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Genetic Ablation of the Fatty Acid–Binding Protein FABP5 Suppresses HER2-Induced Mammary Tumorigenesis

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TLDR
It is established that FABP5 is critical for mammary tumor development, rationalizing the development of FABp5 inhibitors as novel anticarcinogenic drugs.
Abstract
The fatty acid binding protein FABP5 shuttles ligands from the cytosol to the nuclear receptor PPARβ/δ (encoded for by Pparδ), thereby enhancing the transcriptional activity of the receptor. This FABP5/PPARδ pathway is critical for induction of proliferation of breast carcinoma cells by activated EGFR. In this study, we show that FABP5 is highly upregulated in human breast cancers and we provide genetic evidence of the pathophysiological significance of FABP5 in mammary tumorigenesis. Ectopic expression of FABP5 was found to be oncogenic in 3T3 fibroblasts where it augmented the ability of PPARδ to enhance cell proliferation, migration and invasion. To determine whether FABP5 was essential for EGFR-induced mammary tumor growth, we interbred FABP5-null mice with MMTV-ErbB2/HER2 oncomice which spontaneously develop mammary tumors. FABP5 ablation relieved activation of EGFR downstream effector signals, decreased expression of PPARδ target genes that drive cell proliferation, and suppressed mammary tumor development. Our findings establish that FABP5 is critical for mammary tumor development, rationalizing the development of FABP5 inhibitors as novel anticarcinogenic drugs.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The assembly of lipid droplets and their roles in challenged cells

TL;DR: The role of droplets in viral and microbial invasion will be presented, where an unresolved issue is whether changes in droplet abundance promote the invader, defend the host, to try to do both.
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Arylfluorosulfates Inactivate Intracellular Lipid Binding Protein(s) through Chemoselective SuFEx Reaction with a Binding Site Tyr Residue

TL;DR: It is discovered that simple hydrophobic arylfluorosulfates selectively react with a few members of the intracellular lipid binding protein (iLBP) family and can selectively target single iLBPs, making them useful for understanding iLBP function.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cellular retinoid binding-proteins, CRBP, CRABP, FABP5: effects on retinoid metabolism, function and related diseases

TL;DR: Michaelis-Menten and other kinetic approaches verify that BP channel retinoids to select enzymes and receptors by protein-protein interactions, and the extent of BP interactions with retinoid metabolon enzymes and their impact onretinoid physiology remains incompletely understood.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fatty acid binding proteins: tissue-specific functions in health and disease.

TL;DR: Increasing evidence supports the role of FABPs as important controllers of global metabolism, with their dysregulation being linked to a host of metabolic diseases.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fatty acid metabolism in breast cancer subtypes.

TL;DR: Based on mRNA expression data, the less aggressive luminal subtypes appear to rely on a balance between de novo fatty acid synthesis and oxidation as sources for both biomass and energy requirements, while basal-like, receptor negative subtypes overexpress genes involved in the utilization of exogenous fatty acids.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors: nuclear control of metabolism.

TL;DR: This work has shown that direct expression of PPAR mRNAs in the absence of a specific carrier gene results in down-regulation in the activity of other PPARs, and these properties are consistent with those of a “spatially aggregating substance”.
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Expression of the neu protooncogene in the mammary epithelium of transgenic mice induces metastatic disease

TL;DR: Overexpression of the unactivated neu protein can induce metastatic disease after long latency and is associated with elevated neu intrinsic tyrosine kinase activity and the de novo tyrosinesine phosphorylation of several cellular proteins.
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Single-step induction of mammary adenocarcinoma in transgenic mice bearing the activated c-neu oncogene

TL;DR: The results indicate that the combination of activated oncogene and tissue context are major determinants of malignant progression and that expression of the activated form of c-neu in the mammary epithelium has particularly deleterious consequences.
Journal ArticleDOI

The epidermal growth factor receptor family as a central element for cellular signal transduction and diversification.

TL;DR: A broad overview of signal transduction networks that are controlled by the EGFR superfamily of receptors in health and disease and its application for target-selective therapeutic intervention is given.
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