Abstract

Vitamin A derivatives (retinoids) are potent regulators of cell proliferation and differentiation. Retinoids inhibit the function of the oncogenic AP-1 and beta-catenin/TCF pathways and also stabilize components of the adherens junction, a tumor suppressor complex. When treated with retinoic acid (RA), the breast cancer cell line, SKBR3, undergoes differentiation and reduction in cell proliferation. The present work demonstrates that in SKBR3 cells, which exhibit high AP-1 activity, RA-regulation of cadherin expression and function, but not changes in AP-1 (or beta-catenin/TCF) signaling, is responsible for the epithelial differentiation. However, cadherin function and recruitment of beta-catenin to the membrane is not required for RA to regulate DNA synthesis in these cells. RA also reduces the activity of an AP-1 and TCF-sensitive cyclin D1 reporter in SKBR3 cells in a manner that is independent of the TCF site. In contrast, in SW480 cells, which have high levels of beta-catenin/TCF signaling, the activity and retinoid responsiveness of the cyclin D1 promoter was markedly inhibited by mutation of the TCF site. These data indicate that the remarkably broad effects of RA on the growth and differentiation of many different epithelial cancers may well be explained by the ability of RA to differentially regulate the activity of RAR/RXR, AP-1, and beta-catenin/TCF pathways.

Highlights

  • Retinoids are important regulators of cell proliferation and differentiation and can act as potent anti-tumor agents

  • We show that modulation of AP-1 or ␤-catenin/TCF signaling is not involved in retinoic acid (RA)-induced cell differentiation

  • These results show that RA-mediated inhibition of cell proliferation is independent of the cadherin/␤-catenin and calcium-dependent adhesion pathways in SKBR3 cells

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Summary

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES

Cell Lines and Treatments—SKBR3 and SW480 cells were obtained from ATCC and grown in Dulbecco’s modified Eagle’s medium (Invitrogen) plus 10% fetal bovine serum as described previously [31]. All antibodies were diluted in 5% skim milk in phosphate-buffered saline for Western blotting or 6% normal goat serum for immunocytochemistry. C-Jun (amino acids 3–122 deleted), missing the transactivation domain along with the FLAG tag, was amplified by PCR and cloned into a pcDNA3.1 expression vector. This construct, pcDNA3.1FLAG-TAM-67, was sequenced to confirm the correct nucleotide sequence of the FLAG-TAM67 gene. Cells were transfected with 1 ␮g of either the wild type or mutant E-cadherin-luciferase construct, AP-1 luciferase construct, CD1-luciferase construct or with the LEF-reporter pTOPFLASH/pFOPFLASH [35] along with 0.02 ␮g of pCMV-Renilla luciferase (Promega) [32]. The experimental reporter activity was controlled for transfection efficiency by comparison with the constitutively expressed Renilla luciferase

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