Estrogen receptor alpha mutations in breast cancer cells cause gene expression changes through constant activity and through secondary effects

2020 
While breast cancer patients with tumors that express estrogen receptor α (ER) generally respond well to hormone therapies that block ER9s actions, a significant number relapse. Approximately 30% of these recurrences harbor activating mutations in ER9s ligand binding domain (LBD). ER mutations have been shown to confer ligand-independent function to ER; however, much is still unclear regarding the effect of mutant ER beyond its estrogen independence. To investigate mutant ER9s molecular effects, we developed multiple isogenic ER mutant cell lines for the most common ER LBD mutations, Y537S and D538G. We found that these mutations induce differential expression of thousands of genes, the majority of which are mutant allele-specific and are not observed upon estrogen treatment of wildtype cells. The mutant-specific genes show consistent differential expression across ER mutant lines developed in other laboratories. The observed gene expression changes cannot be explained by constitutive ER activity alone, as wildtype cells with long-term estrogen exposure only exhibit some of these transcriptional changes, suggesting that mutant ER causes novel regulatory effects that are not simply due to constant activity. While ER mutations have minor effects on ER genomic binding, with the exception of ligand independence, we observed substantial differences in chromatin accessibility due to ER mutations. Mutant ER is bound to approximately a quarter of mutant-enriched accessible regions that are enriched for other DNA binding factors including FOXA1, CTCF, and OCT1. Our findings indicate that mutant ER causes several consistent effects on gene expression both indirectly and through constant activity.
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