Absence of the steroid receptor coactivator-3 induces B-cell lymphoma. - Archive ouverte HAL Accéder directement au contenu
Article Dans Une Revue EMBO Journal Année : 2006

Absence of the steroid receptor coactivator-3 induces B-cell lymphoma.

Résumé

Steroid receptor coactivator 3 (SRC-3/ACTR/AIB-1/pCIP/RAC3/TRAM-1) is a member of the p160 family of nuclear receptor coactivators that plays an important role in mammary gland growth, development, and tumorigenesis. We show that deletion of SRC-3 gene decreases platelet and increases lymphocytes numbers, leading to the development of malignant B-cell lymphomas upon aging. The expansion of the lymphoid lineage in SRC-3(-/-) mice is cell autonomous, correlates with an induction of proliferative and antiapoptotic genes secondary to constitutive NF-kappaB activation, and can be reversed by restoration of SRC-3 expression. NF-kappaB activation is explained by the degradation of IkappaB, consequent to increases in free IkappaB kinase, which is no longer inhibited by SRC-3. These results demonstrate that SRC-3 regulates lymphopoiesis and in combination with previous studies indicate that SRC-3 has vastly diverging effects on cell proliferation depending on the cellular context, ranging from proliferative and tumorigenic (breast) to antiproliferative (lymphoid cells) effects.

Dates et versions

hal-00187866 , version 1 (15-11-2007)

Identifiants

Citer

Agnès Coste, Maria Cristina Antal, Susan Chan, Philippe Kastner, Manuel Mark, et al.. Absence of the steroid receptor coactivator-3 induces B-cell lymphoma.. EMBO Journal, 2006, 25 (11), pp.2453-64. ⟨10.1038/sj.emboj.7601106⟩. ⟨hal-00187866⟩
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