Early growth response protein 1 upregulation and nuclear translocation by 2'-benzoyloxycinnamaldehyde induces prostate cancer cell death - Abstract

2'-Benzoyloxycinnamaldehyde (BCA) induces apoptosis in human cancer cells through ROS generation.

BCA upregulates proapoptotic genes such as activating transcription factor 3 (ATF3), NSAID-activated gene 1 protein (NAG-1), and growth arrest and DNA-damage-inducible protein alpha (GADD45A) in prostate cancer cells. These genes are known to be induced by transcription factor early growth response protein 1 (EGR1). BCA induces significant EGR1 upregulation, while EGR1 knockdown decreases the induction of these genes with concurrent alleviation of cell death by BCA. Antioxidant glutathione pretreatment with BCA removes EGR1 expression increase, suggesting that EGR1 upregulation is dependent on oxidative stress generated by BCA. In prostate cancer cells, EGR1 localizes in the cytoplasm; however, BCA remarkably upregulates EGR1 nuclear translocalization, suggesting its possible effect as a transcriptional activator. BCA induces transient upregulation of importin-7 (IPO7) which is critical for EGR1 nuclear translocation, and IPO7 knockdown led to a significant decrease in chemosensitivity to BCA. Taken together, our findings suggest that BCA induces prostate cancer cell death via EGR1 upregulation and nuclear translocalization, followed by activation of proapoptotic target genes.

Written by:
Kang HS, Ock J, Lee HJ, Lee YJ, Kwon BM, Hong SH.   Are you the author?
Department of Oral Microbiology, School of Dentistry, Kyungpook National University, Daegu 700-412, South Korea.

Reference: Cancer Lett. 2013 Feb 28;329(2):217-27.
doi: 10.1016/j.canlet.2012.11.006


PubMed Abstract
PMID: 23178451

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