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Submitted on September 19, 2007
Accepted on January 7, 2008
Departments of Medicine (Division of Hematology, Oncology, and Transplantation) and Pharmacology, University of Minnesota Cancer Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: Lange047{at}umn.edu.
Human progesterone receptors (PR) rapidly activate cytosolic signaling pathways, in addition to their classical function as ligand-activated transcription factors. Using ER+/PR-B+ T47D breast cancer cells, we probed the role of progestin-stimulated rapid PR signaling in the transcriptional regulation of target genes involved in breast cancer cell proliferation. EGFR was rapidly activated following a 10-min treatment with R5020. Progestin induced EGFR-, c-Src-, and MAPK-dependent phosphorylation of PR-B on the MAPK consensus site, Ser345. Ser345-phosphorylated PR-B receptors strongly associated with Sp1 transcription factors to regulate PR cell cycle (p21) and growth-promoting (EGFR) target genes whose promoters lack canonical PRE sequences. Inhibitors of EGFR, c-Src, or MAPK activities blocked PR tethering to Sp1 and progestin-stimulated S-phase entry. Mutant PR-B receptors defective for c-Src binding (mPro) were not phosphorylated on Ser345 in response to progestin and failed to interact with Sp1. Hormone-induced complexes containing Sp1 or wt PR-B, but not S345A or mPro PR-B, were recruited to Sp1 sites within the endogenous p21 promoter. Progestin-induced S-phase entry was attenuated in T47D cells containing wt PR-B and treated with EGFR, c-Src, or MEK inhibitors, or in T47D cells stably expressing mPro or mDBD PR-B. In sum, rapid progestin-activated PR signaling leads to PR Ser345 phosphorylation and PR tethering to Sp1, and is critical for progestin-stimulated regulation of Sp1 target genes and breast cancer cell proliferation. These data demonstrate the therapeutic potential for PR-targeted breast cancer treatment by exploiting multiple nodes along the PR signaling pathway, including PR-B, EGFR, c-Src, MAPK, or Sp1.
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