4.8 Article

Protein lysate microarray analysis to identify microRNAs regulating estrogen receptor signaling in breast cancer cell lines

Journal

ONCOGENE
Volume 28, Issue 44, Pages 3926-3936

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/onc.2009.241

Keywords

breast cancer; estrogen receptor; miRNA; protein lysate microarray; screening

Funding

  1. Academy of Finland Centre of Excellence on Translational Genome-Scale Biology
  2. Academy of Finland postdoctoral researcher's grant
  3. Sigrid Juselius Foundation
  4. Finnish Cancer Society
  5. EU-FP6 [LSHB-CT-2004-005276, LSHG-CT-2004-5033155]
  6. EU-FP7 [HEALTH-F2-2007-201438]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Predicting the impact of microRNAs (miRNAs) on target proteins is challenging because of their different regulatory effects at the transcriptional and translational levels. In this study, we applied a novel protein lysate microarray (LMA) technology to systematically monitor for target protein levels after high-throughput transfections of 319 pre-miRs into breast cancer cells. We identified 21 miRNAs that downregulated the estrogen receptor-alpha (ER alpha), as validated by western blotting and quantitative real time-PCR, and by demonstrating the inhibition of estrogen-stimulated cell growth. Five potent ER alpha-regulating miRNAs, miR-18a, miR-18b, miR-193b, miR-206 and miR-302c, were confirmed to directly target ER alpha in 3'-untranslated region reporter assays. The gene expression signature that they repressed highly overlapped with that of a small interfering RNA against ER alpha, and across all the signatures tested, was most closely associated with the repression of known estrogen-induced genes. Furthermore, miR-18a and miR-18b showed higher levels of expression in ER alpha-negative as compared with ER alpha-positive clinical tumors. In summary, we present systematic and direct functional evidence of miRNAs inhibiting ER alpha signaling in breast cancer, and demonstrate the high-throughput LMA technology as a novel, powerful technique in determining the relative impact of various miRNAs on key target proteins and associated cellular processes and pathways. Oncogene (2009) 28, 3926-3936; doi:10.1038/onc.2009.241; published online 17 August 2009

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available