Abstract

Galectin-7 was initially described as a marker of epithelial differentiation expressed in the stratified epithelium of various tissues. Like other members of the galectin family, its expression level is often significantly altered in cancer cells. In breast cancer, its expression is significantly augmented in aggressive molecular subtypes, most notably in estrogen receptor-negative tumors and in cell lines with a basal-like phenotype. Studies using experimental mouse models have further shown high expression of galectin-7 was sufficient to increase the metastatic behavior of poorly metastatic breast cancer cells, rendering them more resistant to apoptosis. This expression pattern in breast cancer cells is unexpected because galectin-7 was originally identified as a p53-induced gene. To address this paradox, we have examined the molecular mechanisms regulating galectin-7 in breast cancer cells. Our results showed that transfection of breast cancer cells with expression vectors encoding mutant p53 was sufficient to induce galectin-7 at both mRNA and protein levels. Doxorubicin treatment of breast cancer cells harboring a mutant p53 also induced galectin-7. This induction was specific since knockdown of endogenous mutant p53 inhibited doxorubicin-induced galectin-7 expression. The p53-induced galectin-7 expression in breast cancer cells correlated with increased NF-κB activity and was inhibited by NF-κB inhibitors, indicating that the ability of mutant p53 to induce galectin-7 was dependent on NF-κB activity. The implication of NF-κB was further supported by data showing that NF-κB bound to the endogenous galectin-7 promoter and that TNFα-induced galectin-7 expression was abolished by NF-κB inhibitors. Taken together, our data provide an explanation to the observed high galectin-7 expression levels in cancer cells and suggest that galectin-7 could be part of a common pathway used by mutant p53 to promote cancer progression.

Highlights

  • Evidence suggesting that interactions between lectins and their ligands play a major role in different steps of cancer progression has gained the attention of several oncologists [1]

  • Using tissue microarrays constructed from samples obtained from normal breast tissues and breast carcinomas, we previously reported that galectin-7 was expressed at abnormally high levels in tissues collected from patients with a poor prognosis [12]

  • Using MCF-7 cells transfected with a vector encoding wildtype p53 (p53wt), we found that increased levels of wild-type p53 were able to induce galectin-7 expression at both mRNA and protein levels (Figure 1A and B)

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Summary

Introduction

Evidence suggesting that interactions between lectins and their ligands play a major role in different steps of cancer progression has gained the attention of several oncologists [1]. Using tissue microarrays constructed from samples obtained from normal breast tissues and breast carcinomas, we previously reported that galectin-7 was expressed at abnormally high levels in tissues collected from patients with a poor prognosis [12] These results were consistent with the genomic profiling data previously reported by Perou et al [13], who provided a molecular portrait of 65 surgical specimens of human breast tumors from 42 individuals. Their data revealed that while galectin-7 transcripts were expressed at low levels in normal breast tissues and mammary epithelial cell lines, they were highly expressed in estrogen receptor (ER)-negative breast cancer and in cell lines with a basal-like phenotype. We have examined this apparent contradiction by investigating the molecular mechanisms controlling galectin-7 expression in human breast cancer cells

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