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Molecular and Cellular Biology, September 2006, p. 6412-6424, Vol. 26, No. 17
0270-7306/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/MCB.01950-05
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center,1 Departments of Genetics,2 Radiation Oncology,3 Medicine,4 Pharmacology,School of Medicine, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599,5 Eppley Institute for Research in Cancer and Allied Diseases, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, Nebraska 681986
Received 5 October 2005/ Returned for modification 30 November 2005/ Accepted 27 May 2006
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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The well-documented growth stimulatory effects of HER1 and HER2 have driven the investigation of ErbB signaling in breast cancer. HER1 is expressed in nearly all human carcinomas, including breast cancers, while nearly 20 to 25% of breast cancers overexpress HER2 and/or exhibit gene amplification at the her2 locus (26, 37, 40, 48). Expression of either HER1 or HER2 in tumor specimens correlates with a shorter survival period, a higher grade of malignancy, and an overall poor prognosis (10, 12-14, 19, 24). Genetically engineered animal models of breast cancer confirm the role of HER1 and HER2 in driving proliferation of the mammary epithelium (reviewed in reference 39). Recent evidence suggests that increased expression of HER3 in breast cancers also correlates with a poor prognosis. HER3 is overexpressed in about 20% of all breast cancers and is frequently coexpressed with HER2 (2, 5, 10, 23, 31, 52, 53). This has generated the hypothesis that HER2/HER3 heterodimers may function to simultaneously drive cellular proliferation and survival in breast cancer cells.
In contrast, there is evidence that HER4 expression correlates with a more differentiated tumor grade, longer survival, and positive prognostic indicators, such as estrogen receptor expression (1, 17, 29, 38, 41, 44). Women whose breast tumors express HER4 exhibit the lowest risk of death due to cancer compared to women whose tumors express HER1, HER2, or HER3. During breast development, HER4 expression and activity (measured by tyrosine phosphorylation) are lowest during phases of epithelial cell proliferation and highest during phases of differentiation (35). Mammary glands from mice that lack HER4 activity, either by Cre-Lox technology, cardiac-specific transgene rescue of a HER4 knockout (with the mammary epithelium therefore remaining ErbB4 deficient), or mammary-specific expression of a dominant-negative HER4 mutant, have lactational defects due to an impaired program of differentiation (16, 20, 43). Decreased bioavailability of HB-EGF (a ligand for both HER1 and HER4) in the mammary epithelium causes a similar lactational deficiency (57). Taken together, the evidence suggests that HER4 signaling may impair cellular proliferation or promote differentiation of breast epithelium. In support of this hypothesis, it was reported that heregulin-dependent growth inhibition occurs in HER4-positive breast cancer-derived cell lines but not in HER4-negative cells (34).
We investigated the mechanism by which heregulin mediates growth inhibition in a HER4-dependent manner, using human breast cancer cell lines and BRCA1-deficient mouse mammary epithelial cells (MECs). The data demonstrate that heregulin induces a cell cycle delay in the early phases of mitosis and increases expression of the tumor suppressor protein BRCA1. Mitotic delay in response to HER4 requires the expression of BRCA1.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Quantitative reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR). Gene-specific 5'-3' oligonucleotides and intervening fluorescent dye-labeled probes for human genes encoding HER4, heregulin, BRCA1, keratin 18, and amphiregulin were designed using Primer Express software (ABI/Perkin-Elmer). The nonextendable probes were synthesized, labeled with 5' 6-carboxyfluorescein reporter and 3' 6-carboxytetramethylrhodamine quencher dyes (Integrated DNA Technologies), and purified by high-performance liquid chromatography. Real-time fluorescence quantitative PCR (qPCR) was performed with an ABI PRISM 7900 instrument (PE Bio). mRNA sequences for each gene were transcribed in vitro, using MEGAscript (Ambion), and used as positive controls and absolute quantitation standards for the assays. Amplification of twofold serial dilutions of RNA was used to construct standard linear curves that permitted accurate measurements of 200 to 90 million template copies. Total RNA was isolated from each cell line or from human tumor specimens by using an RNeasy kit (QIAGEN) and was treated with RNase-free DNase (Ambion). Total RNA (10 ng) isolated from each cell line was assayed. De-identified human tumor specimens were obtained from the Tissue Procurement Core Facility, UNC-Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center. The tumor identification numbers listed in Table 1 cannot be linked to clinical identifiers for this anonymous donor collection.
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Immunoprecipitation and Western analysis. Whole-cell extracts were prepared by washing cells with cold phosphate-buffered saline and lysing them in cold NLB (20 mM HEPES [pH 7.3], 50 mM sodium fluoride, 10% glycerol, 1% Triton X-100, 5 mM EDTA, 0.5 M NaCl, 1 mM Na3VO4, aprotinin [6 µg/ml], and leupeptin [10 µg/ml]). Receptor proteins were precipitated with a purchased antibody against HER2 (clone 9G6.10; Neomarkers, Inc.) and with antibodies against HER1 (V22), HER3 (1511), and HER4 (132), each produced in our lab and described previously (34). Immunocomplexes were pulled down with protein A/G- or protein A-agarose (Santa Cruz) for 3 h at 4°C, washed three times with NLB, and analyzed by immunoblotting using an antiphosphotyrosine antibody (PY20-HRP; Santa Cruz Biotechnologies), as previously described (34). Whole-cell lysates were analyzed directly by immunoblotting using antibodies against the following proteins: cyclin D1, cyclin A, cyclin B1, total cdc2, and BRCA, obtained from Santa Cruz Biotechnologies; HER4 (clone HFR) and STAT5A, obtained from Neomarkers Lab Vision; and phosphoserine pRb, phosphotyrosine 15 cdc2, phospho-serine 10 histone H3, phospho- and total JNK, phospho- and total p44/42, and phospho- and total p38, obtained from Cell Signaling.
Cell cycle analysis. Cells growing in serum-free medium supplemented with insulin and hydrocortisone were harvested by trypsinization, fixed in ice-cold methanol, labeled with 50 µg/ml of propidium iodide (Sigma-Aldrich), and treated with RNase A. A total of 10,000 stained nuclei per sample was analyzed in a FACSCalibur flow cytometer (Becton Dickinson). Where indicated, fixed cells were stained with anti-phospho-Ser 10 histone H3 antibody (Cell Signaling), washed, and incubated with a fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-conjugated anti-rabbit secondary antibody (Molecular Probes, Invitrogen) prior to fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) analysis. Where indicated, cells were labeled with bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU; 10 mg/ml) for 6 h prior to cell fixation. DNA in BrdU-labeled cells was denatured in 2 M HCl for 30 min, and then cells were stained with FITC-conjugated anti-BrdU antibody (Becton Dickinson) prior to analysis. DNA histograms were modeled using Modfit-LT software (Verity).
In vitro cdc2 kinase activity. Total cdc2 was immunoprecipitated from whole-cell extracts, washed in ice-cold phosphate-buffered saline, equilibrated in ice-cold kinase buffer (50 mM HEPES, pH 7.5, 10 mM MgCl2, 2.5 mM EGTA, 1 mM dithiothreitol, 0.1 mM NaF, 0.1 mM Na3VO4, 1 µM ATP) for 20 min, and resuspended in 20 µl of kinase buffer. cdc2 immunoprecipitates were assayed for kinase activity against 0.1 µg histone H1 (Roche Applied Science). Kinase reactions were performed in a final volume of 30 µl in the presence of 0.5 µM biotinylated ATP (Promega, Madison, WI) for 45 min at 30°C. The entire reaction volume was electrophoresed in an 8% polyacrylamide gel at 60 mA for 3 h at 4°C, transferred to a polyvinylidene difluoride membrane, and then analyzed by immunoblotting using a horseradish peroxidase-conjugated anti-biotin antibody (Santa Cruz Biotechnologies).
| RESULTS |
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Heregulin results in accumulation of HER4-positive cells in G2 or M phase. Cell growth is a balance between cell cycle progression and cell death. However, using in situ TUNEL analysis to detect apoptotic cells, we did not observe increased apoptosis in HRG-treated breast cancer cells at any time point observed, regardless of HER4 expression (Fig. 1B). As a positive control, 50 nM paclitaxel induced apoptotic cell death in each cell line examined. Next, we examined the effects of HRG on the cell cycle of SUM44 cells, using Western analysis to detect molecular markers of each cell cycle phase (Fig. 1C). HRG resulted in prolonged tyrosine phosphorylation of HER2, -3, and -4 in SUM44 cells over 5 days of treatment with HRG (Fig. 1C). SUM44 cells do not express HER1 at the RNA or protein level (34). Decreased expression of cyclin D1 was observed within 24 to 72 h of HRG treatment, suggesting a decreased percentage of cells in G1/S phase, a supposition reinforced by decreased phosphorylation of the retinoblastoma gene product, pRb. By 24 h, increased protein expression of cyclin B1 was observed in HRG-treated cells, and it continued to increase throughout the 5-day period. It is known that cyclin B1 expression begins to increase in late S phase and remains elevated until its degradation in mitosis (anaphase) (reviewed in reference 30). Therefore, our data suggest that HRG-dependent HER4 signaling may increase in the proportions of cells in either G2 or M phase.
We examined the effects of HRG on the expression of cyclin D and cyclin B in another HER4-positive cell line, BT-474. BT-474 cells differ from SUM44 cells in that BT-474 cells express HER1 and overexpress HER2. Vast overexpression of HER2 in BT-474 cells may explain the high basal levels of HER2 and HER3 tyrosine phosphorylation observed (Fig. 1D). HRG induced the tyrosine phosphorylation of HER4 and HER1 (presumably via heterodimerization) through 72 h. Similar to the case in SUM44 cells, the cyclin B level increased and remained elevated in HRG-treated BT-474 cells, while cyclin D expression decreased.
Cell cycle analysis of propidium iodide-stained cells demonstrated that HRG increased the proportion of 4N DNA (4N)-containing cells among SUM44 and BT-474 cells (Fig. 1E). However, HRG did not significantly alter the number of cells undergoing DNA synthesis, as determined by analyzing the percentage of cells that incorporated BrdU over a 6-hour labeling period (>10,000 cells; n = 3) (Fig. 1E). This confirms that HRG delays progression through G2 or M in these two HER4-positive cell lines. The response of BT-474 cells to HRG was particularly pronounced. HeLa cells stably transfected with HER4 also displayed an increase in the G2/M population compared to that in HeLa cells expressing the empty pLXSN vector. SkBR-3 and SUM102-pLXSN cells did not display any HRG-dependent alterations of the 4N-containing population of cells, consistent with the observation that HRG did not inhibit the growth of these HER4-negative cell lines (33). However, while HRG-mediated growth inhibition of SUM102-HER4 cells was observed (Fig. 1A), HRG increased the proportion of 2N- rather than 4N-containing cells in this particular cell line. Therefore, HRG-mediated growth inhibition in SUM102-HER4 cells occurs by a different mechanism than that in SUM44 or BT-474 cells.
Mitotic delay in response to heregulin. Because cells in the G2 phase of the cell cycle and cells undergoing mitosis each contain 4N DNA, we were unable to determine in which phase HRG-treated SUM44 and BT-474 cells were delayed. Therefore, we examined the activity of cdc2, a kinase that is acti vated at the G2/M transition. In this process, cdc2 interacts with its catalytic partner, cyclin B1, becomes dephosphor ylated at tyrosine 15, and becomes kinase active. Total cdc2 was immunoprecipitated from whole-cell extracts of SUM44 cells cultured in the presence or absence of HRG for 72 h. Immunoprecipitates were analyzed by Western analysis, revealing an HRG-dependent decrease in inhibitory Tyr15 phosphorylation of cdc2 and increased cyclin B coprecipitation with cdc2 (Fig. 2A). In contrast, SUM44 cells grown without HRG did not display any alterations in the level of cdc2 tyrosine 15 phosphorylation or in cdc2-cyclin B coprecipitation (Fig. 2A). Immunoprecipitates of cdc2 were used for an in vitro kinase assay, with a histone H1 peptide as the substrate. Although equal amounts of cdc2 were immunoprecipitated from SUM44 cells cultured with and without HRG at each time point, we found enhanced cdc2 kinase activity in cells treated with HRG for at least 24 h (Fig. 2B). Similarly, a quantitative, luciferase-based assay detecting in vitro cdc2 kinase activity demonstrated increased kinase activity in cdc2 immunoprecipitates from SUM44 cells treated for 48 h with HRG (Fig. 2C).
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Phosphorylation of histone H3 at serine 10 occurs specifically during mitosis. We observed a substantial increase in Ser10 phosphorylation of histone H3 in SUM44 cells treated with HRG for 48 h by FACS analysis of cells stained with an antibody against phospho-Ser 10 histone H3 (Fig. 2E). This suggests that HRG-treated SUM44 cells may accumulate in early mitosis.
Increased expression of BRCA1 in heregulin-treated cells requires HER4 but not HER2. We examined the expression of several regulators of progression through the G2 and M phases in HRG-treated cells. While the expression of many proteins was unaltered by HRG (CHK1, CHK2, p53, and AuroraA) (data not shown), we found increased expression of BRCA1 within 24 h in HRG-treated BT-474 cells; elevated BRCA1 expression was sustained through 96 h (Fig. 3A). Because BRCA1 mRNA levels are regulated in a cell cycle-dependent manner, we determined if changes in BRCA1 expression were secondary to the HRG-induced cell cycle changes or if they occurred independently of the cell cycle. We treated BT-474 cells with or without HRG in the presence of hydroxyurea (to synchronize cells in S phase) or olomoucine (to synchronize cells at the G2/M boundary). We found increased expression of BRCA1 in HRG-treated synchronized cells compared to that in synchronized cells that were not treated with HRG (Fig. 3B), suggesting that BRCA1 induction by HRG occurred independently of the cell cycle.
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Since HRG stimulates the tyrosine kinase activities of both HER2 and HER4, we next examined the requirement for HER2 in HRG-mediated induction of BRCA1. HER2 signaling was impaired by the elimination of HER2 cell surface expression. This was accomplished by sequestration of HER2 in the endoplasmic reticulum, using a single-chain anti-HER2 antibody containing an endoplasmic reticulum targeting sequence known as scFv-5R (34). This protein is referred to herein as 5R, and it was retrovirally expressed in SUM44 and SUM102-HER4 cells. The expression of 5R in each of these cells has been described previously (34), and it completely abolished HRG-dependent HER2 tyrosine phosphor ylation in both SUM44-5R cells and SUM102-HER4-5R cells (Fig. 3D) compared to that in SUM44-pBABE and SUM102-HER4-pBABE cells, respectively. The expression of 5R did not eliminate HRG-dependent tyrosine phosphor ylation of HER4 or HER3 in SUM44-5R or SUM102-HER4-5R cells (Fig. 3D). Previous reports demonstrated that SUM44-pBABE and SUM44-5R cells maintain HRG-dependent growth inhibition (34).
The expression of 5R and elimination of HER2 signaling did not block the HRG-dependent induction of BRCA1 mRNA in SUM44 cells (Fig. 3E). In contrast, SUM44-5R cells displayed a heightened induction of BRCA1 expression in response to HRG compared to SUM44-pBABE cells. Furthermore, in SUM102-HER4 cells, which had acquired an antiproliferative response to HRG by virtue of HER4 expression, sequestration of HER2 did not abolish HRG-mediated induction of BRCA1. Thus, HER2 is not necessary for the HRG-dependent increase in BRCA1 expression in cells with either endogenous (SUM44) or exogenously expressed (SUM102-HER4) HER4. Although increased BRCA1 induction was seen in HRG-treated SUM44- 5R cells compared to that in SUM44-pBABE cells, we did not see exaggerated HRG-mediated growth inhibition in SUM44-5R cells compared to that in SUM44-pBABE cells (data not shown), consistent with previous observations that HRG-mediated growth inhibition is similar in SUM44-5R and SUM44-pBABE cells (34).
We treated SUM44 cells with the pan-ErbB kinase inhibitor GW572016 (1 µM) to determine if ErbB kinase activity is required for the induction of BRCA1 mRNA in these HER4-positive, HER1-negative cells. In the absence of HRG, the expression of BRCA1 was similar in cells treated with or without GW572016 (Fig. 3F). While HRG induced BRCA1 transcript levels in the absence of GW572016, the HRG-mediated increase in BRCA1 was not observed in cells cultured in the presence of GW572016. Since HER2 expression is not required for HRG-inducible BRCA1 expression and since these cells do not express HER1, this suggests that HRG-induced HER4 kinase activity is required for BRCA1 induction.
Clinical correlation of HER4 and BRCA1 expression. To examine the relationship between HER4 and BRCA1 expression further, we measured mRNA expression of HER4 and BRCA1 in human breast cancer specimens. HER4 mRNA expression was determined using real-time quantitative RT-PCR, measuring the absolute number of HER4 transcripts in 10 ng of tumor total RNA (Table 1). We assayed 19 human breast cancer samples, finding that HER4 mRNA expression could be detected at various levels. We also measured the BRCA1 transcript number in each tumor, using quantitative real-time RT-PCR. Interestingly, a correlation was observed between the numbers of HER4 and BRCA1 transcripts (Fig. 4) (Pearson's correlation coefficient = 0.73). Transcripts encoding HRG were detected in some, but not all, of the breast tumor specimens (Table 1). As controls, we quantified the mRNAs encoding amphiregulin and keratin 18. Unlike that of BRCA1, expression of amphiregulin did not correlate positively or negatively with HER4 expression in these tumor samples, nor did gene expression of the epithelial structural protein keratin 18 (data not shown). The consent forms from these anonymous donors do not allow linkage to clinical data or clinical outcomes. Nonetheless, these results are consistent with our findings for breast cancer cell lines that HER4 enhances the expression of BRCA1 mRNA.
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Consistent with these observations, SP600125 impaired the HRG-dependent accumulation of BT-474 cells with 4N DNA (Fig. 5E). The HRG-induced increase in phospho-histone H3-positive cells was also impaired by SP600125 (Fig. 5F). These data suggest that JNK may be required for the HRG-mediated cell cycle delay at the G2/M transition.
Heregulin-mediated growth inhibition requires BRCA1. To examine the role of BRCA1 in HRG/HER4-mediated growth inhibition, we inhibited the expression of BRCA1 in BT-474 cells, using transient transfection of siRNA sequences targeting BRCA1. Cells were transfected and then cultured in serum-free medium in the presence or absence of HRG for 30 h. Cells transfected with BRCA1 siRNA sequences demonstrated a dose-dependent decrease in BRCA1 expression without altering HRG-induced tyrosine phosphorylation of HER4 (Fig. 6A). Western analysis demonstrated that the HRG-dependent dephosphorylation of cdc2 at tyrosine 15 was not observed in the absence of BRCA1, nor was the HRG-dependent increase in immunodetection of phosphorylation of histone H3 at Ser10 (Fig. 6B). In contrast, HRG-induced phosphorylation of JNK and p44/42 was unaffected by transfection with BRCA1 siRNA, demonstrating that the effects of BRCA1 inhibition are beyond the initial signaling events. These results further suggest that JNK activation in response to HRG is required upstream of BRCA1 induction, although our results do not rule out other functions of JNK that may lie downstream of BRCA1 induction.
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To further test the requirement for BRCA1 in HRG-mediated growth inhibition, we used a
genetic model of BRCA1 depletion. Mouse MECs were derived from a mouse
model in which exon 11 of the BRCA1 gene is flanked with LoxP sites
(36). Exon 11 was excised
by retroviral expression of Cre recombinase in culture, producing an
isogenic pair of MECs differing only with respect to BRCA1 expression,
referred to herein as BRCA1WT and
BRCA1
11/
11 MECs. We cultured these two
cell lines in serum-free medium in the presence or absence of HRG for 0
to 48 h, resulting in HRG-dependent tyrosine phosphorylation
of HER2, HER3, HER4, and, to a lesser extent, HER1 at 48 h
(Fig. 7A). We analyzed whole-cell extracts from BRCA1WT and
BRCA1
11/
11 MECs treated for 48 h
with HRG for phosphorylation of cdc2 at tyrosine 15 by Western
analysis. While equal amounts of cdc2 were detected regardless of HRG
treatment or BRCA1 status, we found an HRG-dependent decrease in cdc2
phosphorylation at Tyr15 in BRCA1WT MECs but not in
BRCA1
11/
11 MECs.
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11/
11 MECs. The absence of exon 11 of
BRCA1 did not affect other aspects of HER4 signaling, such as
HRG-dependent phosphorylation of p44/42. Western analysis of STAT5A
demonstrated equal loading in each lane of the gel. An
HRG-dependent increase in the G2/M population of
BRCA1WT cells compared to that of untreated cells
was observed (Fig. 7C). In
contrast, BRCA1
11/
11
cells did not have an increased 4N population in response to
48 h of incubation with HRG. The HRG-dependent increase in 4N
DNA was also observed in BRCA1WT cells examined 7 days after
HRG treatment, but not in BRCA1
11/
11 cells
(data not shown). Phospho-histone H3 was detected at higher levels in
HRG-treated BRCA1WT MECs than in untreated
BRCA1WT cells (Fig.
7D); however,
BRCA1
11/
11 cells did not display increased
phospho-histone H3 staining after being treated with HRG. These results
are consistent with the hypothesis that HRG induces a BRCA1-dependent
G2/M checkpoint. To determine if BRCA1 overexpression is sufficient to induce mitotic delay in the absence of HRG signaling, we generated BT-474 cell lines stably transfected with expression vectors expressing human BRCA1 or BRCA1S1423A, with the latter being deficient in a BRCA1-dependent G2/M checkpoint induced by ionizing radiation (53, 54). Selection-resistant clones were analyzed individually for expression of BRCA1, and more than five clones were pooled together for further analysis. While total HER4 expression was equal across all samples analyzed, Western analysis demonstrated that BRCA1 expression was increased in cells stably transfected with the BRCA1 or BRCA1S1423 expression construct (Fig. 8A). Although the cells were grown under serum-free conditions and not treated with HRG, cells expressing BRCA1 displayed an increase in the level of cyclin B expression compared to that in cells expressing BRCA1S1423A or cells transfected with the empty parental vector pcDNA3. Cells that overexpressed BRCA1 contained less phospho-Tyr 15 cdc2 than did controls. Finally, the percentage of phospho-histone H3-positive cells increased in BT474 cells overexpressing BRCA1 (Fig. 8B) but not in BT-474 cells overexpressing BRCA1S1423A, suggesting that BRCA1 overexpression may be sufficient to delay mitosis in the absence of HRG.
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| DISCUSSION |
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It is known that BRCA1 mRNA expression is regulated in a cell cycle-specific manner, with the lowest levels of BRCA1 expression detected during G1 and with increasing levels detected as cells transition through S phase and G2 (8, 12, 46). This is consistent with the proposed functions of BRCA1 in mediating DNA repair and checkpoint controls in the later phases of the cell cycle. Because BRCA1 expression is influenced by cell cycle dynamics, it is possible that the regulation of BRCA1 expression by HER4 activity might be an indirect reflection of the demonstrated HER4-induced cell cycle delay in late G2 or early M phase. However, our data with SUM102-HER4 cells demonstrated that HRG increased BRCA1 expression >4-fold (Fig. 3), while cells accumulated in G1 (Fig. 1). Furthermore, HRG treatment of synchronized BT-474 cells increased BRCA1 expression regardless of the cell cycle phase in which cells were synchronized. Therefore, it seems as if HER4 increases BRCA1 expression by mechanisms that are independent, at least in part, of cell cycle dynamics.
The mechanism by which HER4 triggers BRCA1 expression is currently unknown. Two likely possibilities are that HER4 stabilizes BRCA1 transcripts and that HER4 induces the transcription of BRCA1. Given that the intracellular domain of HER4 becomes liberated upon ligand binding to form a constitutively active tyrosine kinase that can translocate to the nucleus (25, 47), bind transcription factors such as p53, YAP, and STAT5A (4, 18, 28, 51), and perhaps exhibit transcriptional activity on its own (25), it is interesting to speculate that HER4 may contribute directly to the transcriptional activation of the BRCA1 gene. Alternatively, HER4 could activate gene transcription of BRCA1 through a conventional RTK signaling cascade. The observations that JNK signaling was triggered by HER4 activity and that JNK was required for HRG-induced BRCA1 induction (Fig. 5) suggest that classical RTK signaling pathways, or perhaps tyrosine kinase signaling by the liberated intracellular domain of HER4, may be involved in the regulation of BRCA1, as opposed to direct transcriptional activation by the HER4 intracellular domain. It is clearly possible that both signaling pathways (classical signaling and a novel action of the intracellular fragment of HER4) may simultaneously be involved in BRCA1 induction. Similarly, while Fig. 8 demonstrates that overexpression of BRCA1 produces the same G2/M delay as does HRG-induced HER4 activity, it is possible that maximal growth inhibition via HER4 involves both BRCA1 induction and other HER4-dependent signaling steps.
The observation that molecular signals initiated at or emanating from the cell surface could enhance expression of the BRCA1 gene may hold therapeutic potential, given the importance of BRCA1 as a tumor suppressor. In addition to the numerous inactivating mutations or deletions in the BRCA1 gene detected in hereditary breast cancer families (9, 22), decreased BRCA1 expression is often detected in sporadic cases of breast cancer (42). Our studies showed that human breast cancers expressing higher levels of HER4 mRNA generally displayed greater BRCA1 mRNA levels (Fig. 4), supporting the idea that HER4 expression may confer a better breast cancer prognosis, in part by virtue of elevated BRCA1 expression. Although our translational analysis examined only a small number of tumors (n = 19), we found repeated evidence that HER4-expressing breast cancer-derived cell lines had increased BRCA1 expression at both the protein and mRNA levels when treated with HRG (Fig. 3), while HER4 cell lines did not. HRG-dependent induction of BRCA1 mRNA required HER4 tyrosine kinase activation (Fig. 3F) but was independent of HER2 and, in fact, might be enhanced in the absence of HER2 (Fig. 3D and E). The introduction of HER4 into a HER4-negative breast cancer cell line conferred HRG-mediated BRCA1 induction. Because BRCA1 is a protein with numerous and diverse functions, including control of genomic stability, regulation of cell cycle checkpoints, DNA repair, and regulation of gene transcription, BRCA1 has many pathways by which it can carry out its critically important tumor suppressor activity (58). The interest in this bona fide human tumor suppressor has produced much data and many hypotheses to explain how it works; our findings add to this list the possibility that increased expression of BRCA1 in response to HER4 activation may confer greater control over cellular decisions regarding growth, particularly in the G2/M region of the cell cycle (see below).
Although the accumulation of cells with 4N DNA in response to HRG may have suggested a delay in G2 or at the G2/M transition, our data suggest that HER4-positive breast cancer cells are delayed in early mitosis. Mitotic delay was demonstrated by increased phosphorylation of histone H3, sustained cyclin B expression and cyclin B-cdc2 interaction, and sustained cdc2 activity, each of which initially becomes evident in early mitosis. As cells progress through mitosis and chromosomes align in anaphase, cyclin B dissociates from cdc2, cdc2 becomes inactivated, and cyclin B is targeted for degradation by the anaphase promoting complex. Because we observed sustained cyclin B-cdc2 association and cdc2 activity in response to HRG, it is likely that HRG resulted in a delay at a checkpoint in mitosis known as the spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC). Most of what is known with regard to the SAC has been studied in response to cellular damage rather than in response to a physiologic ligand such as HRG. We examined several SAC proteins in HRG-treated BT-474 cells but did not find any difference in the subcellular localization of BRCA1, cdc20, MAD2, or BubR1 (data not shown), nor did we observe any overall change in the phosphorylation status of these four proteins, as assessed by phosphoserine and phosphothreonine Western analysis of immunoprecipitates from cells treated with or without HRG. This does not rule out HRG-dependent posttranslational modifications of BRCA1. In fact, HRG-dependent BRCA1 phosphorylation has been reported previously (3). The data herein showing that BRCA1S1473A overexpression did not result in a G2/M delay may suggest that HRG-dependent modification by a serine-threonine kinase is involved.
The role of BRCA1 as a necessary intermediary in HRG- and HER4-dependent growth delay was demonstrated by independent means in assays with human breast cancer cell lines, using RNA interference (Fig. 6), and in genetic experiments using isogenic mouse mammary cell lines that either express BRCA1 or do not. HRG-dependent mitotic delay occurred in BRCA1+ cells and was absent in BRCA1 cells (Fig. 7). Although the precise role of BRCA1 in regulating mitotic progression in response to HER4 activation is still under investigation, it may relate to the ability of BRCA1 to activate the SAC, a checkpoint that ensures the accurate alignment and segregation of chromosomes and prevents cells with misaligned chromosomes from exiting mitosis. The requirement for BRCA1 in the SAC is highlighted by the remarkable number of aneuploid cells derived from mice carrying a homozygous targeted deletion of BRCA1 exon 11, the inability of these cells to inhibit the anaphase promoting complex in the presence of mitotic poisons, and their inability to arrest in mitosis (6, 7, 49, 50, 55).
Evidence from animal models demonstrates that HER4 activity is required for lactational differentiation of the mammary epithelium. Mammary glands from mice that lack HER4 activity as a result of multiple genetic strategies each have lactational defects due to an impaired program of differentiation (16, 20, 43), as measured by a decrease in the expression of milk proteins (ß-casein and whey acidic protein) and a decrease in activity of the transcription factor STAT5a, which is required for lactation. Interestingly, the role of BRCA1 in the differentiation of mammary epithelial cells has recently become apparent. BRCA1 expression is spatially and temporally regulated at each distinct stage of mammary gland development (21, 32). Also, mammary glands from mice with a conditional BRCA1 knockout displayed an impaired program of growth and differentiation (55). In cell culture models, the role of BRCA1 in morphological differentiation has been studied in three-dimensional cultures of MCF10A cells. Depletion of BRCA1 using RNA interference revealed that acinus formation, the formation of a single-layered, polarized epithelial structure surrounding a lumen, relied on BRCA1 expression and inversely correlated with increased growth of the MCF10A cells in the absence of BRCA1 expression (11). These studies support a hypothesis currently under investigation that the mechanism by which HER4 regulates mammary differentiation may rely on BRCA1 activity, similar to the BRCA1-dependent mechanism by which HER4 decreases the growth of breast cancer cells, as demonstrated herein.
In summary, our data suggest that HER4-mediated induction of BRCA1 expression may inhibit the growth of breast cancer cells by two mechanisms, by decreasing progression through mitosis and by enhancing cellular differentiation. These data warrant further investigations examining the potential synergy between HER4 and BRCA1 in mitotic delay with regard to tumor formation and progression.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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This work was supported in part by a grant from the Breast Cancer Research Foundation, by National Institute of General Medical Sciences grant GM00678, and by UNC Breast Cancer SPORE grant CA58223.
| FOOTNOTES |
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