Oncotarget

Research Papers:

ERβ regulation of NF-κB activation in prostate cancer is mediated by HIF-1

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Oncotarget. 2015; 6:40247-40254. https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.5377

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Paul Mak _, Jiarong Li, Sanjoy Samanta and Arthur M. Mercurio

Abstract

Paul Mak1, Jiarong Li1, Sanjoy Samanta1, Arthur M. Mercurio1

1Department of Molecular, Cell and Cancer Biology, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, MA 01605, USA

Correspondence to:

Arthur M. Mercurio, e-mail: arthur.mercurio@umassmed.edu

Keywords: estrogen receptor beta, HIF-1, NFkB, prostate

Received: June 30, 2015     Accepted: September 21, 2015     Published: October 02, 2015

ABSTRACT

We examined the regulation of NF-κB in prostate cancer by estrogen receptor β (ERβ) based on the inverse correlation between p65 and ERβ expression that exists in prostate carcinomas and reports that ERβ can inhibit NF-κB activation, although the mechanism is not known. We demonstrate that ERβ functions as a gate-keeper for NF-κB p65 signaling by repressing its expression and nuclear translocation. ERβ regulation of NF-κB signaling is mediated by HIF-1. Loss of ERβ or hypoxia stabilizes HIF-1α, which we found to be a direct driver of IKKβ transcription through a hypoxia response element present in the promoter of the IKKβ gene. The increase of IKKβ expression in ERβ-ablated cells correlates with an increase in phospho-IκBα and concomitant p65 nuclear translocation. An inverse correlation between the expression of ERβ and IKKβ/p65 was also observed in the prostates of ERβ knockout (BERKO) mice, Gleason grade 5 prostate tumors and analysis of prostate cancer databases. These findings provide a novel mechanism for how ERβ prevents NF-κB activation and raise the exciting possibility that loss of ERβ expression is linked to chronic inflammation in the prostate, which contributes to the development of high-grade prostate cancer.



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