Differential regulation of PTEN expression by androgen receptor in prostate and breast cancers
Prostate cancer and breast cancer are the most common malignancies in the western world. Androgen receptor (AR) and PTEN both have been well documented to have important roles in prostate carcinogenesis. In contrast, AR and PTEN in breast carcinogenesis have not been well studied. Furthermore, the c...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Oncogene 2011-10, Vol.30 (42), p.4327-4338 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Prostate cancer and breast cancer are the most common malignancies in the western world. Androgen receptor (AR) and
PTEN
both have been well documented to have important roles in prostate carcinogenesis. In contrast, AR and PTEN in breast carcinogenesis have not been well studied. Furthermore, the crosstalk and connection between those two pathways remain unclear. Increased AR expression in prostate cancers, combined with decreased PTEN expression, portends a poor clinical outcome. Paradoxically, both high AR and high PTEN levels, detected by immunohistochemistry, in primary breast carcinomas have been associated with better disease-free survival. Here, we performed
in silico
analysis of publicly available microarray data sets from prostate or breast carcinomas. We found an inverse correlation between
AR
and
PTEN
transcript expression in prostate cancer tissues in contrast to the positive correlation in breast cancer. These data led us to hypothesize that AR may directly affect
PTEN
transcriptional regulation in prostate and breast cancer cells. Here, we show for the first time that AR inhibits
PTEN
transcription in prostate cancer cells, whereas AR upregulates
PTEN
transcription in breast cancer cells, which mechanistically explains both the immunohistochemical PTEN–AR expressional data noted in clinical trials and in our
in silico
analysis of the transcriptomes of breast and prostate cancers. In addition, we have fine-mapped the AR-binding motif within the
PTEN
promoter. Here we show that, in patients with Cowden syndrome, an inherited cancer syndrome caused by germline mutations scattered throughout
PTEN
, point variants affecting the 3′ end of the AR-binding motif result in abrogation of androgen-mediated transcriptional regulation of
PTEN
expression. We may speculate that the differential AR effect on
PTEN
may begin to explain organ-specific and perhaps sex-specific neoplasia predisposition in Cowden syndrome, as well as why only a fraction of women with germline
PTEN
mutations develop breast cancer, depending on the androgen steroid milieu and levels. |
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ISSN: | 0950-9232 1476-5594 |
DOI: | 10.1038/onc.2011.144 |