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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Stimulation of prostate cancer cellular proliferation and invasion by the androgen receptor co-activator ARA70.

ARA70 was first identified as a gene fused to the ret oncogene in thyroid carcinoma and subsequently as a co-activator for androgen receptor (AR). Two isoforms of ARA70 have been identified: a 70-kDa version called ARA70 alpha and an internally spliced 35-kDa variant termed ARA70 beta. We have previously reported that ARA70 alpha expression is reduced in prostate cancer, and its overexpression inhibits proliferation of LNCaP prostate cancer cells. However, the function of the ARA70 beta isoform in prostate cancer is not understood. In this report we examined the effects of ARA70 beta on AR transcriptional regulation as well as prostate cancer cellular proliferation and invasion. Although both ARA70 alpha and ARA70 beta functioned as transcriptional co-activators of AR in cell-based reporter assays, ARA70 beta overexpression, in contrast to ARA70 alpha, promoted prostate cancer cellular proliferation and invasion through Matrigel. Interestingly, genome-wide expression profiling of cells expressing ARA70 beta revealed an increase in the expression of genes involved in the control of cell division and adhesion, compatible with a role for ARA70 beta in proliferation and invasion. Consistent with its function in promoting cell growth and invasion, ARA70 beta expression was increased in prostate cancer. Our findings implicate ARA70 beta as a regulator of tumor cell growth and metastasis by affecting gene expression.[1]

References

  1. Stimulation of prostate cancer cellular proliferation and invasion by the androgen receptor co-activator ARA70. Peng, Y., Li, C.X., Chen, F., Wang, Z., Ligr, M., Melamed, J., Wei, J., Gerald, W., Pagano, M., Garabedian, M.J., Lee, P. Am. J. Pathol. (2008) [Pubmed]
 
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