Literature DB >> 25178713

Increased androgen receptor activity and cell proliferation in aromatase inhibitor-resistant breast carcinoma.

Rika Fujii1, Toru Hanamura2, Takashi Suzuki3, Tatsuyuki Gohno2, Yukiko Shibahara4, Toshifumi Niwa2, Yuri Yamaguchi5, Koji Ohnuki6, Yoichiro Kakugawa7, Hisashi Hirakawa8, Takanori Ishida9, Hironobu Sasano4, Noriaki Ohuchi9, Shin-ichi Hayashi10.   

Abstract

Aromatase inhibitors (AI) are commonly used to treat postmenopausal estrogen-receptor (ER)-positive breast carcinoma. However, resistance to AI is sometimes acquired, and the molecular mechanisms underlying such resistance are largely unclear. Recent studies suggest that AI treatment increases androgen activity during estrogen deprivation in breast carcinoma, but the role of the androgen receptor (AR) in breast carcinoma is still a matter of controversy. The purpose of this study is to examine the potential correlation between the AR- and AI-resistant breast carcinoma. To this end, we performed immunohistochemical analysis of 21 pairs of primary breast carcinoma and corresponding AI-resistant recurrent tissue samples and established two stable variant cell lines from ER-positive T-47D breast carcinoma cell line as AI-resistance models and used them in in vitro experiments. Immunohistochemical analysis demonstrated that the expression of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) and Ki-67 were significantly higher and ER and progesterone receptor (PR) were lower in recurrent lesions compared to the corresponding primary lesions. Variant cell lines overexpressed AR and PSA and exhibited neither growth response to estrogen nor expression of ER. Androgen markedly induced the proliferation of these cell lines. In addition, the expression profile of androgen-induced genes was markedly different between variant and parental cell lines as determined by microarray analysis. These results suggest that in some cases of ER-positive breast carcinoma, tumor cells possibly change from ER-dependent to AR-dependent, rendering them resistant to AI. AR inhibitors may thus be effective in a selected group of patients.
Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Androgen receptor; Aromatase inhibitor-resistance; Breast cancer; DDC; PSA

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25178713     DOI: 10.1016/j.jsbmb.2014.08.019

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol        ISSN: 0960-0760            Impact factor:   4.292


  20 in total

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