Abstract

BackgroundEstrogens play an important role in breast cancer (BC) development and progression; when the two isoforms of the estrogen receptor (ERα and ERβ) are co-expressed each of them mediate specific effects of these hormones in BC cells. ERβ has been suggested to exert an antagonist role toward the oncogenic activities of ERα, and for this reason it is considered an oncosuppressor. As clinical evidence regarding a prognostic role for this receptor subtype in hormone-responsive BC is still limited and conflicting, more knowledge is required on the biological functions of ERβ in cancer cells. We have previously described the ERβ and ERα interactomes from BC cells, identifying specific and distinct patterns of protein interactions for the two receptors. In particular, we identified factors involved in mRNA splicing and maturation as important components of both ERα and ERβ pathways. Guided by these findings, here we performed RNA sequencing to investigate in depth the differences in the early transcriptional events and RNA splicing patterns induced by estradiol in cells expressing ERα alone or ERα and ERβ.ResultsExon skipping was the most abundant splicing event in the post-transcriptional regulation by estradiol. We identified several splicing events induced by ERα alone and by ERα + ERβ, demonstrating for the first time that ERβ significantly affects estrogen-induced splicing in BC cells, as revealed by modification of a subset of ERα-dependent splicing by ERβ, as well as by the presence of splicing isoforms only in ERβ + cells. In particular, we observed that ERβ + BC cell lines exhibited around 2-fold more splicing events than the ERβ- cells. Interestingly, we identified putative direct targets of ERβ-mediated alternative splicing by correlating the genomic locations of ERβ and ERα binding sites with estradiol-induced differential splicing in the corresponding genes.ConclusionsTaken together, these results demonstrate that ERβ significantly affects estrogen-induced early transcription and mRNA splicing in hormone-responsive BC cells, providing novel information on the biological role of ERβ in these tumors.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12864-015-1541-1) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Estrogens play an important role in breast cancer (BC) development and progression; when the two isoforms of the estrogen receptor (ERα and ERβ) are co-expressed each of them mediate specific effects of these hormones in BC cells

  • High-throughput sequencing in ERβ + and ERβ- human BC cell lines We have previously established and characterized subclones of the human BC cell line MCF-7 expressing human ERβ fused to a Tandem Affinity Purification (TAP) tag, and have shown that the addition of the TAP-tag at either the N- or the C-terminus of the protein does not alter significantly the receptor function, nor its ability to activate transcription or to antagonize Estrogen receptors α (ERα)-dependent transcription [21,22,36]

  • Expression of ERβ in this BC cell line had a stronger effect on inhibited genes than on the activated ones: regulation of 40% of genes inhibited by estradiol in wt cells was lost in both ERβ + cell lines, versus 14% for estrogen-activated genes

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Summary

Introduction

Estrogens play an important role in breast cancer (BC) development and progression; when the two isoforms of the estrogen receptor (ERα and ERβ) are co-expressed each of them mediate specific effects of these hormones in BC cells. Encoded by different genes, ERα and ERβ share the same general modular protein structure of the nuclear hormone receptor superfamily, and have almost 100% amino acid sequence homology in their DNAbinding domain. They show 59% amino acid homology in their ligand-binding domains [4,5]. Several studies have reported a negative prognostic value for ERβ expression [19,20], making the overall contribution of this receptor isoform to BC biology unclear

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