Abstract

beta-Catenin signaling plays a key role in a variety of cellular contexts during embryonic development and tissue differentiation. Aberrant beta-catenin signaling has also been implicated in promoting human colorectal carcinomas as well as a variety of other cancers. To study the molecular and cellular biological functions of beta-catenin in a controlled fashion, we created a regulatable form of activated beta-catenin by fusion to a modified estrogen receptor (ER) ligand binding domain (G525R). Transfection of tissue culture cells with expression vectors encoding this hybrid protein allows the signal transduction function of beta-catenin to be induced by the synthetic estrogen, 4-hydroxytamoxifen, leading to regulated activation of a beta-catenin-lymphocyte enhancer-binding factor-dependent reporter gene as well as induction of endogenous cyclin D1 expression. The activation of ER-beta-catenin signaling rescues RK3E cells from anoikis and correlates with an increased phosphorylation of mitogen-activated protein kinase. The inhibition of anoikis by ER-beta-catenin can be abolished by a mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway inhibitor, PD98059. Evidence is also provided to show that ER-beta-catenin down-regulates cadherin protein levels. These findings support a key role for activated beta-catenin signaling in processes that contribute to tumor formation and progression.

Highlights

  • Wnt-1 was first identified as a proto-oncogene in mouse mammary tumors [1]

  • Activation of the ␤-catenin pathway by Wnt-1 leads to the accumulation of a cytoplasmic pool of ␤-catenin [36, 37], which translocates into the nucleus and binds to transcription factors of the lymphocyte enhancer-binding factor 1 (LEF-1)/T cell factor family to regulate ␤-catenin-LEF-dependent gene expression (3, 38 – 41)

  • Mutational inactivation of the adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) protein contributes to the accumulation of ␤-catenin and deregulated expression of its downstream target genes, some of which have been implicated in human cancers [51,52,53,54,55]

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Summary

Introduction

Wnt-1 was first identified as a proto-oncogene in mouse mammary tumors [1]. Wnt-1 and other members of this gene family normally play important roles in embryonic development including the specification of cell fate, induction of body axis, and determination of embryonic patterning [2,3,4]. Transfection of tissue culture cells with expression vectors encoding this hybrid protein allows the signal transduction function of ␤-catenin to be induced by the synthetic estrogen, 4-hydroxytamoxifen, leading to regulated activation of a ␤-catenin-lymphocyte enhancerbinding factor-dependent reporter gene as well as induction of endogenous cyclin D1 expression.

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