Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Sharon Prince is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Sharon Prince.


Cancer Research | 2004

Tbx2 Directly Represses the Expression of the p21 WAF1 Cyclin-Dependent Kinase Inhibitor

Sharon Prince; Suzanne Carreira; Keith W. Vance; Amaal Abrahams; Colin R. Goding

T-box factors play a crucial role in the development of many tissues, and mutations in T-box factor genes have been implicated in multiple human disorders. Some T-box factors have been implicated in cancer; for example, Tbx2 and Tbx3 can suppress replicative senescence, whereas Tbx3 can cooperate with Myc and Ras in cellular transformation. The p21WAF1 cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor plays a key role in senescence and in cell cycle arrest after DNA damage. Here, using a combination of in vitro DNA-binding, transfection, and chromatin immunoprecipitation assays, we show that Tbx2 can bind and repress the p21 promoter in vitro and in vivo. Moreover, small interfering RNA-mediated down-regulation of Tbx2 expression results in a robust activation of p21 expression. Taken together, these results implicate Tbx2 as a novel direct regulator of p21 expression and have implications for our understanding of the role of T-box factors in the regulation of senescence and oncogenesis, as well as in development.


Genes & Cancer | 2010

The Highly Homologous T-Box Transcription Factors, TBX2 and TBX3, Have Distinct Roles in the Oncogenic Process

Jade Peres; Emily Davis; Shaheen Mowla; Dorothy C. Bennett; Jarod Li; Sabina Wansleben; Sharon Prince

The T-box transcription factors TBX2 and TBX3 are overexpressed in several cancers and are able to bypass senescence by repressing ARF and p21(WAF1/CIP1/SDII). Although these studies suggest that they may both contribute to the oncogenic process by repressing common targets, whether they have redundant or distinct roles in cancers where they are both overexpressed remains to be elucidated. Importantly, when Tbx2 function is inhibited in melanoma cells lacking Tbx3, the cells senesce, but whether this is possible in melanoma cells overexpressing both proteins is not known. An understanding of this issue may have important implications for the design of an effective pro-senescence therapy. In this study, the authors used a sh-RNA approach to knock down TBX2 and TBX3 individually in 2 human melanoma cell lines that overexpress both these factors and then examined their specific involvement in the oncogenic process. They demonstrate, using in vitro and in vivo cell proliferation, as well as colony- and tumor-forming ability and cell motility assays, that TBX2 and TBX3 have distinct roles in melanoma progression. In the tested lines, although TBX2 could promote proliferation and transformation and was required by primary melanoma cells for immortality, TBX3 was required for tumor formation and cell migration. These findings were reproducible in a human breast cancer cell line, which confirms that TBX2 and TBX3, although highly homologous, do not have redundant roles in the transformation process of cancers where they are both overexpressed. These results have important implications for the development of new cancer treatments and in particular for melanoma, which is a highly aggressive and intractable cancer.


Iubmb Life | 2009

The T-box transcription factor Tbx2: its role in development and possible implication in cancer.

Amaal Abrahams; M. Iqbal Parker; Sharon Prince

Tbx2 is a member of the T‐box family of transcription factors that are crucial in embryonic development. Recent studies suggest that T‐box factors may also play a role in controlling cell cycle progression and in the genesis of cancer. Tbx2 has been implicated in several developmental processes such as coordinating cell fate, patterning and morphogenesis of a wide range of tissues and organs including limbs, kidneys, lungs, mammary glands, heart, and craniofacial structures. Importantly, Tbx2 is overexpressed in several cancers including melanoma, small cell lung carcinoma, breast, pancreatic, liver, and bladder cancers and can suppress senescence, a cellular process, which serves as a barrier to cancer development. This review presents a state of the art overview of the role and regulation of Tbx2 in early embryonic development and in cancer.


Annals of Human Genetics | 2013

Polymorphisms within the COL5A1 3′-UTR That Alters mRNA Structure and the MIR608 Gene are Associated with Achilles Tendinopathy

Yoonus Abrahams; Mary-Jessica Laguette; Sharon Prince; Malcolm Collins

COL5A1 encodes for the α1 chain of type V collagen, an important regulator of fibril assembly in tendons, ligaments and other connective tissues. A polymorphism (rs12722) within the functional COL5A1 3′‐untranslated region (UTR) has been shown to associate with chronic Achilles tendinopathy and other exercise‐related phenotypes. The COL5A1 3′‐UTR contains several putative cis‐acting elements including a functional Hsa‐miR‐608 binding site. The aim of this study was to determine whether previously uncharacterized polymorphisms within a functional region of the COL5A1 3′‐UTR or the MIR608 gene are associated with chronic Achilles tendinopathy. The effect of these COL5A1 3′‐UTR polymorphisms on the 3′‐UTR predicted mRNA secondary structure was also investigated. One hundred and sixty Caucasian chronic Achilles tendinopathic and 342 control participants were genotyped for the COL5A1 3′‐UTR markers rs71746744, rs16399 and rs1134170, as well as marker rs4919510 within MIR608. All four genetic markers were independently associated with chronic Achilles tendinopathy. The COL5A1 polymorphisms appear to alter the predicted secondary structure of the 3′‐UTR. We propose that the secondary structure plays a role in the regulation of the COL5A1 mRNA stability and by implication type V collagen production.


Oncogene | 2008

Ectopic Tbx2 expression results in polyploidy and cisplatin resistance

Emily Davis; Huajian Teng; Bilada Bilican; M I Parker; Baoguo Liu; S Carriera; Colin R. Goding; Sharon Prince

T-box factors play critical roles in embryonic development and have been implicated in cell cycle regulation and cancer. For example, Tbx2 can suppress senescence through a mechanism involving the repression of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors, p19ARF and p21WAF1/CIP1/SDII, and the Tbx2 gene is deregulated in melanoma, breast and pancreatic cancers. In this study, several transformed human lung fibroblast cell lines were shown to downregulate Tbx2. To further investigate the role of Tbx2 in oncogenesis we therefore stably reexpressed Tbx2 in one such cell line. Compared to their parental cells, the resulting Tbx2-expressing cells are larger, with binucleate and lobular nuclei containing double the number of chromosomes. Moreover, these cells had an increase in frequency of several features of genomic instability such as chromosome missegregation, chromosomal rearrangements and polyploidy. While grossly abnormal, these cells still divide and give rise to cells that are resistant to the chemotherapeutic drug cisplatin. Furthermore, this is shown to be neither species nor cell type dependent, as ectopically expressing Tbx2 in a murine melanoma cell line also induce mitotic defects and polyploidy. These results have important implications for our understanding of the role of Tbx2 in tumorigenesis because polyploidy frequently precedes aneuploidy, which is associated with high malignancy and poor prognosis.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

UV-mediated regulation of the anti-senescence factor TBX2

Amaal Abrahams; Shaheen Mowla; M. Iqbal Parker; Colin R. Goding; Sharon Prince

Several lines of evidence have implicated members of the developmentally important T-box gene family in cell cycle regulation and in cancer. Importantly, the highly related T-box factors Tbx2 and Tbx3 can suppress senescence through repressing the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors p19ARF and p21WAF1/CIP1/SDII. Furthermore, Tbx2 is up-regulated in several cancers, including melanomas where it was shown to function as an anti-senescence factor, suggesting that this may be one of the mechanisms by which T-box proteins contribute to the oncogenic process. However, very little is known about whether Tbx2 is regulated by p21-mediated stress-induced senescence signaling pathways. In this study, using the MCF-7 breast cancer cell line known to overexpress Tbx2, we show that in response to stress induced by ultraviolet irradiation the Tbx2 protein is specifically phosphorylated by the p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase. Using site-directed mutagenesis and in vitro kinase assays, we have identified serine residues 336, 623, and 675 in the Tbx2 protein as the p38 target sites and show that these sites are phosphorylated in vivo. Importantly, we show by Western blotting, immunofluorescence, and reporter assays that this phosphorylation leads to increased Tbx2 protein levels, predominant nuclear localization of the protein, and an increase in the ability of Tbx2 to repress the p21WAF1/CIP1/SDII promoter. These results show for the first time that the ability of Tbx2 to repress the p21 gene is enhanced in response to a stress-induced senescence pathway, which leads to a better understanding of the regulation of the anti-senescence function of Tbx2.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2013

The oncogenic TBX3 is a downstream target and mediator of the TGF-β1 signaling pathway

Jarod Li; Marc S. Weinberg; Luiz F. Zerbini; Sharon Prince

Overexpression of the developmentally important T-box transcription factor TBX3 inhibits proliferation but promotes the migration of epithelial cells. TBX3 is transcriptionally up-regulated by the TGF-β1 signaling pathway in a Smad3/4- and JunB-dependent manner and is a key mediator of the antiproliferative and promigratory roles of TGF-β1.


Biochemical Journal | 2011

PMA-induced up-regulation of TBX3 is mediated by AP-1 and contributes to breast cancer cell migration

Shaheen Mowla; Romaney Pinnock; Virna D. Leaner; Colin R. Goding; Sharon Prince

The T-box transcription factor TBX3 provides an important link between embryonic development and cancer. TBX3 mediates limb, mammary gland and heart development and, in humans, mutations resulting in haplo-insufficiency of TBX3 lead to ulnar-mammary syndrome. Importantly, the de-regulation of TBX3 gene expression has been linked to several cancers, where it acts to suppress senescence and promotes proliferation and tumour invasion. Despite the negative impact of de-regulated TBX3 expression as seen by developmental defects and cancer, surprisingly little is known about the regulation of the TBX3 gene. In the present paper, we show that the phorbol ester PMA increases TBX3 protein and mRNA levels in a protein kinase C-dependent manner via the AP-1 (activator protein 1) transcription factors c-Jun and JunB. Furthermore, these AP-1 factors are shown to mediate the activation of the TBX3 gene by binding a non-consensus PMA-response element in the TBX3 promoter in vitro and in vivo. We also demonstrate that TBX3 contributes to the PMA-induced migration previously observed for the MCF-7 breast epithelium cancer cell line. Our present results reveal a previously unidentified pathway that up-regulates TBX3 expression and provides additional evidence that increased levels of TBX3 contribute to metastasis.


Genes and Immunity | 2010

A functional SNP in the regulatory region of the decay-accelerating factor gene associates with extraocular muscle pareses in myasthenia gravis

Jeannine M. Heckmann; H Uwimpuhwe; R Ballo; Mandeep Kaur; Vladimir B. Bajic; Sharon Prince

Complement activation in myasthenia gravis (MG) may damage muscle endplate and complement regulatory proteins such as decay-accelerating factor (DAF) or CD55 may be protective. We hypothesize that the increased prevalence of severe extraocular muscle (EOM) dysfunction among African MG subjects reported earlier may result from altered DAF expression. To test this hypothesis, we screened the DAF gene sequences relevant to the classical complement pathway and found an association between myasthenics with EOM paresis and the DAF regulatory region c.-198C>G SNP (odds ratio=8.6; P=0.0003). This single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) results in a twofold activation of a DAF 5′-flanking region luciferase reporter transfected into three different cell lines. Direct matching of the surrounding SNP sequence within the DAF regulatory region with the known transcription factor-binding sites suggests a loss of an Sp1-binding site. This was supported by the observation that the c.-198C>G SNP did not show the normal lipopolysaccharide-induced DAF transcriptional upregulation in lymphoblasts from four patients. Our findings suggest that at critical periods during autoimmune MG, this SNP may result in inadequate DAF upregulation with consequent complement-mediated EOM damage. Susceptible individuals may benefit from anti-complement therapy in addition to immunosuppression.


Molecular Cancer | 2013

The T-box transcription factor, TBX3, is sufficient to promote melanoma formation and invasion

Jade Peres; Sharon Prince

The T-box transcription factor, TBX3, is overexpressed in several cancers and has been proposed as a chemotherapeutic target. Several lines of evidence suggest that TBX3 may be a key contributor to malignant melanoma, a highly aggressive and intractable disease. Using in vitro and in vivo assays we demonstrate here for the first time that overexpressing TBX3 in non-tumourigenic early stage melanoma cells is sufficient to promote tumour formation and invasion. Furthermore, we show that TBX3 may play an important role as a reciprocal switch between substrate dependent cell proliferation and tumour invasion.

Collaboration


Dive into the Sharon Prince's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jade Peres

University of Cape Town

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Colin R. Goding

Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Emily Davis

University of Cape Town

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Huajian Teng

University of Cape Town

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Serah Kimani

University of Cape Town

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge