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[Cancer Research 65, 2125-2129, March 15, 2005]
© 2005 American Association for Cancer Research


Molecular Biology, Pathobiology, and Genetics

Apoptosis Factor EI24/PIG8 Is a Novel Endoplasmic Reticulum–Localized Bcl-2–Binding Protein which Is Associated with Suppression of Breast Cancer Invasiveness

Xiansi Zhao1, Robert E. Ayer1, Shannon L. Davis1, Sarah J. Ames1, Brian Florence2, Cyrus Torchinsky1, James S. Liou2, Ling Shen1 and Remco A. Spanjaard1

Departments of 1 Otolaryngology and Biochemistry and 2 Department of Medicine, Cancer Research Center, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts

Requests for reprints: Remco A. Spanjaard, Department of Otolaryngology and Biochemistry, Cancer Research Center, Boston University School of Medicine, 715 Albany Street R903, Boston, MA 02118. Phone: 617-638-5854; Fax: 617-638-5837; E-mail: rspan{at}bu.edu.

p53 is a critical tumor suppressor which removes cells with DNA damage by regulating expression and activity of a select group of p53-induced genes (PIG) that subsequently induce apoptosis. PIG8 was also identified as a gene induced by etoposide and named etoposide-induced gene 24 (EI24). Later experiments established EI24/PIG8 as a proapoptotic factor and suggested that it may function as a tumor suppressor. Indeed, EI24/PIG8 is relatively highly mutated in aggressive breast cancers and is located in a region which expresses frequent loss of heterozygosity. However, despite these important observations, the activity and role of EI24/PIG8 remain largely unknown. We used (immmuno)fluorescence microscopy and subcellular fractionation techniques to show that EI24/PIG8 is localized in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Pull-down experiments showed that it specifically binds with Bcl-2, a death regulator known to reside in mitochondria, ER, and the nuclear envelope. EI24/PIG8-Bcl-2 binding was corroborated by coimmunoprecipitation and other in vitro and in vivo protein-protein binding assays. Further analysis showed that EI24/PIG8 uses its N-terminal region to bind the BH3 domain in Bcl-2. Finally, we used immunohistochemical techniques to analyze expression of EI24/PIG8 in breast cancer tissue progression arrays and showed that loss of EI24/PIG8 is associated with tumor invasiveness but not with the development of the primary tumor. These results suggest that EI24/PIG8 is a novel, ER-localized Bcl-2–binding protein which may contribute to apoptosis by modulating the activity and/or function of Bcl-2 in this organelle. EI24/PIG8 may serve to prevent tumor spreading, consistent with its suspected role as a tumor suppressor.

Key Words: tumor development • tumor suppressor • organelle • cell death • biomarker




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