]. PrP levels are higher in the most aggressive colon cancer cell lines [24] and in highergrade human colorectal carcinomas [25]. Antibodies against PrP decrease cellular proliferation of colon carcinoma HCT116 cells and decrease xenograft tumor growth in combination with irinotecan chemotherapy [24]. PRNP gene expression correlates with colorectal cancer recurrence [26]

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