PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

Nitric oxide synthase and breast cancer: role of TIMP-1 in NO-mediated Akt activation.

  • Lisa A Ridnour,
  • Kimberly M Barasch,
  • Alisha N Windhausen,
  • Tiffany H Dorsey,
  • Michael M Lizardo,
  • Harris G Yfantis,
  • Dong H Lee,
  • Christopher H Switzer,
  • Robert Y S Cheng,
  • Julie L Heinecke,
  • Ernst Brueggemann,
  • Harry B Hines,
  • Chand Khanna,
  • Sharon A Glynn,
  • Stefan Ambs,
  • David A Wink

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0044081
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 9
p. e44081

Abstract

Read online

Prediction of therapeutic response and cancer patient survival can be improved by the identification of molecular markers including tumor Akt status. A direct correlation between NOS2 expression and elevated Akt phosphorylation status has been observed in breast tumors. Tissue inhibitor matrix metalloproteinase-1 (TIMP-1) has been proposed to exert oncogenic properties through CD63 cell surface receptor pathway initiation of pro-survival PI3k/Akt signaling. We employed immunohistochemistry to examine the influence of TIMP-1 on the functional relationship between NOS2 and phosphorylated Akt in breast tumors and found that NOS2-associated Akt phosphorylation was significantly increased in tumors expressing high TIMP-1, indicating that TIMP-1 may further enhance NO-induced Akt pathway activation. Moreover, TIMP-1 silencing by antisense technology blocked NO-induced PI3k/Akt/BAD phosphorylation in cultured MDA-MB-231 human breast cancer cells. TIMP-1 protein nitration and TIMP-1/CD63 co-immunoprecipitation was observed at NO concentrations that induced PI3k/Akt/BAD pro-survival signaling. In the survival analysis, elevated tumor TIMP-1 predicted poor patient survival. This association appears to be mainly restricted to tumors with high NOS2 protein. In contrast, TIMP-1 did not predict poor survival in patient tumors with low NOS2 expression. In summary, our findings suggest that tumors with high TIMP-1 and NOS2 behave more aggressively by mechanisms that favor Akt pathway activation.