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  • The putative endogenous AHR ligand ITE reduces JAG1 and associated NOTCH1 signaling in triple negative breast cancer cells.

The putative endogenous AHR ligand ITE reduces JAG1 and associated NOTCH1 signaling in triple negative breast cancer cells.

Biochemical pharmacology (2020-02-08)
Sean A Piwarski, Chelsea Thompson, Ateeq R Chaudhry, James Denvir, Donald A Primerano, Jun Fan, Travis B Salisbury
ABSTRACT

The aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR) is a ligand-activated transcription factor. Triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) is the most aggressive breast cancer subtype. TNBC expresses AHR and AHR ligands have anti-cancer activity in TNBC. The aggressiveness of TNBC is due in part to JAG1-NOTCH1 signaling. ITE is a putative endogenous AHR ligand. We show that ITE reduces the expression of JAG1 the amount of Notch 1 intracellular domain (NICD1) and the phosphorylation of STAT3 (at tyrosine 705) in TNBC MDA-MB-231 cells. The STAT3 inhibitor STATTIC also reduced JAG1. STAT3, thus, mediates regulation of JAG1 in MDA-MB-231 cells. Reducing the expression of JAG1 with short interfering RNA decreases the growth, migration and invasiveness of MDA-MB-231 cells. JAG1, therefore, has cellular effects in MDA-MB-231 cells under basal conditions. We consequently evaluated if exposing cells to greater amounts of JAG1 would counteract ITE cellular effects in MDA-MB-231 cells. The results show that JAG1 does not counteract the cellular effects of ITE. JAG1, thus, has no effect on growth or invasiveness in MDA-MB-231 cells treated with ITE. JAG1, therefore, has context dependent roles in MDA-MB-231 cells (basal versus ITE treatment). The results also show that other pathways, not inhibition of the JAG1-NOTCH1 pathway, are important for mediating the growth and invasive inhibitory effect of ITE on MDA-MB-231 cells.

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MISSION® esiRNA, targeting human AHR, RP11-507K12.1