CONTROL OF EGFR GENE EXPRESSION IN HUMAN BREAST CANCER
Project Number5R01CA055677-02
Contact PI/Project LeaderCHRYSOGELOS, SUSAN A
Awardee OrganizationGEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY
Description
Abstract Text
The progression of human breast cancer from hormone-responsiveness to a
more aggressive, estrogen-independent state may involve the development
of the ability to constitutively produce growth factors or their
receptors which permit a tumor to bypass the need for estrogen.
Clinically, this more malignant phenotype is often characterized by the
loss of estrogen receptor (ER) and the acquisition of epidermal growth
factor receptor (EGFR). EGFR is an indicator of poor response to
endocrine therapy, and its presence overrides the beneficial effects of
ER in coexpressors. Because of its prognostic value and the strong
transcriptional component to its expression, this project focuses on the
regulatory mechanisms by which transcription of the EGFR gene is
controlled in human breast cancer. Preliminary studies indicate that
there are structural differences (as revealed by DNase I sensitivity) in
the promoter, first exon, and intron I of the EGFR gene which correlate
with its expression in human breast cancer cell lines. Specifically, a
site around the exon I/intron I boundary disappears in high expressors,
while a group of sites in intron I appears in these cell lines.
Additionally, a region in the promoter shows .changes in both the level
of sensitivity and the extent of the area which is susceptible. These
regions will be further analyzed to precisely localize sites of
protein-DNA interaction whose presence or absence are associated with
EGFR expression. This will be done using human breast cancer cell lines
(both ER+ and ER-) with a wide range of EGFR expression. Protein binding
sites will be mapped sequentially by native genomic blotting gel
retardation assays, and in vitro footprinting. In this way, the in vivo
significance of the protein binding sites will be established first,
before pinpointing them at single-nucleotide resolution. This strategy
will also be used to identify the cis-regulatory elements involved in the
induction of EGFR by estrogen in hormone-dependent cell lines. The
functionality of the various sequence elements identified by these
methods as protein binding sites will be assessed in transient
transfection assays using CAT expression vectors transfected into human
breast cancer cell lines expressing high and low levels of EGFR. In the
long term, sequences which are shown to be involved in the regulation of
EGFR levels will then be used to isolate the protein factors responsible
for controlling EGFR expression. It is hoped that by understanding these
regulatory mechanisms and the role they play in the evolution of more
aggressive forms of human breast cancer, new opportunities will arise for
developing effective treatments against the disease.
No Sub Projects information available for 5R01CA055677-02
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