Estrogen Receptor Inhibits c-Jun-dependent Stress-induced Cell Death by Binding and Modifying c-Jun Activity in Human Breast Cancer Cells

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Abstract

c-Jun, a major component of the AP-1 transcription factor, is either pro- or anti-apoptotic with cellular determinants unknown. Nuclear estrogen receptor (ER), on the other hand, regulates gene expression through both estrogen response elements and AP-1. Here we show that stress stimulates c-Jun phosphorylation and AP-1 activity in both ER+ and ER- human breast cancer cells and only induces cell death in ER- cells, indicating a determinant role of ER in c-Jun/AP-1 activity. The inhibitory effect of ER in stress-induced cell death is confirmed by ER transfection into ER- cells. Furthermore, inhibition of c-Jun activation by a dominant negative c-Jun blocks AP-1 activity in ER+ cells and attenuates stress-induced cell death but not AP-1 activity in ER- cells, suggesting that the c-Jun/AP-1 activity has distinct properties depending on ER status. ER was shown to inhibit stress-induced cell death through its physical interaction with c-Jun. This is because ER binds c-Jun in breast cancer cells, stress treatment further increases the ER-bound phosphorylated c-Jun, and the c-Jun binding-deficient ER mutant fails to protect stress-induced cell death. Together, our studies reveal a novel function of ER in stress response by modification of c-Jun activity.

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Qi, X., Borowicz, S., Pramanik, R., Schultz, R. M., Han, J., & Chen, G. (2004). Estrogen Receptor Inhibits c-Jun-dependent Stress-induced Cell Death by Binding and Modifying c-Jun Activity in Human Breast Cancer Cells. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 279(8), 6769–6777. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M311492200

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