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PPARδ elicits ligand-independent repression of 2 Trefoil Factor Family to limit prostate cancer growth. Homo sapiens

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NIAID Data Ecosystem2026-03-10 收录
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https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/bioproject/PRJNA375825
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Cancer Res; 78(2); 399-409. ©2017 The nuclear receptor PPAR-β/δ (PPARD) has essential roles in fatty acid catabolism and energy homeostasis as well as cell differentiation, inflammation, and metabolism. However, its contributions to tumorigenesis are uncertain and have been disputed. Here, we provide evidence of tumor suppressive activity of PPARD in prostate cancer through a noncanonical and ligand-independent pathway. PPARD was downregulated in prostate cancer specimens. In murine prostate epithelium, PPARD gene deletion resulted in increased cellularity. Genetic modulation of PPARD in human prostate cancer cell lines validated the tumor suppressive activity of this gene in vitro and in vivo Mechanistically, PPARD exerted its activity in a DNA binding-dependent and ligand-independent manner. We identified a novel set of genes repressed by PPARD that failed to respond to ligand-mediated activation. Among these genes, we observed robust regulation of the secretory trefoil factor family (TFF) members, including a causal and correlative association of TFF1 with prostate cancer biology in vitro and in patient specimens. Overall, our results illuminate the oncosuppressive function of PPARD and understanding of the pathogenic molecular pathways elicited by this nuclear receptor.Significance: These findings challenge the presumption that the function of the nuclear receptor PPARβ/δ in cancer is dictated by ligand-mediated activation. Overall design: Genome-wide changes in gene expression of pC3 cells versus pC3-PPARD expressing cells and pC3-PPARD expressing cells with GW501516.
创建时间:
2017-02-17
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