Identification of a Novel Class of Retinoic Acid Receptor beta -Selective Retinoid Antagonists and Their Inhibitory Effects on AP-1 Activity and Retinoic Acid-induced Apoptosis in Human Breast Cancer Cells*

Yin LiDagger , Yuichi Hashimoto§, Anissa AgadirDagger , Hiroyuki Kagechika, and Xiao-kun ZhangDagger parallel

From the Dagger  Burnham Institute, Cancer Research Center, La Jolla, California 92037, § Institute of Molecular and Cellular Biosciences, and  Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Tokyo, Tokyo 113, Japan

    ABSTRACT
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ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
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DISCUSSION
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Four candidate retinoid antagonists (LE135, LE511, LE540, and LE550) were designed on the basis of the ligand superfamily concept and synthesized. Analysis of these related retinoids by transient transfection assay demonstrated that LE135, LE540, and LE550 are effective retinoic acid receptor (RAR) antagonists, whereas LE511 selectively induced RARbeta transcriptional activity. Both LE135 and LE540 inhibited retinoic acid (RA)-induced transcriptional activation of RARbeta , but not RARalpha , RARgamma or retinoid X receptor alpha  (RXRalpha ), on a variety of RA response elements. The retinoid antagonists also inhibited all-trans-RA-induced transcriptional activation of RARbeta /RXRalpha heterodimers, although they did not show any effect on transactivation activity of RXR/RXR homodimers. In ZR-75-1 human breast cancer cells, cotreatment of LE135 and LE540 with all-trans-RA inhibited all-trans-RA-induced apoptosis of the cells, further demonstrating that RARbeta plays a role in RA-induced apoptosis of breast cancer cells. We also evaluated the effect of these retinoids on AP-1 activity. Our data showed that LE135 and LE540 strongly repressed 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate-induced AP-1 activity in the presence of RARbeta and RXRalpha . Interestingly, LE550 induced AP-1 activity when RARbeta and RXRalpha were expressed in HeLa cells but not in breast cancer cells. These results demonstrate that LE135 and LE540 were a novel class of RARbeta -selective antagonists and anti-AP-1 retinoids and should be useful tools for studying the role of retinoids and their receptors.

    INTRODUCTION
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ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
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DISCUSSION
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Retinoids, the natural and synthetic vitamin A derivatives, are known to regulate many biological processes, including growth, differentiation, and development (1-3). They are currently used in the treatment of epithelial cancer and promyelocytic leukemia and are being evaluated as preventive and therapeutic agents for a variety of other human cancers (4). One of the major drawbacks of retinoid therapy has been the wide range of undesirable side effects. Development of anticancer-specific retinoids with improved clinical value is largely dependent on the understanding of the mechanistic basis of the pleiotropic activities induced by retinoids and their receptors. The effects of retinoids are mainly mediated by two classes of nuclear retinoid receptors: the retinoic acid receptors (RARs)1 (5-9) and the retinoid X receptors (RXRs) (10-14), and both receptors are members of the steroid-thyroid hormone receptor superfamily and are encoded by three distinct genes, alpha , beta , and gamma  (5-14). All-trans-retinoic acid (RA) acts as a ligand for RARs, while 9-cis-RA is a ligand for both RARs and RXRs. RARs and RXRs modulate the expression of their target genes by interacting as either homodimers or heterodimers with RA response elements (RAREs) (11, 14-17). A RARE (beta RARE) in the RARbeta gene promoter mediates RA-induced RARbeta gene expression in many different cell types (18, 19). Up-regulation of the RARbeta gene by RA plays a critical role in amplifying the RA response and is required for RA-induced growth inhibition and apoptosis in human breast cancer (20) and lung cancer cells (21).

In addition to the regulation of RARE-containing genes, retinoid receptors can inhibit the effect of the tumor promoter TPA by repressing the transcriptional activity of AP-1 (22). Inhibition of AP-1 activity by retinoid receptors may involve either direct protein-protein interaction between retinoid receptor and components of AP-1, such as c-Jun (23), or competition for a common coactivator CBP (24). Recent studies have suggested that different receptor conformational changes may account for gene regulation on RAREs and inhibition of AP-1 activity and that they can be dissociated as anti-AP-1-specific retinoids have been described (25-27). Interaction between membrane and nuclear receptor signaling pathways mediated by RAR/AP-1 interaction may represent an important mechanism underlying the potent antineoplastic effects of retinoids. Because many of the AP-1 responsive genes, such as collagenases and stromelysins, are involved in cancer cell proliferation and transformation (28), retinoids that specifically inhibit AP-1 activity may be therapeutically desirable because they may have reduced side effects associated with gene activation, but retain their anticancer activity. This is demonstrated by recent studies showing that retinoids that inhibit AP-1 activity but cannot induce transactivation of RARE-containing genes were able to inhibit TPA-induced transformation and the clonal growth of mouse epidermal JB6 cells (29). In addition, a group of anti-AP-1-specific retinoids inhibited the proliferation of lung and breast cancer cells but had impaired ability to induce differentiation of F-9 cells (25).

Each subtype of RARs has been implicated in the regulation of cancer development and the anticancer activities of retinoids. Translocation of the RARalpha gene is responsible for the development of acute promyelocytic leukemia (30), whereas RARgamma may play a role in mediating growth inhibition and apoptosis by certain retinoids (31). Recently, evidence is emerging showing that RARbeta may play a critical role in the regulation of cancer cell growth. RARbeta is located in chromosome 3p24, a region that is often deleted or mutated in a variety of cancer (32), and RARbeta was found to be integrated by hepatitis B virus in human liver cancer (33). It is not expressed in many different types of cancer cell lines (20, 34-38), and re-expression of RARbeta in RARbeta -negative cancer cells restored the ability of RA to induce growth inhibition and apoptosis (20). Despite these studies, further investigation is needed to dissect function of each retinoid receptor in cancer cells. Several approaches have been used often to determine specific function of each receptor subtype, including loss of function, such as knock-out and antisense technique, and gain-of-function, such as ectopic expression of a receptor subtype. RAR subtype-selective agonists and antagonists are being developed (39-43), and they have been widely used to study the function of each receptor. However, the degree of selectivity and receptor transactivation activity needs to be improved. In addition, development of more and effective RARbeta -selective retinoids is important to further study RARbeta function in cancer. Furthermore, receptor-selective retinoids allow dissociation of desired and undesired effects of retinoids and are also believed to be more specific and with less toxicity in cancer prevention and treatment.

To further study RARbeta function in cancer cells, we analyzed a class of conformational restricted retinoids. Our data demonstrated that LE135, LE540, and LE550 inhibited all-trans-RA-induced transcriptional activation of RARbeta but not RARalpha , RARgamma , or RXRalpha on a number of RAREs, whereas LE511 selectively induced transactivation activity of RARbeta . The RARbeta -selective antagonist effect was further demonstrated by their ability to inhibit all-trans-RA-induced apoptosis of ZR-75-1 human breast cancer cells. Interestingly, the antagonists LE135 and LE540 also exert anti-AP-1 activity. They effectively repressed TPA-induced AP-1 activity in both HeLa and breast cancer cells when RARbeta was expressed. In contrast, LE550 induced AP-1 activity in HeLa but not in breast cancer cells. Together our results demonstrate that a novel class of RARbeta -selective retinoids with variable biological functions should represent useful tools for studying RARbeta function.

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EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
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Retinoids-- All-trans-RA was obtained from Sigma. LE135 was prepared as described by Eyrolles et al. (44). LE511, LE540, and LE550 were prepared as described by (45). Ro 41-5253 was kindly provided by Dr. Michael Klaus (46).

Cell Culture-- Monkey kidney CV-1 and HeLa cells were grown in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium supplemented with 10% fetal calf serum, and ZR-75-1 breast cancer cells were maintained in RPMI 1640 medium supplemented with 10% fetal calf serum.

Plasmid Constructions-- The receptor expression plasmids pECE-RARalpha , -RARbeta , -RARgamma , and -RXRalpha and the construction of the reporter plasmids beta RARE-tk-CAT, TREpal-tk-CAT, CRBPI-RARE-tk-CAT, and ApoAI-RARE-tk-CAT have been described previously (15, 16, 47, 48).

Transient Transfection Assay-- CV-1 cells were seeded at 5.0 × 105 cells/well in 24-well plates. A modified calcium phosphate precipitation procedure was used for transient transfection as described previously (20). 100 ng of reporter plasmid, 100 ng of beta -galactosidase expression vector (pCH110, Amersham Pharmacia Biotech), and various amounts of receptor were mixed with carrier DNA (pBluescript, Stratagene) to 1,000 ng of total DNA/well. After 16-24 h, transfected cells were treated with or without 10-7 M all-trans-RA in the absence or presence of the indicated concentrations of retinoid antagonists. For anti-AP-1 assay, a reporter construct containing the collagenase promoter linked with the CAT gene, -73-Col-CAT (23), was used in HeLa and ZR-75-1 cells. After transfection, cells were grown in a medium containing 0.5% charcoal-treated fetal calf serum with retinoids and/or TPA (100 ng/ml). Transfection efficiency was normalized to beta -galactosidase activity. The data shown are the means of three separate experiments.

Apoptosis Assay-- Nuclear morphological change analysis and DNA fragmentation (TdT) assay were as described previously (20, 21). For nuclear morphological analysis, ZR-75-1 cells were treated with or without 10-7 M all-trans-RA in the absence or presence of 10-6 M LE135, LE540, or LE550 for 4 days, trypsinized, washed with phosphate-buffered saline, fixed with 3.7% paraformaldehyde, and stained with 50 µg/ml 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole containing 100 µg/ml DNase-free RNase A to visualize the nuclei. Stained cells were examined by fluorescent microscopy. For DNA fragmentation (TdT) assay, ZR-75-1 cells were treated with or without 10-7 M all-trans-RA in the absence or presence of 10-6 M LE135, LE540, or LE550. After 3 days, cells were trypsinized, washed with phosphate-buffered saline, fixed in 1% formaldehyde in phosphate-buffered saline, washed with phosphate-buffered saline, resuspended in 70% ice-cold ethanol, and immediately stored at -20 °C overnight. Cells were then labeled with biotin-16-dUTP by terminal transferase and stained with avidin-fluorescein isothiocyanate (Roche Molecular Biochemicals). The labeled cells were analyzed using a FACScater-Plus. Representative histograms are shown.

    RESULTS
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INTRODUCTION
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Transactivation Activity of the Synthetic Retinoids-- Recently, we designed several retinoid antagonists, LE135, LE511, LE540, and LE550 (49, 50), based on the structure-activity relationship of retinoids (Fig. 1). Transcriptional activation of these retinoids on RARalpha , RARbeta , RARgamma , or RXRalpha was determined by transient transfection assay using the reporter construct TREpal-tk-CAT (15) in CV-1 cells. As shown in Fig. 2, all-trans-RA strongly induced transcriptional activation of each RARs, whereas 9-cis-RA effectively promoted RXR homodimer activity. However, LE135, LE540, and LE550, at 10-7 M and 10-6 M, had very little effect on transcriptional activation of RARalpha , RARbeta , RARgamma , or RXRalpha . LE135 and LE540 even showed inhibitory effect on basal RARbeta activity in a dose-dependent manner. Interestingly, LE511, a LE135 analog with bulky acyclic alkyl group, showed a strong induction of RARbeta transactivation activity. Activation of RARbeta could be observed when 10-7 M LE511 was used, and it is about 65% of efficiency as compared with all-trans-RA. Together, these results demonstrate that LE135, LE540, and LE550 are ineffective on transcriptional activation of RARs and RXR, whereas LE511 is a RARbeta -selective agonist.


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Fig. 1.   Chemical structure of the synthetic retinoids.


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Fig. 2.   Transcriptional activation profiles. Transcriptional activation activities of retinoids were determined on RARalpha , RARbeta , RARgamma , or RXRalpha receptors. CV-1 cells were transiently transfected with 100 ng of TREpal-tk-CAT reporter plasmid and 100 ng of RARalpha , RARbeta , or RARgamma or 20 ng of RXRalpha receptor expression plasmid. Transfected cells were grown in the absence or presence of the indicated concentrations of retinoids, and assayed for CAT activity after 24 h. 100% activity was the reporter gene activity measured in the presence of 10-6 M all-trans-RA for RARs or 10-6 M 9-cis-RA for RXRalpha after subtraction of constitutive receptor activity.

Antagonistic Effect of the Synthetic Retinoids on RA-induced RARbeta Transcriptional Activation-- LE135 was previously shown to selectively bind to RARbeta (44). The observations that LE135 could not induce RARbeta transactivational activity and that it inhibited basal RARbeta activity (Fig. 2) suggested that binding of RARbeta by LE135 might repress its transactivation function. We therefore analyzed the effect of LE135 on all-trans-RA-induced transcriptional activation of RARbeta on beta RARE-tk-CAT reporter (19). For comparison, its effect on RARalpha or RARgamma was analyzed. As shown in Fig. 3a, 10-7 M all-trans-RA-induced RARbeta activity was strongly inhibited by LE135 in a concentration-dependent manner, with more than 70% inhibition when 10-6 M LE135 was used. For comparison, RARalpha -selective antagonist Ro 41-5253 did not show any effect on RARbeta activity. When RARalpha was analyzed, LE135 did not exhibit clear inhibitory effect on all-trans-RA-induced RARalpha activity, whereas Ro 41-5253 significantly repressed the reporter transcription. Both LE135 and Ro 41-5253 did not show any influence on all-trans-RA-induced RARgamma activity. Similar results were obtained on another reporter, the TREpal-tk-CAT (Fig. 3b and data not shown). Because RARbeta is likely to function as RARbeta /RXR heterodimer in cells, we determined whether LE135 could act as a RARbeta /RXR heterodimer antagonist. As shown in Fig. 3b, LE135 exhibited a similar degree of inhibition on both all-trans-RA-induced RARbeta and RARbeta /RXR heterodimer activity (Fig. 3b), whereas it had no effect on 9-cis-RA-induced RXR homodimer activity. Similar results were obtained with LE540 (data not shown). Together, these data demonstrate that LE135 and LE540 are effective antagonist of RARbeta and RARbeta /RXR heterodimer.


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Fig. 3.   Antagonistic effects of retinoids on RA-induced transcriptional activation of the RARs. a, effect of LE135 on RARalpha , RARbeta , or RARgamma receptor on beta RARE. RARalpha , RARbeta , or RARgamma expression vector (100 ng) was cotransfected with the beta RARE-tk-CAT repoter into CV-1 cells. Transfected cells were treated with 10-7 M all-trans-RA in the absence or presence of the indicated concentration of LE135 or Ro 41-5253 (10-7 M). b, effect of LE135 on RARbeta , RXRalpha , or RARbeta /RXRalpha heterodimer activity on the TREpal. RARbeta (100 ng), RXRalpha (25 ng), or RARbeta /RXRalpha expression vectors were cotransfected with the TREpal-tk-CAT reporter into CV-1 cells. Transfected cells were treated with 10-7 M all-trans-RA in the absence or presence of the indicated concentrations of LE135. c, the antagonist effect of retinoids is response element independent. CV-1 cells were cotransfected with 100 ng of RARbeta expression plasmid and 100 ng of beta RARE-tk-CAT, CRBPI-RARE-tk-CAT or ApoAI-RARE-tk-CAT reporter. Transfected cells were treated with 10-7 M all-trans-RA in the absence or presence of the 10-6 M LE135, LE540, or LE550.

To further analyze the antagonist effect of LE135 and its analogs, reporter constructs containing different RAREs, including beta RARE, CRBPI-RARE and ApoAI-RARE were used. As shown in Fig. 3c, LE135, LE540, and LE550 inhibited all-trans-RA-induced RARbeta transcriptional activation on these different RAREs. Similar degrees of inhibition (about 60-70%) were observed with the beta RARE and the ApoAI-RARE, whereas a less degree of inhibition (50-60%) was obtained with the CRBPI-RARE. Interestingly, LE540 showed a more effective inhibition on all RAREs than its isomer LE550, consistent with their antagonist effect on HL-60 cell differentiation (45). These results demonstrate that LE135, LE540, and LE550 could inhibit transactivation of RARbeta and that the antagonistic effect of these retinoids is response element independent.

Effect of the Retinoid Antagonists on RA-induced Growth Inhibition and Apoptosis in Human Breast Cancer Cells-- We have previously demonstrated that expression of RARbeta is required for all-trans-RA-induced apoptosis of human breast cancer cells (20). We then analyzed whether inhibition of RARbeta activity by RARbeta -selective antagonists could repress all-trans-RA activity in ZR-75-1 human breast cancer cells. ZR-75-1 cells underwent extensive apoptosis when they were treated with all-trans-RA as revealed by both morphological analysis (DAPI staining) (Fig. 4a) and DNA end-labeling assay (TdT) (Fig. 4b). However, all-trans-RA-induced apoptosis was strongly prevented when 10-7 M all-trans-RA was used together with 10-6 M of LE135, LE540, or LE550. Morphological analysis showed that all-trans-RA-induced apoptosis was reduced from about 40 to 20% by LE135, LE540, or LE550 (Fig. 4a). Similar results were obtained by TdT assay (Fig. 4b). These results are in agreement with previous observation made by ectopic expression of RARbeta (20), and suggest that these RARbeta -selective antagonists are useful tools for studying RARbeta function.


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Fig. 4.   Effect of the retinoid antagonists on RA-induced apoptosis in ZR-75-1 human breast cancer cells. a, morphological analysis of apoptotic breast cancer cells. ZR-75-1 cells were treated with or without 10-7 M all-trans-RA in the absence or presence of 10-6 M LE135, LE540, or LE550 for 4 days and nuclear morphology was analyzed by DAPI staining. b, DNA fragmentation analysis. ZR-75-1 cells were treated with or without 10-7 M all-trans-RA in the absence or presence of 10-6 M LE135, LE540, or LE550 for 3 days, and DNA fragmentation was determined by the TdT assay. Representative histograms show relative apoptotic cell numbers. FL, fluorescence.

Effect of Retinoid Antagonists on TPA-induced AP-1 Activity-- Recently, it was reported that RA can inhibit AP-1 activity (22) and that receptor conformational change required for AP-1 inhibition is different from that required for receptor transcriptional activation and they can be dissociated (25-27). To determine whether LE135, LE540, and LE550 could also induce RAR conformational changes for inhibiting AP-1 activity, we investigated their effect on TPA-induced AP-1 activity. When a reporter containing the collagenase (23) linked with the CAT gene, -73Col-CAT (23), was transiently transfected into HeLa cells, treatment of the cells with TPA strongly induced the reporter activity, consistent with previous observations. Co-treatment of the cells with either all-trans-RA, LE135, LE540, or LE550 did not show a clear effect on TPA-induced reporter activity (Fig. 5a). However, when RARbeta was cotransfected, the TPA-induced reporter transcription was slightly inhibited, which was further inhibited when cells were treated with all-trans-RA but not with LE135, LE540, and LE550. Interestingly, treatment with LE550 slightly enhanced reporter transcription. When RARbeta and RXRalpha were cotransfected, however, LE135 and LE540 showed a strong inhibition of the TPA-induced reporter activity. The enhancing effect of LE550 was also increased. These data suggest that LE135 and LE540 could induce a conformational change of RARbeta required for inhibiting AP-1 activity only when RARbeta is heterodimerized with RXRalpha and that LE550 may induce another RARbeta conformation that stimulates AP-1 transcriptional activity. To determine whether these retinoids could inhibit AP-1 activity in breast cancer cells, the -73Col-CAT was transiently transfected into ZR-75-1 cells (Fig. 5b). Treatment of the cells with TPA led to an increase of reporter gene transcription for about 7-fold. Both LE135 and LE540 inhibited the TPA-induced activity in a concentration-dependent manner when RARbeta expression vector was cotransfected. These data demonstrate that LE135 and LE540 could also inhibit AP-1 activity in breast cancer cells. The fact that LE135 and LE540 could inhibit the TPA-induced reporter transcription without RXRalpha cotransfection is consistent with observation that RXRalpha is expressed in ZR-75-1 cells (20). Interestingly, we did not observe any induction of the reporter activity when cells were treated with LE550, suggesting that the AP-1-inducing effect of LE550 is cell-type specific.


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Fig. 5.   Effect of retinoids on TPA-induced collagenase promoter activity. a, effect of LE compounds on TPA-induced collagenase promoter activity in HeLa cells. The -73Col-CAT reporter (100 ng) was cotransfected without or with the indicated retinoid receptor expression vector (100 ng) into HeLa cells. After transfection, cells were cultured in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium containing 0.5% FCS and treated with either all-trans-RA or the indicated retinoids and/or TPA (100 ng/ml). 24 h later, the cells were harvested and CAT activities were determined. The mean of CAT activity in three independent experiments is shown. b, effect of LE compounds on TPA-induced collagenase promoter activity in ZR-75-1 cells. The -73Col-CAT reporter (250 ng) was transfected into ZR-75-1 cells and assayed for its activity as described in panel a. Empty bar, no TPA treatment; black bar, with TPA treatment.


    DISCUSSION
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INTRODUCTION
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Previous studies on receptor-ligand interaction have suggested requirements for being a potent retinoid antagonist: (i) strong binding to the receptor mediated by the hydrophobic alkylated benzo group of a retinoid contributes to its binding affinity to RARs and (ii) inhibition of the conformational changes, such as proper folding of the helix 12 where the binding site for co-activators (AF2 domain) exists. This has established structure-activity relationships in both retinoid agonists and antagonists. We describe here a class of related synthetic retinoids, LE135, LE540, LE511, and LE550, which either specifically activate or inhibit RARbeta transactivation function. In assaying for transactivation function of the retinoids on each subtype of RARs and RXRalpha , LE511 selectively activated RARbeta (Fig. 2), suggesting that it is a RARbeta -selective agonist. In contrast, other LE compounds, LE135, LE540, and LE550, did not display any activation function on the retinoid receptors tested (Fig. 2). Instead, LE135 and LE540 showed a strong inhibition of RARbeta basal transactivation activity. When they were used together with all-trans-RA, LE135 or LE540 effectively inhibited all-trans-RA-induced RXRalpha /RARbeta activity (Fig. 3). LE135 does not bind to RXRs and RARgamma in receptor binding assay (45). It binds with higher affinity to RARbeta (Ki = 0.22 µM) than to RARalpha (Ki = 1.4 µM) (45). Thus, LE135 and its related analog LE540 act as RARbeta -selective antagonists. These results suggest that the tetramethyltetrahydronaphthalenyl group as seen in LE135, LE540, and LE550 may be required for RARbeta antagonist effect, because its replacement with effective mono-tertiary butylphenyl group as seen in LE511 resulted in loss of RARbeta antagonism effect (Fig. 3). The smaller hydrophobic tert-butyl group of LE511 not only decreases the binding affinity to RARs but also may change the binding occupation in the ligand-RAR complex with less disturbance of the helix folding. This may explain the critical agonistic activity of LE511. The existence of another benzo (or naphtho) group impairs the transcriptional activating activity due to the different conformational change in the ligand-receptor complex. From the reported crystal structures of RXRalpha and RARgamma (51, 52), proper folding of the helix 12 in the ligand-binding domain of RARs is critical for receptor activation. The benzo/naphtho group fused to the diazepine ring may disturb the proper folding of the helix to elicit the antagonistic activity. The bulkier naphtho group of LE540 is expected to be more effective than the benzo group of LE135 and that of LE550 with a different direction seems to affect weakly the conformation around the helix as it could not inhibit RARbeta basal transactivation activity (Fig. 2).

The pleiotropic effects of retinoids are mainly mediated by RARs and RXRs. Both types of retinoid receptors are encoded by three distinct genes, alpha , beta , and gamma . The fact that these receptors display distinct patterns of expression during development and differentiation suggests that each of them may have specific function, which is being unraveled recently by a variety of technologies, such as homologous recombination, antisense, and ectopic expression of a receptor of interest. The complexity of retinoid responses also can be dissected with the use of both receptor-selective agonist and antagonists, activating or interfering specifically or preferentially with one given receptor. We have previously reported (20) that all-trans-RA-induced apoptosis of human breast cancer cells requires RARbeta expression. This was based on our observation that stable expression of RARbeta in RARbeta -negative cells induced apoptosis, whereas expression of RARbeta antisense RNA in RARbeta -positive cells abolished apoptotic effect of all-trans-RA (20). Here, we used RARbeta -selective antagonists to study the involvement of RARbeta in all-trans-RA-induced growth inhibition and apoptosis of ZR-75-1 human breast cancer cells. When RARbeta -selective antagonists LE135, LE540, or LE550 was used together with all-trans-RA, the effect of all-trans-RA on apoptosis in ZR-75-1 cells was largely reduced (Fig. 4). This result further supports the role of RARbeta in all-trans-RA-induced growth inhibition and apoptosis of human breast cancer cells. It also demonstrates that LE135 and its analogs are valuable tools for studying RARbeta function.

In this study, we also show that RARbeta antagonists could act as effective anti-AP-1 retinoids (Fig. 5). These retinoids, which did not show any transactivation function on RARs and RXRs, could repress AP-1 activity in the presence of RARbeta /RXR heterodimer. Therefore, they are anti-AP-1 specific retinoids. Interestingly, they could not affect AP-1 activity in the presence of RARbeta alone but required RXR for effective inhibition of AP-1 activity. This suggests that binding of retinoids to RARbeta alone is not sufficient to induce a specific anti-AP-1 conformational change. Interestingly, LE550 could induce AP-1 activity in HeLa cells but not in ZR-75-1 cells (Fig. 5). The mechanism by which LE550 induces AP-1 activity is unclear. It is likely that LE550 induces a different conformational change of RARbeta . This is supported by our observation that LE540 and LE135 inhibited basal RARbeta activity, whereas LE550 could not (Fig. 2). This is interesting since LE540 and LE550 are regio-isoforms, in which the bulkier naphtho group of both compounds is arranged in different directions, which may be critical for AP-1 interaction (Fig. 5). Previous studies have demonstrated that AP-1 can either inhibit or stimulate nuclear receptor activity, depending on cell type, promoter, and nuclear receptor (53). Our observation that LE550 could induce AP-1 activity in HeLa cells suggests that the retinoid receptor could also stimulate AP-1 activity in response to appropriate ligand. The fact that induction of AP-1 activity by LE550 was only observed in HeLa cells but not in ZR-75-1 cells implies that inhibition or induction of AP-1 activity by retinoid receptor is also cell-type specific. LE550 may induce RARbeta in a conformation that allows a positive effect on AP-1 transcription, probably through transcriptional mediators specifically expressed in HeLa cells. Such a compound may be a valuable tool for studying mechanisms underlying AP-1/nuclear receptor interaction and for dissecting complexity of AP-1/nuclear receptor interaction.

    FOOTNOTES

* The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.

parallel To whom correspondence should be addressed: The Burnham Institute, Cancer Research Center, 10901 N. Torrey Pines Rd., La Jolla, CA 92037. Tel.: 619-646-3141; Fax: 619-646-3195; E-mail: xzhang{at}ljcrf.edu.

    ABBREVIATIONS

The abbreviations used are: RAR, retinoic acid receptor; RA, retinoic acid; TPA, 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate; RXR, retinoid X receptor; RARE, RA response element.

    REFERENCES
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ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES
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