Publication | Open Access
CARM1 Is an Important Determinant of ERα-Dependent Breast Cancer Cell Differentiation and Proliferation in Breast Cancer Cells
88
Citations
42
References
2011
Year
Breast OncologyBreast CancersCancer BiologyEpigeneticsMammary Gland DevelopmentTumor BiologyTranscriptional RegulationCancer Cell BiologyEstrogen Receptor αCancer MetabolismRadiation OncologyImportant DeterminantCancer ResearchMedicineBreast Cancer CellsCancer GeneticsGene ExpressionEpigenetic RegulationCell BiologyEndocrine-related CancerNatural SciencesCancer GenomicsBreast CancerCarm1 ExpressionSystems BiologyOncologyCell Development
Breast cancers with estrogen receptor α (ERα) expression are often more differentiated histologically than ERα-negative tumors, but the reasons for this difference are poorly understood. One possible explanation is that transcriptional cofactors associated with ERα determine the expression of genes which promote a more differentiated phenotype. In this study, we identify one such cofactor as coactivator-associated arginine methyltransferase 1 (CARM1), a unique coactivator of ERα that can simultaneously block cell proliferation and induce differentiation through global regulation of ERα-regulated genes. CARM1 was evidenced as an ERα coactivator in cell-based assays, gene expression microarrays, and mouse xenograft models. In human breast tumors, CARM1 expression positively correlated with ERα levels in ER-positive tumors but was inversely correlated with tumor grade. Our findings suggest that coexpression of CARM1 and ERα may provide a better biomarker of well-differentiated breast cancer. Furthermore, our findings define an important functional role of this histone arginine methyltransferase in reprogramming ERα-regulated cellular processes, implicating CARM1 as a putative epigenetic target in ER-positive breast cancers.
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