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Structural and Molecular Mechanisms of Cytokine-Mediated Endocrine Resistance in Human Breast Cancer Cells.

Citation
Stender, J. D., et al. “Structural And Molecular Mechanisms Of Cytokine-Mediated Endocrine Resistance In Human Breast Cancer Cells.”. Molecular Cell, pp. 1122-1135.e5.
Center UCSD-UCLA
Author Joshua D Stender, Jerome C Nwachukwu, Irida Kastrati, Yohan Kim, Tobias Strid, Maayan Yakir, Sathish Srinivasan, Jason Nowak, Tina Izard, Erumbi S Rangarajan, Kathryn E Carlson, John A Katzenellenbogen, Xin-Qiu Yao, Barry J Grant, Hon S Leong, Chin-Yo Lin, Jonna Frasor, Kendall W Nettles, Christopher K Glass
Keywords breast cancer, crystallography, cytokines, drug resistance, estrogen receptor, inflammation, tamoxifen
Abstract

Human breast cancers that exhibit high proportions of immune cells and elevated levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines predict poor prognosis. Here, we demonstrate that treatment of human MCF-7 breast cancer cells with pro-inflammatory cytokines results in ERα-dependent activation of gene expression and proliferation, in the absence of ligand or presence of 4OH-tamoxifen (TOT). Cytokine activation of ERα and endocrine resistance is dependent on phosphorylation of ERα at S305 in the hinge domain. Phosphorylation of S305 by IKKβ establishes an ERα cistrome that substantially overlaps with the estradiol (E2)-dependent ERα cistrome. Structural analyses suggest that S305-P forms a charge-linked bridge with the C-terminal F domain of ERα that enables inter-domain communication and constitutive activity from the N-terminal coactivator-binding site, revealing the structural basis of endocrine resistance. ERα therefore functions as a transcriptional effector of cytokine-induced IKKβ signaling, suggesting a mechanism through which the tumor microenvironment controls tumor progression and endocrine resistance.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
Molecular cell
Volume
65
Issue
6
Number of Pages
1122-1135.e5
Date Published
03/2017
ISSN Number
1097-4164
DOI
10.1016/j.molcel.2017.02.008
Alternate Journal
Mol. Cell
PMID
28306507
PMCID
PMC5546241
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