Abstract
Septins comprise a conserved family of GTPase proteins. Of these, human SEPT9 has been widely implicated in cancers of epithelial origin, including breast cancer, as well as leukemia. In a previous issue of Breast Cancer Research, Connolly and colleagues present compelling data further supporting a role for SEPT9 isoforms in early breast cancer development as well as evidence suggesting that cellular localization patterns of SEPT9 isoforms may contribute to oncogenesis.
Connolly and colleagues [1] help substantiate that septins, proteins proven critical for normal cell division [2], are relevant to cancer. The 13 septin loci identified in humans [3] have been associated with important cellular functions, from angiogenesis to vesicular trafficking, and a wide variety of human diseases, from cancer to neurological conditions (reviewed in [4-6]). SEPT9 was identified as a myeloid/lymphoid leukemia (MLL) fusion partner in leukemia [7] and cloned from a region of allelic imbalance in breast and ovarian cancers [8,9]. The SEPT9 locus is complex. It encodes at least five different protein isoforms that form oligomeric complexes with other septins [10,11]. SEPT9 isoforms share core domains, including a GTPase domain with a putative nuclear localization signal, but differ at the amino and carboxyl termini (reviewed in [3,4]). Altered expression of SEPT9 and its variant isoforms have been implicated in breast, ovarian, prostate, colon, and head and neck cancers [5,12-16] whereas SEPT9 mutations have been associated with hereditary neuralgic amyotrophy [17]. SEPT9 research has focused on differential expression levels of SEPT9 in malignant and non-malignant cells, cellular responses to differing expression of SEPT9 isoforms, and characterization of interacting proteins, including other septins, and associated molecular pathways, such as hypoxia inducibe factor-1 alpha and JNK signaling [14,18,19]. SEPT9_i1, an isoform implicated as an oncogene [12-14], differs by 25 unique amino-terminus amino acids, including an additional nuclear localization signal. High ectopic SEPT9_i1 expression in immortalized human mammary epithelial cells leads to oncogenic phenotypes and increased SEPT9_i1 nuclear localization [12]. Knock-down of SEPT9_i1 expression in cancer cells normalizes oncogenic phenotypes [12,18]. High SEPT9 expression also leads to cytokinesis and chromosome segregation defects [20-22].
Connolly and colleagues [1] present compelling evidence confirming SEPT9 amplification and high SEPT9 expression in breast cancer cells [12,23]. They found increased Sept9 levels in hyperplastic and malignant stages. They noted SEPT9_i1, as well as SEPT9 _i3, _i4, and _i5, increased cell migration in MCF7 cells, substantiating a potential role for SEPT9_i1 and other SEPT9 isoforms as putative oncogenes in breast cancer. Mechanisms regulating SEPT9 isoform expression and contributing to tumorigenesis remain unclear. They did find that SEPT9_i3 has a unique promoter that is hypermethylated in many breast cancer cells [1]. While overall SEPT9 and SEPT9_i1 expression was often high in cancer cells, SEPT9_i3 expression was often low. In some breast cancer cell lines, however, SEPT9_i3 promoter hypo-methylation with high SEPT9_i3 expression was noted and green fluorescent protein (GFP)-SEPT9_i3 expression in MCF7 cells increased migration [1]. Thus, the role of SEPT9_i3 promoter methylation in breast cancer remains unclear but hypermethylation and decreased SEPT9 expression has been reported in colon cancer and head and neck cancer [15,16,24]. More recent data in head and neck cancer, however, suggest high SEPT9 and SEPT9_i1 expression is associated with later cancer stages and poor outcomes, supporting oncogenic roles [13]. Given SEPT9 isoforms interact in oligomeric complexes, it is plausible that altered ratios of SEPT9 isoforms, where high levels of one, such as SEPT9_i1, and low levels of another, such as SEPT9_i3, may be important in tumorigenesis. Further studies are required to determine if changes in interactions between septin isoforms can impact tumorigenesis.
Previous studies suggest that SEPT9 is generally cytoplasmic, often as filamentous structures, or within contractile rings of dividing cells. Di use cytoplasmic localization and nuclear localization have also been observed [12,20]. Connolly and colleagues provide novel, intriguing evidence that cellular localization of SEPT9 isoforms may be relevant to cancer [1]. They found characteristic cytoplasmic SEPT9 staining in all cells as well as nucleolus localization in human and murine luminal breast epithelial cells. Nuclear localization was lost in more advanced tumor cells. They also noted differences in the organization of SEPT9 filaments in the nucleus and cytoplasm when different GFP-SEPT9 isoforms were expressed in MCF7 cells. While functional roles of septins can be associated with their cytoplasmic localization, the role of SEPT9 isoforms in the nucleus is less clear, although SEPT9_i1 stabilization of JNK may be a nuclear associated function [19]. Previous studies postulated increased SEPT9 nuclear localization in breast cancer [12], but immortalized cells may not mimic physiologic conditions in mammary glands. Specific antibodies used and fixation methods employed may also contribute to differing results of localization studies. Thus, additional studies to examine cellular localization of SEPT9 and the impact this has on cellular functions and cancer progression are needed. Future studies of live primary cells using GFP-tagged SEPT9 constructs may be informative.
Conclusion
The work by Connolly and colleagues [1] provides additional significant support for the roles of SEPT9 isoforms in cancer. Importantly, their studies in human breast tissue microarrays and cells from a mouse model of breast cancer support early SEPT9 involvement in mammary tumorigenesis. Furthermore, they provide evidence that suggests that cellular localization of SEPT9 isoforms may be important in cancer development. Many unanswered questions remain regarding the clinical relevance of SEPT9 expression patterns in breast cancer and about the molecular mechanisms by which SEPT9 isoforms contribute to the pathogenesis of cancer. Further correlation of tissue expression with clinicopathological variables is essential to help determine clinical relevance to breast cancer. Additional functional studies of SEPT9 isoforms are required to begin under-standing molecular mechanisms important in normal cellular functions, mammary gland development, and the pathogenesis of breast cancer. A better understanding of the cellular functions and clinical correlations of SEPT9 isoforms relevant to cancer could provide valuable insights into future diagnostic, prognostic and therapeutic strategies important in the management of breast cancer. For now, the intriguing findings of Connelly and colleagues [1], as well as other published findings implicating SEPT9 in cancer, translate into a compelling rationale for more intensive studies of septins in cancer.
Abbreviations
GFP: green fluorescent protein.
Competing interests
The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
See related research by Connolly et al., http://breast-cancer-research.com/content/13/4/R76
Contributor Information
Laura Stanbery, Email: nejedlik@umich.edu.
Elizabeth M Petty, Email: epetty@umich.edu.
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