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NR4A3 Suppresses Lymphomagenesis through Induction of Proapoptotic Genes.
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Anne Krogsdam
Hildegard T Greinix
Verena Stiegelbauer
Katrin Pansy
Alexander J A Deutsch
+15 authors
Journal:
2017/September
-
Cancer Research
ISSN:
1538-7445
PUBMED:
28249906
DOI:
10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-16-2320
Abstract:
Nuclear orphan receptor NR4A1 exerts an essential tumor suppressor function in aggressive lymphomas. In this study, we investigated the hypothesized contribution of the related NR4A family member NR4A3 to lymphomagenesis. In aggressive lymphoma patients, low expression of NR4A3 was associated with poor survival. Ectopic expression or pharmacological activation of NR4A3 in lymphoma cell lines led to a significantly higher proportion of apoptotic cells. In a mouse NSG xenograft model of lymphoma (stably transduced SuDHL4 cells), NR4A3 expression abrogated tumor growth, compared with vector control and uninduced cells that formed massive tumors. Transcript analysis of four different aggressive lymphoma cell lines overexpressing either NR4A3 or NR4A1 revealed that apoptosis was driven similarly by induction of BAK, Puma, BIK, BIM, BID, and Trail. Overall, our results showed that NR4A3 possesses robust tumor suppressor functions of similar impact to NR4A1 in aggressive lymphomas. Cancer Res; 77(9); 2375-86. ©2017 AACR.
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