Bommer Guido T, Jäger Claudia, Dürr Eva-Maria, Baehs Sebastian, Eichhorst Sören T, Brabletz Thomas, Hu Gang, Fröhlich Thomas, Arnold Georg, Kress Dagmar C, Göke Burkhard, Fearon Eric R, Kolligs Frank T
Department of Medicine II, University of Munich, 81377 Munich, Germany.
J Biol Chem. 2005 Mar 4;280(9):7962-75. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M412593200. Epub 2004 Nov 24.
Neoplastic progression in human tissues appears to be paralleled by a series of genetic and epigenetic alterations. In human colorectal cancers, defect Wnt/beta-catenin/T-cell factor and RAS/RAF signaling pathways have a major contributing role in tumor initiation and progression. To date, much of the research on the consequences of beta-catenin activation has been focused on genes whose expression is believed to be activated by beta-catenin-associated T-cell factor-dependent transcription. Little is known about genes whose expression may be down-regulated secondary to beta-catenin activation. Using a subtractive suppression hybridization approach, we identified a gene with markedly decreased expression in rat RK3E epithelial cells neoplastically transformed by beta-catenin. Because expression of this gene was also down-regulated in RK3E transformed by several other oncogenes, the gene was named DRO1 for "down-regulated by oncogenes 1." Compared with corresponding normal tissues, DRO1 expression was found to be very reduced in colon and pancreatic cancer cell lines as well as in most colorectal cancer specimens. The predicted DRO1 protein contains three repetitive elements with significant similarity to the carboxyl-terminal regions of the predicted proteins from DRS/SRPX/ETX1 and SRPUL genes, suggesting the existence of a new protein family. Ectopic expression of DRO1 in neoplastically transformed RK3E or colorectal and pancreatic cancer cell lines lacking endogenous DRO1 expression resulted in substantial inhibition of growth properties. DRO1 was found to suppress anchorage independent growth and to sensitize cells to anoikis and CD95-induced apoptosis. Our findings suggest that inhibition of DRO1 expression may be an important event in the development of colorectal and pancreatic cancers.
人类组织中的肿瘤进展似乎伴随着一系列基因和表观遗传改变。在人类结直肠癌中,缺陷的Wnt/β-连环蛋白/T细胞因子和RAS/RAF信号通路在肿瘤起始和进展中起主要作用。迄今为止,关于β-连环蛋白激活后果的许多研究都集中在那些据信其表达由β-连环蛋白相关的T细胞因子依赖性转录激活的基因上。对于那些可能因β-连环蛋白激活而表达下调的基因知之甚少。我们采用消减抑制杂交方法,在经β-连环蛋白发生肿瘤转化的大鼠RK3E上皮细胞中鉴定出一个表达明显降低的基因。由于该基因在经其他几种癌基因转化的RK3E细胞中表达也下调,因此该基因被命名为DRO1,即“被癌基因下调1”。与相应的正常组织相比,发现DRO1在结肠和胰腺癌细胞系以及大多数结直肠癌标本中的表达非常降低。预测的DRO1蛋白包含三个重复元件,与DRS/SRPX/ETX1和SRPUL基因预测蛋白的羧基末端区域具有显著相似性,提示存在一个新的蛋白家族。在缺乏内源性DRO1表达的经肿瘤转化的RK3E或结直肠癌和胰腺癌细胞系中异位表达DRO1,导致生长特性受到显著抑制。发现DRO1可抑制锚定非依赖性生长,并使细胞对失巢凋亡和CD95诱导的凋亡敏感。我们的研究结果表明,DRO1表达的抑制可能是结直肠癌和胰腺癌发生过程中的一个重要事件。