Regular article
Tumorigenesis and neoplastic progression
The Regulation of SOX7 and Its Tumor Suppressive Role in Breast Cancer

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajpath.2013.07.025Get rights and content
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Both epigenetic silencing and genetic deletion of tumor suppressors contribute to the development and progression of breast cancer. SOX7 is a transcription factor important to development, and its down-regulation has been reported in tumor tissues and cell lines of prostate, colon, and lung cancers. However, the regulation of SOX7 expression and its functional role in breast cancer have not been reported. The current study demonstrates that SOX7 mRNA and protein expression are down-regulated in breast cancer tissues and cell lines compared with adjacent normal tissues and nontumorigenic cells, respectively. The SOX7 promoter is hypermethylated in breast cancer cell lines compared with nontumorigenic cells, and the inhibition of DNA methylation increases SOX7 mRNA levels. With shRNA-mediated SOX7 silencing, nontumorigenic immortal breast cells display increased proliferation, migration, and invasion and form structures that resemble that of breast cancer cells in a three-dimensional culture system. Conversely, ectopic SOX7 expression inhibits proliferation, migration, and invasion of breast cancer cells in vitro and tumor growth in vivo. Importantly, we discovered that SOX7 transcript levels positively correlated with clinical outcome of 674 breast cancer patients. Overall, our data suggest that SOX7 acts as a tumor suppressor in breast cancer. SOX7 expression is likely regulated by multiple mechanisms and potentially serves as a prognostic marker for breast cancer patients.

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Supported in part by Research Scholars grant 116403-RSG-09-082-01-MGO from the American Cancer Society and grant 5R01CA106314 (G.S.); National Cancer Institute training grant 5T32CA079448 (D.B.S.); and contract DE-AC02-05CH11231 from the Office of Science, Office of Biological and Environmental Research, US Department of Energy. The Cell & Virus Vector Core Laboratory and the Tumor Tissue Core Laboratory at the Comprehensive Cancer Center of Wake Forest University School of Medicine are supported by National Cancer Institute Cancer Center Support grant P30CA012197.