In the small intestine, epithelial cells are derived from stem cells in the crypts, migrate up the villus as they differentiate and are ultimately shed from the villus tips. This process of proliferation and shedding is tightly regulated to maintain the intestinal architecture and tissue homeostasis. Apoptosis regulates both the number of stem cells in the crypts as well as the sloughing of cells from the villus tips. Previously, we have shown that villin, an epithelial cell-specific actin-binding protein functions as an anti-apoptotic protein in the gastrointestinal epithelium. The expression of villin is highest in the apoptosis-resistant villus cells and lowest in the apoptosis-sensitive crypts. In this study we report that villin is cleaved in the intestinal mucosa to generate a pro-apoptotic fragment that is spatially restricted to the villus tips. This cleaved villin fragment severs actin in an unregulated fashion to initiate the extrusion and subsequent apoptosis of effete cells from the villus tips. Using villin knockout mice, we validate the physiological role of villin in apoptosis and cell extrusion from the gastrointestinal epithelium. Our study also highlights the potential role of villin’s pro-apoptotic function in the pathogenesis of inflammatory bowel disease, ischemia-reperfusion injury, enteroinvasive bacterial and parasitic infections.
Nuclear villin regulates the expression and activity of Slug, a key transcriptional regulator of epithelial–mesenchymal transition, by directly interacting with its transcriptional corepressor, ZBRK1. Villin accumulates in the nucleus during wound repair, and altering the cellular microenvironment by hypoxia increases the nuclear villin.
Head and neck squamous carcinomas (HNSCC) present as dense epithelioid three-dimensional (3D) tumor nests that can mediate signals via the human epidermal growth factor receptor (ErbB) tyrosine kinase family to promote intratumoral survival and growth. We examined the role of the tumor microenvironment on ErbB receptor family expression and found that the status of intercellular organization altered the receptor profile. We showed that HNSCC cells forced into tumor island-like 3D aggregates strongly upregulated ErbB3 at the level of transcription. Not only was the elevated ErbB3 responsive to HRG-β1-induced enhanced signaling mechanism, but also analysis by siRNA-knockdown and kinase inhibitor strategies revealed that the ErbB3/AKT signaling pathway was sufficient to enhance tumor cell survival and growth potential. Elevated ErbB3 expression in the high-density 3D culture system was strongly associated with hypoxia-induced HIF-1α. Hypoxia-regulated ErbB3 expression was mediated by the HIF-1α-binding consensus sequence in the ErbB3 proximal promoter. The findings show that the local 3D tumor microenvironment can trigger reprograming and switching of ErbB family members and thereby influence ErbB3-driven tumor growth.
Estrogen receptor α (ERα)-positive breast cancers tend to develop resistance to both endocrine therapy and chemotherapy. Despite recent progress in defining molecular pathways that confer endocrine resistance, the mechanisms that regulate chemotherapy response in luminal tumors remain largely elusive. Luminal tumors often express wild-type p53 that is a major determinant of the cellular DNA damage response. Similar to p53, the second ER subtype, ERβ, has been reported to inhibit breast tumorigenesis by acting alone or in collaboration with p53. However, a synergistic mechanism of action has not been described. Here, we suggest that ERβ relies on p53 to elicit its tumor repressive actions in ERα-positive breast cancer cells. Upregulation of ERβ and treatment with ERβ agonists potentiates the tumor suppressor function of p53 resulting in decreased survival. This effect requires molecular interaction between the two proteins that disrupts the inhibitory action of ERα on p53 leading to increased transcriptional activity of p53. In addition, we show that the same interaction alters the chemosensitivity of endocrine-resistant cells including their response to tamoxifen therapy. Our results suggest a collaboration of ERβ and p53 tumor suppressor activity in breast cancer cells that indicates the importance of ligand-regulated ERβ as a tool to target p53 activity and improve the clinical management of resistant disease.
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