Russo Irma H, Russo Jose
Breast Cancer Research Laboratory, Fox Chase Cancer Center, Philadelphia, PA 19111, USA.
Recent Results Cancer Res. 2007;174:111-30. doi: 10.1007/978-3-540-37696-5_11.
Breast cancer is a fatal disease whose incidence is gradually increasing in most industrialized countries and in all ethnic groups. Primary prevention is the ultimate goal for the control of this disease. The knowledge that breast cancer risk is reduced by early full-term pregnancy and that additional pregnancies increase the rate of protection has provided novel tools for designing cancer prevention strategies. The protective effect of pregnancy has been experimentally reproduced in virgin rats by treatment with the placental hormone human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG). HCG prevents the initiation and inhibits the progression of chemically induced mammary carcinomas by inducing differentiation of the mammary gland, inhibiting cell proliferation, and increasing apoptosis. It also induces the synthesis of inhibin, a tumor suppressor factor, downregulates the level of expression of the estrogen receptor alpha (ER-alpha) by methylation of CpG islands, imprinting a permanent genomic signature that characterizes the refractory condition of the mammary gland to undergo malignant transformation. The genomic signature induced by hCG is identical to that induced by pregnancy and is specific for this hormone. Comparison of the mammary gland's genomic profile of virgin Sprague-Dawley rats treated daily with hCG for 21 days with that of rats receiving 17beta-estradiol (E2) and progesterone (Pg) (E2 + Pg) revealed that in hCG-treated rats 194 genes were significantly up-modulated (> 2.5 log2-folds) (p < 0.01) and commonly expressed, whereas these genes were not expressed in the E2 + Pg group. The genomic signature induced by hCG and pregnancy included activators or repressors of transcription genes, apoptosis, growth factors, cell division control, DNA repair, tumor suppressor, and cell-surface antigen genes. Our data indicate that hCG, like pregnancy, induces permanent genomic changes that are not reproduced by steroid hormones and in addition regulates gene expression through epigenetic mechanisms that are differentiation-dependent processes, leading us to conclude that hormonally induced differentiation offers enormous promise for the primary prevention of breast cancer.
乳腺癌是一种致命疾病,在大多数工业化国家以及所有种族群体中,其发病率都在逐渐上升。一级预防是控制这种疾病的最终目标。早期足月妊娠可降低乳腺癌风险,且额外的妊娠会提高保护率,这一认知为设计癌症预防策略提供了新工具。通过用胎盘激素人绒毛膜促性腺激素(hCG)对未孕大鼠进行处理,已在实验中重现了妊娠的保护作用。hCG通过诱导乳腺分化、抑制细胞增殖和增加细胞凋亡,预防化学诱导的乳腺癌的起始并抑制其进展。它还诱导抑制素的合成,抑制素是一种肿瘤抑制因子,通过对CpG岛进行甲基化来下调雌激素受体α(ER-α)的表达水平,形成一种永久性的基因组特征,该特征表征了乳腺对恶性转化的难治状态。hCG诱导的基因组特征与妊娠诱导的相同,且对该激素具有特异性。将每天用hCG处理21天的未孕斯普拉格-道利大鼠的乳腺基因组图谱与接受17β-雌二醇(E2)和孕酮(Pg)(E2 + Pg)处理的大鼠的图谱进行比较,结果显示,在hCG处理的大鼠中,有194个基因显著上调(> 2.5 log2倍)(p < 0.01)且共同表达,而这些基因在E2 + Pg组中未表达。hCG和妊娠诱导的基因组特征包括转录基因的激活剂或抑制剂、细胞凋亡、生长因子、细胞分裂控制、DNA修复、肿瘤抑制和细胞表面抗原基因。我们的数据表明,hCG与妊娠一样,会诱导永久性的基因组变化,而类固醇激素不会产生这种变化,此外,hCG还通过表观遗传机制调节基因表达,这些机制是依赖分化的过程,这使我们得出结论,激素诱导的分化为乳腺癌的一级预防带来了巨大希望。