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The role of iron in the regulation of proteins connected with tamoxifen-resistance
Potomová, Petra ; Truksa, Jaroslav (advisor) ; Balušíková, Kamila (referee)
Cancer cells are highly dependent on nutrient uptake to sustain their increased proliferation, one of these nutrients being iron. In recent years, a heightened dependency on iron was observed in cancer cells, allowing for the proper function of numerous enzymes, DNA synthesis and mitochondrial respiration. Here, we further delve into the iron metabolism of malignant cells, attempting to understand the differences between tamoxifen-sensitive and resistant (Tam5R) ones using two breast cancer cell lines of luminal A origin, MCF7 and T47D. These cells show numerous changes in iron homeostasis and iron-dependent mechanisms. Based on alterations in proteomes of Tam5R cell lines, we focused on iron regulation of proteins that are deregulated in tamoxifen resistance - assessing their regulation on transcriptional (mRNA) and post-transcriptional level (protein) as well as comparing their responsiveness to their sensitive parental cell line. We assessed two main types of regulation - iron-responsive element interaction with iron-regulatory proteins (IRE-IRP pathway) and tristetraprolin (TTP) driven mRNA degradation via AU-rich elements (ARE). Using iron loading and chelation, we challenged the cells - confirming the known IRE-IRP regulation of ferritin heavy chain (FTH), transferrin receptor 1 (TfR1),...

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