Literature DB >> 11391860

Antagonism of oestrogen action in human breast and endometrial cells in vitro: potential novel antitumour agents.

M E Nuttall1, I Pendrak, J G Emery, D P Nadeau, P W Fisher, T A Nicholson, Y Zhu, L J Suva, W D Kingsbury, M Gowen.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: There is a need to find novel oestrogen receptor (ER) ligands that antagonize oestrogen action in the reproductive tissues and would therefore have therapeutic potential in oestrogen-dependent tumours. We tested novel ER ligands in both breast and endometrial cells to profile agonism/antagonism in these oestrogen target reproductive tissues.
METHODS: Novel analogues of the ER antagonist ICI 182,780 were synthesized and tested for their ability to inhibit gene expression dependent on oestrogen response elements (ERE) in human breast (MCF-7) and endometrial (Ishikawa) cell lines. This activity was correlated with inhibition of oestrogen-induced cell proliferation and ER binding.
RESULTS: The sulphide analogue (compound 1) and sulphone analogue (compound 2) had no intrinsic ERE-dependent agonism in either breast cancer or endometrial cells in culture. All three compounds dose-dependently inhibited ERE-mediated oestrogen agonism. Moreover, these ER ligands inhibited oestrogen-stimulated proliferation of breast cancer and endometrial cells. ICI 182,780, compound 1 and compound 2 were all able to bind both isoforms of the ER (ER alpha and ER beta). In endometrial cells, the relative binding to ER beta correlated with the ERE-dependent antioestrogenic effect of these ligands, suggesting that in this tissue this receptor is the predominant isoform that determines antioestrogenic activity.
CONCLUSIONS: The ability of these analogues of ICI 182,780 to inhibit oestrogen-stimulated transcriptional activity and cell proliferation suggests that these agents, in particular the sulphone analogue, have therapeutic potential in the treatment of breast cancer without exhibiting the unwanted oestrogenic effects in the endometrium.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11391860     DOI: 10.1007/s002800000259

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancer Chemother Pharmacol        ISSN: 0344-5704            Impact factor:   3.333


  4 in total

Review 1.  Fulvestrant: a review of its use in hormone receptor-positive metastatic breast cancer in postmenopausal women with disease progression following antiestrogen therapy.

Authors:  Kate McKeage; Monique P Curran; Greg L Plosker
Journal:  Drugs       Date:  2004       Impact factor: 9.546

Review 2.  Estrogen deficiency - a central paradigm in age-related impaired healing?

Authors:  Mohamed El Mohtadi; Kathryn Whitehead; Nina Dempsey-Hibbert; Amina Belboul; Jason Ashworth
Journal:  EXCLI J       Date:  2021-01-11       Impact factor: 4.068

3.  Ulipristal acetate simultaneously provokes antiproliferative and proinflammatory responses in endometrial cancer cells.

Authors:  Ranka Kanda; Yuko Miyagawa; Osamu Wada-Hiraike; Haruko Hiraike; Kazunori Nagasaka; Eiji Ryo; Tomoyuki Fujii; Yutaka Osuga; Takuya Ayabe
Journal:  Heliyon       Date:  2021-12-29

4.  PSA Decrease with Fulvestrant Acetate in a Hormone-Resistant Metastatic Prostate Cancer Patient: A Case Report.

Authors:  Joan Manel Gasent Blesa; Vicente Alberola Candel
Journal:  Case Rep Oncol       Date:  2009-04-25
  4 in total

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