Bianco Nicole R, Perry George, Smith Mark A, Templeton Dennis J, Montano Monica M
Department of Pharmacology, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Cleveland, Ohio 44106, USA.
Mol Endocrinol. 2003 Jul;17(7):1344-55. doi: 10.1210/me.2002-0382. Epub 2003 Apr 24.
Recent studies have shown that the antiestrogens tamoxifen and raloxifene may protect against breast cancer, presumably because of a blockade of estrogen receptor (ER)-mediated transcription. Another possible explanation is that antiestrogen-liganded ER transcriptionally induces genes that are protective against cancer. We previously reported that antiestrogen-liganded ERbeta transcriptionally activates the major detoxifying enzyme quinone reductase (QR) [NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase]. It has been established that metabolites of estrogen, termed catecholestrogens, can form DNA adducts and cause oxidative DNA damage. We hypothesize that QR inhibits estrogen-induced DNA damage by detoxification of reactive catecholestrogens. We report here that physiological concentrations of 17beta-estradiol cause oxidative DNA damage, as measured by levels of 8- hydroxydeoxyguanine, in ER-positive MCF7 breast cancer cells, MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells (ERalpha negative/ERbeta positive) and nontumorigenic MCF10A breast epithelial cells (very low ER), which is dependent on estrogen metabolism. Estrogen-induced 8-hydroxydeoxyguanine was inversely correlated to QR and ERbeta levels and was followed by downstream induction of the DNA repair enzyme XPA. Trans-hydroxytamoxifen, raloxifene, and the pure antiestrogen ICI-182,780 protected against estradiol-mediated damage in breast cancer cells containing ERbeta. This is most likely due to the ability of these antiestrogens to activate expression of QR via ERbeta. We conclude that up-regulation of QR, either by overexpression or induction by tamoxifen, can protect breast cells against oxidative DNA damage caused by estrogen metabolites, representing a possible novel mechanism of tamoxifen prevention against breast cancer.
近期研究表明,抗雌激素药物他莫昔芬和雷洛昔芬可能预防乳腺癌,推测其机制是阻断雌激素受体(ER)介导的转录过程。另一种可能的解释是,与抗雌激素结合的ER可转录诱导具有抗癌作用的基因。我们之前报道过,与抗雌激素结合的ERβ可转录激活主要的解毒酶醌还原酶(QR)[NAD(P)H:醌氧化还原酶]。雌激素的代谢产物儿茶酚雌激素可形成DNA加合物并导致氧化性DNA损伤,这一点已经得到证实。我们推测QR可通过对活性儿茶酚雌激素进行解毒来抑制雌激素诱导的DNA损伤。我们在此报告,通过8-羟基脱氧鸟嘌呤水平测定发现,生理浓度的17β-雌二醇可在ER阳性的MCF7乳腺癌细胞、MDA-MB-231乳腺癌细胞(ERα阴性/ERβ阳性)和非致瘤性MCF10A乳腺上皮细胞(ER水平极低)中引起氧化性DNA损伤,这种损伤依赖于雌激素代谢。雌激素诱导的8-羟基脱氧鸟嘌呤与QR和ERβ水平呈负相关,随后DNA修复酶XPA被下游诱导。反式羟基他莫昔芬、雷洛昔芬以及纯抗雌激素药物ICI-182,780可保护含有ERβ的乳腺癌细胞免受雌二醇介导的损伤。这很可能是由于这些抗雌激素能够通过ERβ激活QR的表达。我们得出结论,通过过表达或他莫昔芬诱导使QR上调,可保护乳腺细胞免受雌激素代谢产物引起的氧化性DNA损伤,这代表了他莫昔芬预防乳腺癌的一种可能的新机制。