| Literature DB >> 28502695 |
Maeva Guillaume1, Sandra Handgraaf1, Aurélie Fabre1, Isabelle Raymond-Letron2, Elodie Riant1, Alexandra Montagner3, Alexia Vinel1, Melissa Buscato1, Natalia Smirnova1, Coralie Fontaine1, Hervé Guillou4, Jean-François Arnal1, Pierre Gourdy5.
Abstract
Estrogen receptor α (ERα) regulates gene transcription through two activation functions (ERα-AF1 and ERα-AF2). We recently found that the protection conferred by 17β-estradiol against obesity and insulin resistance requires ERα-AF2 but not ERα-AF1. However, the interplay between the two ERα-AFs is poorly understood in vivo and the metabolic influence of a specific ERα-AF1 action remains to be explored. To this end, wild-type, ERα-deficient, or ERα-AF1-deficient ovariectomized female mice were fed a high-fat diet and concomitantly administered with vehicle or tamoxifen, a selective ER modulator that acts as a ERα-AF1 agonist/ERα-AF2 antagonist. In ovariectomized wild-type mice, tamoxifen significantly reduced food intake and totally prevented adiposity, insulin resistance, and steatosis. These effects were abolished in ERα-deficient and ERα-AF1-deficient mice, revealing the specific role of ERα-AF1 activation. Finally, hepatic gene expression changes elicited by tamoxifen in wild-type mice were abrogated in ERα-AF1-deficient mice. The combination of pharmacologic and transgenic approaches thus indicates that selective ERα-AF1 activation by tamoxifen is sufficient to elicit metabolic protection, contrasting with the specific requirement of ERα-AF2 in the metabolic actions of 17β-estradiol. This redundancy in the ability of the two ERα-AFs to separately mediate metabolic prevention strikingly contrasts with the contribution of both ERα-AFs in breast cancer proliferation, shedding new light on the therapeutic potential of selective ER modulation.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28502695 DOI: 10.1016/j.ajpath.2017.02.013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Pathol ISSN: 0002-9440 Impact factor: 4.307