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Breast cancer-amplified sequence 3, a target of metastasis-associated protein 1, contributes to tamoxifen resistance in premenopausal patients with breast cancer

Author

  • Anupama E Gururaj
  • Caroline Wigerup
  • Göran Landberg
  • Rakesh Kumar

Summary, in English

Lysine acetylation occurs in many protein targets, including core histones, transcription factors, and other proteins. Metastasis-associated protein 1 (MTA1) is implicated in the progression and metastasis of various epithelial tumors. Because MTA1 functions as a transcriptional coregulator, much of its role in cancer promoting processes are likely to involve its ability to regulate the transcription of downstream target genes that encode effector proteins. We recently showed that MTA1 could be post-translationally modified by acetylation, which modulates its function as a coregulator molecule. We also defined a chromatin target of MTA1, namely, breast cancer-amplified sequence 3 (BCAS3), in the context of which MTA1 behaves as a transcriptional coactivator in breast cancer cells. Because the phenotypic effect of BCAS3 overexpression in tumors has not been defined, we investigated the consequence of increased expression of BCAS3 in human breast tumors. Here, we report that BCAS3 overexpression in hormone receptor-positive premenopausal breast cancer seemed to be associated with impaired responses to tamoxifen. Our findings have implications for endocrine therapy.

Department/s

Publishing year

2006

Language

English

Pages

1407-1410

Publication/Series

Cell Cycle

Volume

5

Issue

13

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Landes Bioscience

Topic

  • Cell Biology

Keywords

  • endocrine
  • estrogen receptor
  • coactivator
  • acetylation
  • MTA1
  • BCAS3
  • resistance
  • breast cancer

Status

Published

Research group

  • Pathology, Malmö

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1551-4005