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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2005
September
Researchers zero in on estrogen's
role in breast-cancer cell growth
Jim Barlow,
Life Sciences Editor
217-333-5802; jebarlow@uiuc.edu
9/8/05
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by Kwame Ross |
| Jonna
Frasor, a postdoctoral researcher, left, and
Benita
S. Katzenellenbogen, a Swanlund Professor of Cell
and Developmental Biology, report that human breast-cancer
cells exposed to estrogen in their laboratory showed
a dramatic reduction in numbers of a crucial nuclear
receptor corepressor, a protein known as N-CoR. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
— Why do estrogen dependent breast-cancer cells grow and spread
rapidly? Researchers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
say it may be because estrogen virtually eliminates levels of a vitally
important regulatory protein.
In a paper that will appear in the Sept. 13 issue of the Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences, the scientists report that human
breast-cancer cells exposed to estrogen in their laboratory showed a
dramatic reduction in numbers of a crucial nuclear receptor corepressor,
a protein known as N-CoR (pronounced “en CORE”). They also
found that the anti-estrogen drug tamoxifen, often used in breast-cancer
treatments, encouraged N-CoR recovery, a beneficial activity. The paper
was published online last week.
“Because estrogen has the ability to reduce the levels of N-CoR,
estrogen then can promote the proliferation and progression of breast
cancer, because the balance of co-activators and co-repressors involved
in normal gene transcription is altered,” said Benita S. Katzenellenbogen,
a Swanlund
Professor of Cell and Developmental Biology at Illinois. She also
is a professor of molecular
and integrative physiology.
The findings may have sweeping implications, said Katzenellenbogen and
lead author Jonna Frasor, a postdoctoral researcher who joins the faculty
of the department of physiology and biophysics in the U. of I. College
of Medicine at Chicago this month.
For one, the mechanisms at play could explain at least some of the mixed
results seen in women using estrogen and progesterone in hormone therapy,
said Katzenellenbogen, who also is a professor in the U. of I. College
of Medicine at Urbana-Champaign.
While numbers of N-CoR proteins fell to 20 percent of normal, the level
of N-CoR’s messenger RNA went untouched.
The reduction of N-CoR followed an up regulation of the ubiquitin ligase
Siah2, an enzyme that targets certain proteins for degradation, Frasor
said.
“Here we had an effect on the level of the N-CoR protein without
affecting the level of N-CoR mRNA,” Katzenellenbogen said. “This
is the result of the initial effect of estrogen on gene expression,
which was to up regulate the mRNA levels for a ubiquitin ligase. So
by changing the level of this ligase, it had a dramatic effect on the
level of N-CoR protein without affecting gene expression for N-CoR itself.
This “secondary effect” may have broad implications for
other important cellular activities, the researchers theorize. Reductions
in N-CoR over time also could promote cancer development in other sites,
such as the uterus, and could adversely affect the desired activities
of vitamin D, retinoid and thyroid receptors, Katzenellenbogen said.
The study sheds light on the impact of estrogen on certain cells, as
well as how tamoxifen works as an anti-estrogen to facilitate recovery
of N-CoR, she and Frasor said.
“Eventually,” Katzenellenbogen said, “understanding
more of the mechanisms involved could lead to the development of other
related agents that might reduce some of the unwanted side effects of
tamoxifen, such as stimulation of the uterus.”
In addition to Katzenellenbogen and Frasor, Jeanne M. Danes, a researcher
in the department of molecular and integrative physiology, and doctoral
student Cory C. Funk were co-authors of the study.
The National Institutes of Health and the Breast Cancer Research Foundation
funded the research.
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