Abstract

Activation of mitogen-activated protein kinase (Erk/MAPK) is a critical signal transduction event for estrogen (E(2))-mediated cell proliferation. Recent studies from our group and others have shown that persistent activation of Erk plays a major role in cell migration and tumor progression. The signaling mechanism(s) responsible for persistent Erk activation are not fully characterized, however. In this study, we have shown that E(2) induces a slow but persistent activation of Erk in MCF-7 breast carcinoma cells. The E(2)-induced Erk activation is dependent on new protein synthesis, suggesting that E(2)-induced growth factors play a major role in Erk activation. When MCF-7 cells were treated with E(2) in the presence of an anti-HER-2 monoclonal antibody (herceptin), 60-70% of E(2)-induced Erk activation is blocked. In addition, when untreated MCF-7 cells were exposed to conditioned medium from E(2)-treated cells, Erk activity was significantly enhanced. Furthermore Erk activity was blocked by an antibody against HER-2 or by heregulin (HRG) depletion from the conditioned medium through immunoprecipitation. In contrast, epidermal growth factor receptor (Ab528) antibody only blocked 10-20% of E(2)-induced Erk activation, suggesting that E(2)-induced Erk activation is predominantly mediated through the secretion of HRG and activation of HER-2 by an autoctine/paracrine mechanism. Inhibition of PKC-delta-mediated signaling by a dominant negative mutant or the relatively specific PKC-delta inhibitor rottlerin blocked most of the E(2)-induced Erk activation but had no effect on TGF alpha-induced Erk activation. By contrast inhibition of Ras, by inhibition of farnesyl transferase (Ftase-1) or dominant negative (N17)-Ras, significantly inhibited both E(2)- and TGF alpha-induced Erk activation. This evaluation of downstream signaling revealed that E(2)-induced Erk activation is mediated by a HRG/HER-2/PKC-delta/Ras pathway that could be crucial for E(2)-dependent growth-promoting effects in early stages of tumor progression.

Highlights

  • Activation of mitogen-activated protein kinase (Erk/ MAPK) is a critical signal transduction event for estrogen (E2)-mediated cell proliferation

  • We have shown that HER-2 and PKC-␦ play a major role in E2-induced Erk activation

  • TGF␣ activates Erk by stimulating an epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR)/Ras pathway. These findings indicate that HER-2 and PKC-␦ play a major role in estrogen-mediated signaling leading to Erk activation and cell proliferation

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Summary

The abbreviations used are

E2, 17 ␤-estradiol; Erk, extracellular signal-regulated kinase; MAPK, mitogen-activated protein kinase; MEK, MAPK kinase; EGFR, epidermal growth factor receptor; EGF, epidermal growth factor; HRG, heregulin; PKC, protein kinase C; ER, estrogen receptor; TPA,12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate; HA, hemagglutinin; BSA, bovine serum albumin; CHX, cycloheximide; TGF, transforming growth factor; Bis, bisindolylmaleimide; CM, conditioned medium. The PKC family is comprised of at least 12 serine/threonine kinases that participate in signal transduction events in response to specific hormonal and growth factor stimuli (31). Differences in their structure and substrate requirements have permitted classification of the isoforms into three groups: 1) conventional PKCs (␣, ␤I, ␤II, and ␥), which are Ca2ϩ-dependent and activated by both phosphatidylserine and the second messenger diacylglycerol; 2) novel PKCs (␦, ⑀, ␩, and ␪), which are Ca2ϩ-independent and regulated by diacylglycerol and phosphatidylserine; and 3) atypical PKCs (␨ and ␫ /␭), which are Ca2ϩ-independent and do not require diacylglycerol for activation phosphatidylserine regulates activity (32, 33). PKC-␦ plays a major role in 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13acetate (TPA)-induced Raf-MEK-Erk activation (36, 37). TGF␣ activates Erk by stimulating an EGFR/Ras pathway These findings indicate that HER-2 and PKC-␦ play a major role in estrogen-mediated signaling leading to Erk activation and cell proliferation

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