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- Title
Tumor cell growth inhibition by caveolin re-expression in human breast cancer cells.
- Authors
Lee, Sam W; Reimer, Corinne L; Oh, Phil; Campbell, Doreen B; Schnitzer, Jan E
- Abstract
Cancer development is a multistage process that results from the step-wise acquisition of somatic alterations in diverse genes. Recent studies indicate that caveolin-1 expression correlates with the level of oncogenic transformation in NIH3T3 cells, suggesting that caveolin in caveolae may regulate normal cell proliferation. In order to better understand potential functions of caveolin-1 in cancer development, we have studied expression levels of caveolin-1 in human breast cancer cells, and have found that caveolin expression is significantly reduced in human breast cancer cells compared with their normal mammary epithelial counterparts. When the caveolin cDNA linked to the CMV promoter is transfected into human mammary cancer cells having no detectable endogenous caveolin, overexpression of caveolin-1 resulted in substantial growth inhibition, as seen by the 50% decrease in growth rate and by ∼l5-fold reduction in colony formation in soft agar. In addition, characterization of caveolin-1 expression during cell cycle progression indicates that expression of α-caveolin-1 is regulated during cell cycle. Furthermore p53-deficient cells showed a loss in caveolin expression. In summary, the overall expression patterns, its ability to inhibit tumor growth in culture, its regulation during the cell cycle, and the loss of expression in p53-deficient cells all are consistent with an important growth regulating function for caveolin-1 in normal human mammary cells, that needs to be repressed in oncogenic transformation and tumor cell growth.
- Subjects
BREAST cancer; CELL proliferation; CELL cycle
- Publication
Oncogene, 1998, Vol 16, Issue 11, p1391
- ISSN
0950-9232
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1038/sj.onc.1201661