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Dive into the research topics where Breege V. Howley is active.

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Featured researches published by Breege V. Howley.


Nature Cell Biology | 2017

A regulated PNUTS mRNA to lncRNA splice switch mediates EMT and tumour progression

Simon Grelet; Laura A. Link; Breege V. Howley; Clémence Obellianne; Viswanathan Palanisamy; Vamsi K. Gangaraju; J. Alan Diehl; Philip H. Howe

The contribution of lncRNAs to tumour progression and the regulatory mechanisms driving their expression are areas of intense investigation. Here, we characterize the binding of heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein E1 (hnRNP E1) to a nucleic acid structural element located in exon 12 of PNUTS (also known as PPP1R10) pre-RNA that regulates its alternative splicing. HnRNP E1 release from this structural element, following its silencing, nucleocytoplasmic translocation or in response to TGFβ, allows alternative splicing and generates a non-coding isoform of PNUTS. Functionally the lncRNA-PNUTS serves as a competitive sponge for miR-205 during epithelial–mesenchymal transition (EMT). In mesenchymal breast tumour cells and in breast tumour samples, the expression of lncRNA-PNUTS is elevated and correlates with levels of ZEB mRNAs. Thus, PNUTS is a bifunctional RNA encoding both PNUTS mRNA and lncRNA-PNUTS, each eliciting distinct biological functions. While PNUTS mRNA is ubiquitously expressed, lncRNA-PNUTS appears to be tightly regulated dependent on the status of hnRNP E1 and tumour context.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Establishment of a TGFβ-Induced Post-Transcriptional EMT Gene Signature

George S. Hussey; Laura A. Link; Andrew S. Brown; Breege V. Howley; Arindam Chaudhury; Philip H. Howe

A major challenge in the clinical management of human cancers is to accurately stratify patients according to risk and likelihood of a favorable response. Stratification is confounded by significant phenotypic heterogeneity in some tumor types, often without obvious criteria for subdivision. Despite intensive transcriptional array analyses, the identity and validation of cancer specific ‘signature genes’ remains elusive, partially because the transcriptome does not mirror the proteome. The simplification associated with transcriptomic profiling does not take into consideration changes in the relative expression among transcripts that arise due to post-transcriptional regulatory events. We have previously shown that TGFβ post-transcriptionally regulates epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) by causing increased expression of two transcripts, Dab2 and ILEI, by modulating hnRNP E1 phosphorylation. Using a genome-wide combinatorial approach involving expression profiling and RIP-Chip analysis, we have identified a cohort of translationally regulated mRNAs that are induced during TGFβ-mediated EMT. Coordinated translational regulation by hnRNP E1 constitutes a post-transcriptional regulon inhibiting the expression of related EMT-facilitating genes, thus enabling the cell to rapidly and coordinately regulate multiple EMT-facilitating genes.


Oncogene | 2016

Translational regulation of inhibin |[beta]|A by TGF|[beta]| via the RNA-binding protein hnRNP E1 enhances the invasiveness of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transitioned cells

Breege V. Howley; George S. Hussey; Laura A. Link; Philip H. Howe

The epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) is a cellular process that functions during embryonic development and tissue regeneration, thought to be aberrantly activated in epithelial-derived cancer and has an important role in the process of metastasis. The transforming growth factor (TGF)-β signaling pathway is a key inducer of EMT and we have elucidated a posttranscriptional mechanism by which TGFβ modulates expression of select transcripts via the RNA-binding protein hnRNP E1 during EMT. One such transcript inhibin βA is a member of the TGFβ superfamily. Here, we show by polysome profiling that inhibin βA is translationally regulated by TGFβ via hnRNP E1. TGFβ treatment or knockdown of hnRNP E1 relieves silencing of the inhibin βA transcript, resulting in increased protein expression and secreted levels of the inhibin βA homodimer, activin A. Our data indicate that the translational upregulation of inhibin βA enhances the migration and invasion of cells that have undergone an EMT and promotes cancer progression in vivo.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2017

Membrane-organizing protein moesin controls Treg differentiation and antitumor immunity via TGF- β signaling

Ephraim Ansa-Addo; Yongliang Zhang; Yi Yang; George S. Hussey; Breege V. Howley; Mohammad Salem; Brian Riesenberg; Shaoli Sun; Don C. Rockey; Serhan Karvar; Philip H. Howe; Bei Liu; Zihai Li

Moesin is a member of the ezrin-radixin-moesin (ERM) family of proteins that are important for organizing membrane domains and receptor signaling and regulating the migration of effector T cells. Whether moesin plays any role during the generation of TGF-&bgr;–induced Tregs (iTregs) is unknown. Here, we have discovered that moesin is translationally regulated by TGF-&bgr; and is also required for optimal TGF-&bgr; signaling that promotes efficient development of iTregs. Loss of moesin impaired the development and function of both peripherally derived iTregs and in vitro–induced Tregs. Mechanistically, we identified an interaction between moesin and TGF-&bgr; receptor II (T&bgr;RII) that allows moesin to control the surface abundance and stability of T&bgr;RI and T&bgr;RII. We also found that moesin is required for iTreg conversion in the tumor microenvironment, and the deletion of moesin from recipient mice supported the rapid expansion of adoptively transferred CD8+ T cells against melanoma. Our study establishes moesin as an important regulator of the surface abundance and stability of T&bgr;RII and identifies moesin’s role in facilitating the efficient generation of iTregs. It also provides an advancement to our understanding about the role of the ERM proteins in regulating signal transduction pathways and suggests that modulation of moesin is a potential therapeutic target for Treg-related immune disorders.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Interleukin-like EMT inducer regulates partial phenotype switching in MITF-low melanoma cell lines.

Ken Noguchi; Annamarie C. Dalton; Breege V. Howley; Buckley J. McCall; Akihiro Yoshida; J. Alan Diehl; Philip H. Howe

ILEI (FAM3C) is a secreted factor that contributes to the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT), a cell biological process that confers metastatic properties to a tumor cell. Initially, we found that ILEI mRNA is highly expressed in melanoma metastases but not in primary tumors, suggesting that ILEI contributes to the malignant properties of melanoma. While melanoma is not an epithelial cell-derived tumor and does not undergo a traditional EMT, melanoma undergoes a similar process known as phenotype switching in which high (micropthalmia-related transcription factor) MITF expressing (MITF-high) proliferative cells switch to a low expressing (MITF-low) invasive state. We observed that MITF-high proliferative cells express low levels of ILEI (ILEI-low) and MITF-low invasive cells express high levels of ILEI (ILEI-high). We found that inducing phenotype switching towards the MITF-low invasive state increases ILEI mRNA expression, whereas phenotype switching towards the MITF-high proliferative state decreases ILEI mRNA expression. Next, we used in vitro assays to show that knockdown of ILEI attenuates invasive potential but not MITF expression or chemoresistance. Finally, we used gene expression analysis to show that ILEI regulates several genes involved in the MITF-low invasive phenotype including JARID1B, HIF-2α, and BDNF. Gene set enrichment analysis suggested that ILEI-regulated genes are enriched for JUN signaling, a known regulator of the MITF-low invasive phenotype. In conclusion, we demonstrate that phenotype switching regulates ILEI expression, and that ILEI regulates partial phenotype switching in MITF-low melanoma cell lines.


Molecular Cancer Research | 2016

PCBP1/HNRNP E1 Protects Chromosomal Integrity by Translational Regulation of CDC27

Laura A. Link; Breege V. Howley; George S. Hussey; Philip H. Howe

CDC27 is a core component of the anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C), a multisubunit E3 ubiquitin ligase, whose oscillatory activity is responsible for the metaphase-to-anaphase transition and mitotic exit. Here, in normal murine mammary gland epithelial cells (NMuMG), CDC27 expression is controlled posttranscriptionally through the RNA binding protein poly(rC) binding protein 1 (PCBP1)/heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein E1 (HNRNP E1). shRNA-mediated knockdown of HNRNP E1 abrogates translational silencing of the Cdc27 transcript, resulting in constitutive expression of CDC27. Dysregulated expression of CDC27 leads to premature activation of the G2–M–APC/C–CDC20 complex, resulting in the aberrant degradation of FZR1/CDH1, a cofactor of the G1 and late G2–M–APC/C and a substrate normally reserved for the SCF-βTRCP ligase. Loss of CDH1 expression and of APC/C-CDH1 activity, upon constitutive expression of CDC27, results in mitotic aberrations and aneuploidy in NMuMG cells. Furthermore, tissue microarray of breast cancer patient tumor samples reveals high CDC27 levels compared with nonneoplastic breast tissue and a significant correlation between disease recurrence and CDC27 expression. These results suggest that dysregulation of HNRNP E1-mediated translational regulation of Cdc27 leads to chromosomal instability and aneuploidy and that CDC27 expression represents a significant predictor of breast cancer recurrence. Implications: The RNA-binding protein HNRNP E1 mediates translational regulation of the cell-cycle regulator CDC27 and that dysregulation of CDC27 leads to aneuploidy. In addition, high CDC27 expression in breast cancer patient tumor specimens significantly predicts disease recurrence, suggesting a novel role for CDC27 as a predictor of relapse. Mol Cancer Res; 14(7); 634–46. ©2016 AACR.


Cytokine | 2018

TGF-beta signaling in cancer: post-transcriptional regulation of EMT via hnRNP E1

Breege V. Howley; Philip H. Howe

The TGFβ signaling pathway is a critical regulator of cancer progression in part through induction of the epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT). This process is aberrantly activated in cancer cells, facilitating invasion of the basement membrane, survival in the circulatory system, and dissemination to distant organs. The mechanisms through which epithelial cells transition to a mesenchymal state involve coordinated transcriptional and post-transcriptional control of gene expression. One such mechanism of control is through the RNA binding protein hnRNP E1, which regulates splicing and translation of a cohort of EMT and stemness-associated transcripts. A growing body of evidence indicates a major role for hnRNP E1 in the control of epithelial cell plasticity, especially in the context of carcinoma progression. Here, we review the multiple mechanisms through which hnRNP E1 functions to control EMT and metastatic progression.


Oncogene | 2018

A CREB3-regulated ER–Golgi trafficking signature promotes metastatic progression in breast cancer

Breege V. Howley; Laura A. Link; Simon Grelet; Maya El-Sabban; Philip H. Howe

In order to better understand the process of breast cancer metastasis, we have generated a mammary epithelial progression series of increasingly aggressive cell lines that metastasize to lung. Here we demonstrate that upregulation of an endoplasmic reticulum (ER) to Golgi trafficking gene signature in metastatic cells enhances transport kinetics, which promotes malignant progression. We observe increased ER–Golgi trafficking, an altered secretome and sensitivity to the retrograde transport inhibitor brefeldin A (BFA) in cells that metastasize to lung. CREB3 was identified as a transcriptional regulator of upregulated ER–Golgi trafficking genes ARF4, COPB1, and USO1, and silencing of these genes attenuated the metastatic phenotype in vitro and lung colonization in vivo. Furthermore, high trafficking gene expression significantly correlated with increased risk of distant metastasis and reduced relapse-free and overall survival in breast cancer patients, suggesting that modulation of ER–Golgi trafficking plays an important role in metastatic progression.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2018

Interleukin-like EMT inducer (ILEI) promotes melanoma invasiveness and is transcriptionally up- regulated by upstream stimulatory factor-1 (USF-1)

Ken Noguchi; Toros Dincman; Annamarie C. Dalton; Breege V. Howley; Buckley J. McCall; Bidyut K. Mohanty; Philip H. Howe

Interleukin-like EMT inducer (ILEI, FAM3C) is a secreted factor that contributes to the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT), a cell-biological process that confers metastatic properties to a tumor cell. However, very little is known about how ILEI is regulated. Here we demonstrate that ILEI is an in vivo regulator of melanoma invasiveness and is transcriptionally up-regulated by the upstream stimulatory factor-1 (USF-1), an E-box–binding, basic-helix-loop-helix family transcription factor. shRNA-mediated knockdown of ILEI in melanoma cell lines attenuated lung colonization but not primary tumor formation. We also identified the mechanism underlying ILEI transcriptional regulation, which was through a direct interaction of USF-1 with the ILEI promoter. Of note, stimulation of endogenous USF-1 by UV-mediated activation increased ILEI expression, whereas shRNA-mediated USF-1 knockdown decreased ILEI gene transcription. Finally, we report that knocking down USF-1 decreases tumor cell migration. In summary, our work reveals that ILEI contributes to melanoma cell invasiveness in vivo without affecting primary tumor growth and is transcriptionally up-regulated by USF-1.


Nature Communications | 2017

Fbxo4-mediated degradation of Fxr1 suppresses tumorigenesis in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma

Shuo Qie; Mrinmoyee Majumder; Katarzyna Mackiewicz; Breege V. Howley; Yuri K. Peterson; Philip H. Howe; Viswanathan Palanisamy; J. Alan Diehl

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Philip H. Howe

Medical University of South Carolina

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J. Alan Diehl

Medical University of South Carolina

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Annamarie C. Dalton

Medical University of South Carolina

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Buckley J. McCall

Medical University of South Carolina

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Ken Noguchi

Medical University of South Carolina

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Simon Grelet

Medical University of South Carolina

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Viswanathan Palanisamy

Medical University of South Carolina

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Akihiro Yoshida

Medical University of South Carolina

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