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Home › Dataset Library › Chromatin immunoprecipitation profiling of human breast cancer cell lines and tissues to identify novel estrogen receptor-{alpha} binding...

Dataset: Chromatin immunoprecipitation profiling of human breast cancer cell lines and tissues to identify novel estrogen receptor-{alpha} binding sites and estradiol target genes

Estrogen receptor-{alpha} (ER{alpha}) and its ligand estradiol play critical roles in breast cancer growth and are important therapeutic...

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Estrogen receptor-{alpha} (ER{alpha}) and its ligand estradiol play critical roles in breast cancer growth and are important therapeutic targets for this disease. Using chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP)-on-chip, ligand-bound ER{alpha} was recently found to function as a master transcriptional regulator via binding to many cis-acting sites genome-wide. Here, we used an alternative technology (ChIP cloning) and identified 94 ER{alpha} target loci in breast cancer cells. The ER{alpha}-binding sites contained both classic estrogen response elements and nonclassic binding sequences, showed specific transcriptional activity in reporter gene assay, and interacted with the key transcriptional regulators, including RNA polymerase II and nuclear receptor coactivator-3. The great majority of the binding sites were located in either introns or far distant to coding regions of genes. Forty-three percent of the genes that lie within 50 kb to an ER{alpha}-binding site were regulated by estradiol. Most of these genes are novel estradiol targets encoding receptors, signaling messengers, and ion binders/transporters. mRNA profiling in estradiol-treated breast cancer cell lines and tissues revealed that these genes are highly ER{alpha} responsive both in vitro and in vivo. Among estradiol-induced genes, Wnt11 was found to increase cell survival by significantly reducing apoptosis in breast cancer cells. Taken together, we showed novel genomic binding sites of ER{alpha} that regulate a novel set of genes in response to estradiol in breast cancer. Our findings suggest that at least a subset of these genes, including Wnt11, may play important in vivo and in vitro biological roles in breast cancer. Experiment Overall Design: This Series currently contains the gene expression data accompanying Zhihong Lin et al. Cancer Research 67,5017-5024(2007). MCF7 cells were treated with vehicle or E2 at a concentration of 10E-9 mol/L for 3 and 6 h. All experiments were performed in triplicate.

Species:
human

Samples:
9

Source:
E-GEOD-11506

PubMed:
17510434

Updated:
Dec.12, 2014

Registered:
Sep.03, 2014


Factors: (via ArrayExpress)
Sample
GSE11506GSM289651
GSE11506GSM289657
GSE11506GSM289652
GSE11506GSM289658
GSE11506GSM289653
GSE11506GSM289659
GSE11506GSM289654
GSE11506GSM289655
GSE11506GSM289656

Tags

  • breast
  • breast cancer
  • cancer
  • cell
  • chromatin
  • disease
  • estrogen
  • genome

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