Original Article
Oncogene (2007) 26, 1757–1768. doi:10.1038/sj.onc.1209967; published online 11 September 2006
Prohibitin, a protein downregulated by androgens, represses androgen receptor activity
S C Gamble1, D Chotai1, M Odontiadis1, D A Dart1, G N Brooke1, S M Powell1, V Reebye1, A Varela-Carver1, Y Kawano1, J Waxman1 and C L Bevan1
1Department of Oncology, Imperial College London, Hammersmith Hospital Campus, London, UK
Correspondence: Dr CL Bevan, The Harris Laboratory for Prostate Cancer Research, Department of Oncology, Imperial College London, Hammersmith Hospital Campus, Du Cane Road, London W12 0NN, UK. E-mail: charlotte.bevan@imperial.ac.uk
Received 21 March 2006; Revised 10 July 2006; Accepted 2 August 2006; Published online 11 September 2006.
Abstract
Prohibitin (PHB) is a cell cycle regulatory protein, known to repress E2F1-mediated gene activation via recruitment of transcriptional regulatory factors such as retinoblastoma and histone deacetylase 1 (HDAC1). We previously identified PHB as a target protein of androgen signaling in prostate cancer cells and showed that downregulation of PHB is required for androgen-induced cell cycle entry in these cells. We now present evidence that PHB, which has 54% homology at the protein level to the oestrogen receptor corepressor REA (repressor of oestrogen receptor activity), can repress androgen receptor (AR)-mediated transcription and androgen-dependent cell growth. Depletion of endogenous PHB resulted in an increase in expression of the androgen-regulated prostate-specific antigen gene. The repression appears to be specific to androgen and closely related receptors, as it is also evident for the glucocorticoid and progesterone, but not oestrogen, receptors. In spite of interaction of PHB with HDAC1, HDAC activity is not required for this repression. Although AR and PHB could be co-immunoprecipitated, no direct interaction was detectable, suggesting that PHB forms part of a repressive complex with the AR. Competition with the co-activator SRC1 further suggests that formation of a complex with AR, PHB and other cofactors is the mechanism by which repression is achieved. It appears then that repression of AR activity is one mechanism by which PHB inhibits androgen-dependent growth of prostate cells. Further, this study implies that the AR itself could, by mediating downregulation of a corepressor, be involved in the progression of prostate tumours to the hormone refractory stage.
Keywords:
prohibitin, prostate cancer, androgen receptor, corepressor, cell cycle
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