Purpose: CLIC4, a member of a family of intracellular chloride channels, is regulated by p53, c-Myc, and tumor necrosis factor-a. Regulation by factors involved in cancer pathogenesis, together with the previously shown proapoptotic activity of CLIC4, suggests that the protein may have a tumor suppressor function. To address this possibility, we characterized the expression profile, subcellular localization, and gene integrity of CLIC4 in human cancers and determined the functional consequences of CLIC4 expression in tumor epithelium and stromal cells. Experimental Design: CLIC4 expression profiles were analyzed by genomics, proteomics, bioinformatics, and tissue microarrays. CLIC4 expression, as a consequence of crosstalk between stroma and epithelium, was tested in vitro by coculture of breast epithelial tumor cells and normal fibroblasts, and the functional consequences of CLIC4 expression was tested in vivo in xenografts of human breast tumor cell lines reconstituted with CLIC4 or mixed with fibroblasts that overexpress CLIC4 transgenically. Results: In cDNA arrays of matched human normal and tumor tissues, CLIC4 expression was reduced in renal, ovarian, and breast cancers. However, CLIC4 protein levels were variable in tumor lysate arrays. Transcript sequences of CLIC4 from the human expressed sequence tag database and manual sequencing of cDNA from 60 human cancer cell lines (NCI60) failed to reveal deletion or mutations in the CLIC4 gene. On matched tissue arrays, CLIC4 was predominantly nuclear in normal human epithelial tissues but not cancers.With advancing malignant progression, CLIC4 staining became undetectable in tumor cells, but expression increased in stromal cells coincident with up-regulation of a-smooth muscle actin, suggesting that CLIC4 is up-regulated in myofibroblasts. Coculture of cancer cells and fibroblasts induced the expression of both CLIC4 and a-smooth muscle actin in fibroblasts adjacent to tumor nests. Introduction of CLIC4 or nuclear targeted CLIC4 via adenovirus into human breast cancer xenografts inhibited tumor growth, whereas overexpression of CLIC4 in stromal cells of xenografts enhanced tumor growth. Conclusion: Loss of CLIC4 in tumor cells and gain in tumor stroma is common to many human cancers and marks malignant progression. Up-regulation of CLIC4 in tumor stroma is coincident with myofibroblast conversion, generally a poor prognostic indicator. Reactivation and restoration of CLIC4 in tumor cells or the converse in tumor stromal cells could provide a novel approach to inhibit tumor growth.
Dietary selenium is known to protect skin against UV-induced damage and cancer and its topical application improves skin surface parameters in humans, while selenium deficiency compromises protective antioxidant enzymes in skin. Furthermore, skin and hair abnormalities in humans and rodents may be caused by selenium deficiency, which are overcome by dietary selenium supplementation. Most important biological functions of selenium are attributed to selenoproteins, proteins containing selenium in the form of the amino acid, selenocysteine (Sec). Sec insertion into proteins depends on Sec tRNA; thus, knocking out the Sec tRNA gene (Trsp) ablates selenoprotein expression. We generated mice with targeted removal of selenoproteins in keratin 14 (K14) expressing cells and their differentiated descendents. The knockout progeny had a runt phenotype, developed skin abnormalities and experienced premature death. Lack of selenoproteins in epidermal cells led to the development of hyperplastic epidermis and aberrant hair follicle morphogenesis, accompanied by progressive alopecia after birth. Further analyses revealed that selenoproteins are essential antioxidants in skin and unveiled their role in keratinocyte growth and viability. This study links severe selenoprotein deficiency to abnormalities in skin and hair and provides genetic evidence for the role of these proteins in keratinocyte function and cutaneous development.
and pH of the nucleus, contributes to cell cycle arrest and the specific gene expression program associated with keratinocyte terminal differentiation.
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