4.6 Review

FOXA1: A Pioneer of Nuclear Receptor Action in Breast Cancer

期刊

CANCERS
卷 13, 期 20, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cancers13205205

关键词

FOXA1; nuclear receptors; estrogen receptor; progesterone receptor; androgen receptor; glucocorticoid receptor; endocrine resistance; breast cancer

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资金

  1. Department of Defense [W81XWH-18-1-0455]
  2. NIH
  3. [R01CA206505]

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The review discusses the role of FOXA1 in regulating gene activity, cell biology, and the response of breast cancers to hormone therapies. It also highlights the potential for future studies to explore the roles of FOXA1 independent of its regulation of nuclear receptors.
Simple Summary: Factors such as estrogen, progesterone, and androgen receptors, also known as nuclear receptors, are abundantly expressed in the majority of breast cancers where they serve as critical regulators of tumor growth and metastatic disease. The ability of these receptors to regulate breast cancer cell functions depends on their interactions with DNA to control the activity of a large number of genes. FOXA1 is a protein that is highly expressed in a majority of breast cancers and its binding to DNA helps define which genes are regulated by nuclear receptors. This review discusses the current literature on how FOXA1 controls gene activity, cell biology, and the response of breast cancers to hormone therapies. It also offers areas of future study to identify roles of FOXA1 in controlling breast cancers that is independent of its regulation of nuclear receptors.The pioneering function of FOXA1 establishes estrogen-responsive transcriptomes in luminal breast cancer. Dysregulated FOXA1 chromatin occupancy through focal amplification, mutation, or cofactor recruitment modulates estrogen receptor (ER) transcriptional programs and drives endocrine-resistant disease. However, ER is not the sole nuclear receptor (NR) expressed in breast cancers, nor is it the only NR for which FOXA1 serves as a licensing factor. Receptors for androgens, glucocorticoids, and progesterone are also found in the majority of breast cancers, and their functions are also impacted by FOXA1. These NRs interface with ER transcriptional programs and, depending on their activation level, can reprogram FOXA1-ER cistromes. Thus, NR interplay contributes to endocrine therapy response and resistance and may provide a vulnerability for future therapeutic benefit in patients. Herein, we review what is known regarding FOXA1 regulation of NR function in breast cancer in the context of cell identity, endocrine resistance, and NR crosstalk in breast cancer progression and treatment.

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