Description
It has been shown that retinoic acid (RA) can both inhibit and promote cancer cell growth, but the basis of this paradox is still not clear. The action of RA is mainly mediated by RA receptors (RARs), which classically function as ligand-activated transcription factors. Upon binding to the RA receptor alpha (RARA), RA modulates the transcription of several RA-target genes involved in multiple cellular processes, including cell proliferation. We have found that functional inhibition of RARA transcriptional function by stable expression of a RARA dominant negative (RARA403) converts T47D breast cancer cells from growth-inhibited to growth-promoted by supraphysiological RA (Ren et al., MCB, 2005, PMID:16287870; Somenzi et al., PloS ONE, 2007, PMID:17786207). We hypothesized that RA-induced cell growth requires both the activation of RA-responsive tumor-promoting signalings and lack of activation of RA-responsive tumor suppressor signalings. To identify these signalings, we analyzed the transcriptional response to RA in our model of the RA paradox by using gene expression microarrays.