Abstract

Lumen formation of breast epithelium is rapidly lost during tumorigenesis along with expression of cell adhesion molecule CEACAM1. CEACAM1 induces lumena in a three-dimensional culture of MCF7/CEACAM1 cells that otherwise fail to form lumena. We hypothesized miRNAs may be involved because >400 genes were up- or down-regulated in MCF7/CEACAM1 cells and miRNAs may modify global expression patterns. Comparative analysis of miRNA expression in MCF7 versus MCF7/CEACAM1 cells revealed two miRNAs significantly down-regulated (hsa-miR-30a-3p by 6.73-fold and hsa-miR-342-5p by 5.68-fold). Location of miR-342 within an intron of the EVL gene, hypermethylated and involved in tumorigenesis, suggested that miR-342 overexpression may block lumen formation. In fact, overexpression of miR-342 in MCF7/CEACAM1 cells significantly blocked lumen formation (p < 0.001). ID4, a dominant-negative inhibitor of basic helix-loop-helix transcription factors, up-regulated in MCF7/CEACAM1 cells, down-regulated in breast cancer, and containing a miR-342 binding site, was tested as a potential target of miR-342. The ratio of ID4 to miR-342 increased from 1:2 in MCF7 cells to 30:1 in MCF7/CEACAM1 cells and a miR-342 inhibitor was able to induce 3'-UTR ID4 reporter activity in MCF7 cells. Because 5-methylcytosine methyltransferase DNMT1 is also a potential target of miR-342, we inhibited miR-342 in MCF7 cells and found DNMT1 was up-regulated with no change in EVL expression, suggesting that miR-342 regulates DNMT1 expression but DNMT1 does not affect the EVL expression in these cells. We conclude that the regulation of lumen formation by miR-342 involves at least two of its known targets, namely ID4 and DNMT1.

Highlights

  • Lumen formation of mammary epithelial cells in a threedimensional culture is an in vitro assay that phenocopies mammary epithelial gland formation [1,2,3]

  • CEACAM1 is expressed as multiple mRNA isoforms in cells, the major isoform expressed in the mammary gland has only 12 amino acids in its cytoplasmic domain, and this isoform is sufficient and necessary for lumen formation [5, 6]

  • We show that transfection of ID4 into MCF-7 cells enables lumen formation, whereas knockdown of ID4 in MCF-7 transfected with CEACAM1-SF where ID4 expression is high, abrogates lumen formation

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Summary

Introduction

Lumen formation of mammary epithelial cells in a threedimensional culture is an in vitro assay that phenocopies mammary epithelial gland formation [1,2,3]. When MCF-7 cells were transfected with either wild type CEACAM1-SF or a phosphorylation site mutant (T457A,S459A; hereafter referred to as the DA mutant), the transcription of over 400 genes were found to change significantly during lumen formation [9].

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