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Publication : Autophagy regulates keratin 8 homeostasis in mammary epithelial cells and in breast tumors.

First Author  Kongara S Year  2010
Journal  Mol Cancer Res Volume  8
Issue  6 Pages  873-84
PubMed ID  20530580 Mgi Jnum  J:205234
Mgi Id  MGI:5544397 Doi  10.1158/1541-7786.MCR-09-0494
Citation  Kongara S, et al. (2010) Autophagy regulates keratin 8 homeostasis in mammary epithelial cells and in breast tumors. Mol Cancer Res 8(6):873-84
abstractText  Autophagy is activated in response to cellular stressors and mediates lysosomal degradation and recycling of cytoplasmic material and organelles as a temporary cell survival mechanism. Defective autophagy is implicated in human pathology, as disruption of protein and organelle homeostasis enables disease-promoting mechanisms such as toxic protein aggregation, oxidative stress, genomic damage, and inflammation. We previously showed that autophagy-defective immortalized mouse mammary epithelial cells are susceptible to metabolic stress, DNA damage, and genomic instability. We now report that autophagy deficiency is associated with endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and oxidative stress, and with deregulation of p62-mediated keratin homeostasis in mammary cells, allograft tumors, and mammary tissues from genetically engineered mice. In human breast tumors, high phospho(Ser73)-K8 levels are inversely correlated with Beclin 1 expression. Thus, autophagy preserves cellular fitness by limiting ER and oxidative stress, a function potentially important in autophagy-mediated suppression of mammary tumorigenesis. Furthermore, autophagy regulates keratin homeostasis in the mammary gland via a p62-dependent mechanism. High phospho(Ser73)-K8 expression may be a marker of autophagy functional status in breast tumors and, as such, could have therapeutic implications for breast cancer patients.
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