Selective oestrogen receptor antagonists inhibit oesophageal cancer cell proliferation in vitro.pdf (956.86 kB)
Selective oestrogen receptor antagonists inhibit oesophageal cancer cell proliferation in vitro.
journal contribution
posted on 2019-07-03, 14:00 authored by Waleed Al-Khyatt, Cristina Tufarelli, Raheela Khan, Syed Yousef IftikharBACKGROUND: Oestrogen receptors (ER) have a well-established role to the initiation, progression and regulation of responses to treatment of breast, prostate, and lung cancers. Previous data indicates altered ER expression in oesophageal cancers (OC). However the role of ER subtypes and ER specific inhibitors in the regulation of OC progression remains unclear. This study sought to assess levels of ERα and ERβ in OC. The effects of highly selective ER antagonists on cell proliferation and apoptosis in two OC adenocarcinoma cell lines was also studied. METHODS: ERα and ERβ expression profiling in paired normal oesophageal mucosa and tumour tissues (n = 34; adenocarcinoma n = 28; squamous cell carcinoma n = 6) was performed using quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR). Correlation between levels of ER with the clinico-pathological features for OC was determined. The effect of selective ER antagonists on proliferation of OE33 and OE19 OC cell lines was studied. RESULTS: ERα and ERβ mRNA expression was significantly higher (p < 0.05) in tumour tissues relative to their paired normal mucosa and correlated inversely with survival outcome (p < 0.05). Upregulation of ERα mRNA correlated with higher pathological T-stage (p < 0.05) and lymph node metastasis (p < 0.05) while ERβ mRNA upregulation correlated with positive vascular invasion (p < 0.05). A significant concentration-dependent inhibition of proliferation in OE33 and OE19 cell lines was induced by a highly-selective ERα antagonist (MPP) and an ERβ specific antagonist (PHTPP) (p < 0.05). Moreover, anti-oestrogens induced cell death through stimulation of apoptotic caspase activity. CONCLUSION: These findings indicate that the ER system is involved in OC progression and thus may provide a novel target for the treatment of OC.
History
Citation
BMC Cancer, 2018, 18:121Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF LIFE SCIENCES/School of Medicine/Cancer Research CentreVersion
- VoR (Version of Record)
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BMC CancerPublisher
BMC (part of Springer Nature)eissn
1471-2407Acceptance date
2018-01-23Copyright date
2018Available date
2019-07-03Publisher DOI
Publisher version
https://bmccancer.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12885-018-4030-5Language
enAdministrator link
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Keywords
AdenocarcinomaAlphaBetaCancerFemaleHormonesMaleOesophagealOestrogenReceptorsSexSquamousTreatmentAdultAgedApoptosisCarcinoma, Squamous CellCell ProliferationDisease-Free SurvivalEsophageal NeoplasmsEstrogen Receptor AntagonistsEstrogen Receptor alphaEstrogen Receptor betaGene Expression Regulation, NeoplasticHumansLymphatic MetastasisMiddle AgedRNA, Messenger