Affiliation:
1. Department of Pharmacology, New York University School of Medicine, New York, New York 10016
2. Division of Neuroscience, Oregon National Primate Research Center/Oregon Health and Science University, Beaverton, Oregon 97006
Abstract
ABSTRACTWe previously reported that expression of NRIF3 (nuclearreceptorinteractingfactor-3) rapidly and selectively leads to apoptosis of breast cancer cells. DIF-1 (also known asinterferonregulatoryfactor-2bindingprotein 2 [IRF-2BP2]), the cellular target of NRIF3, was identified as a transcriptional repressor, and DIF-1 knockdown leads to apoptosis of breast cancer cells but not other cell types. Here, we identify IRF-2BP1 and EAP1 (enhancedatpuberty 1) as important components of the DIF-1 complex mediating both complex stability and transcriptional repression. This interaction of DIF-1, IRF-2BP1, and EAP1 occurs through the conserved C4 zinc fingers of these proteins. Microarray studies were carried out in breast cancer cell lines engineered to conditionally and rapidly increase the levels of thedeathdomain (DD1) region of NRIF3. The DIF-1 complex was found to repress FASTKD2, a putative proapoptotic gene, in breast cancer cells and to bind to the FASTKD2 gene by chromatin immunoprecipitation. FASTKD2 knockdown prevents apoptosis of breast cancer cells from NRIF3 expression or DIF-1 knockdown, while expression of FASTKD2 leads to apoptosis of both breast and nonbreast cancer cells. Thus, regulation of FASTKD2 by NRIF3 and the DIF-1 complex acts as a novel death switch that selectively modulates apoptosis in breast cancer.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology
Cited by
56 articles.
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