Abstract

Maspin has been shown to inhibit tumor cell invasion and metastasis in breast tumor cells. Maspin expression was detected in normal breast and prostate epithelial cells, whereas tumor cells exhibited reduced or no expression. However, the regulatory mechanism of maspin expression remains unknown. We report here a rapid and robust induction of maspin expression in prostate cancer cells (LNCaP, DU145, and PC3) and breast tumor cells (MCF7) following wild type p53 expression from an adenovirus p53 expression vector (AdWTp53). p53 activates the maspin promoter by binding directly to the p53 consensus-binding site present in the maspin promoter. DNA-damaging agents and cytotoxic drugs induced endogenous maspin expression in cells containing the wild type p53. Maspin expression was refractory to the DNA-damaging agents in cells containing mutant p53. These results, combined with recent studies of the tumor metastasis suppressor gene KAI1 and plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI1), define a new category of molecular targets of p53 that have the potential to negatively regulate tumor invasion and/or metastasis.

Highlights

  • Prostate epithelial cells; tumor cells showed a decreased expression or absence of expression

  • A recent report suggests that the tumor suppressive effects of manganese-containing superoxide dismutase in human breast cancer cells could result from the up-regulation of maspin [4]

  • These observations suggest that maspin expression plays important roles in regulating tumor cell invasion and metastasis

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Summary

Introduction

Prostate epithelial cells; tumor cells showed a decreased expression or absence of expression. A recent report suggests that the tumor suppressive effects of manganese-containing superoxide dismutase in human breast cancer cells could result from the up-regulation of maspin [4]. Transcriptional activity of maspin expression differed between prostate normal and tumor cells [6]. These observations suggest that maspin expression plays important roles in regulating tumor cell invasion and metastasis.

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