Lamkin Donald M, Sung Ha Yeon, Yang Gyu Sik, David John M, Ma Jeffrey C Y, Cole Steve W, Sloan Erica K
Cousins Center for PNI, Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA.
Cousins Center for PNI, Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA.
Psychoneuroendocrinology. 2015 Jan;51:262-70. doi: 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2014.10.004. Epub 2014 Oct 12.
Experimental studies in preclinical mouse models of breast cancer have shown that chronic restraint stress can enhance disease progression by increasing catecholamine levels and subsequent signaling of β-adrenergic receptors. Catecholamines also signal α-adrenergic receptors, and greater α-adrenergic signaling has been shown to promote breast cancer in vitro and in vivo. However, antagonism of α-adrenergic receptors can result in elevated catecholamine levels, which may increase β-adrenergic signaling, because pre-synaptic α2-adrenergic receptors mediate an autoinhibition of sympathetic transmission. Given these findings, we examined the effect of α-adrenergic blockade on breast cancer progression under non-stress and stress conditions (chronic restraint) in an orthotopic mouse model with MDA-MB-231HM cells. Chronic restraint increased primary tumor growth and metastasis to distant tissues as expected, and non-selective α-adrenergic blockade by phentolamine significantly inhibited those effects. However, under non-stress conditions, phentolamine increased primary tumor size and distant metastasis. Sympatho-neural gene expression for catecholamine biosynthesis enzymes was elevated by phentolamine under non-stress conditions, and the non-selective β-blocker propranolol inhibited the effect of phentolamine on breast cancer progression. Selective α2-adrenergic blockade by efaroxan also increased primary tumor size and distant metastasis under non-stress conditions, but selective α1-adrenergic blockade by prazosin did not. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that α2-adrenergic signaling can act through an autoreceptor mechanism to inhibit sympathetic catecholamine release and, thus, modulate established effects of β-adrenergic signaling on tumor progression-relevant biology.
在乳腺癌临床前小鼠模型中的实验研究表明,慢性束缚应激可通过提高儿茶酚胺水平及随后的β-肾上腺素能受体信号传导来促进疾病进展。儿茶酚胺也作用于α-肾上腺素能受体,并且已表明更强的α-肾上腺素能信号传导在体外和体内均可促进乳腺癌。然而,α-肾上腺素能受体的拮抗作用可导致儿茶酚胺水平升高,这可能会增加β-肾上腺素能信号传导,因为突触前α2-肾上腺素能受体介导交感神经传递的自身抑制。基于这些发现,我们在接种MDA-MB-231HM细胞的原位小鼠模型中,研究了α-肾上腺素能阻断在非应激和应激条件(慢性束缚)下对乳腺癌进展的影响。正如预期的那样,慢性束缚增加了原发性肿瘤的生长以及向远处组织的转移,而酚妥拉明的非选择性α-肾上腺素能阻断显著抑制了这些作用。然而,在非应激条件下,酚妥拉明增加了原发性肿瘤的大小和远处转移。在非应激条件下,酚妥拉明使儿茶酚胺生物合成酶的交感神经基因表达升高,而非选择性β-阻滞剂普萘洛尔抑制了酚妥拉明对乳腺癌进展的影响。依酚氯铵的选择性α2-肾上腺素能阻断在非应激条件下也增加了原发性肿瘤的大小和远处转移,但哌唑嗪的选择性α1-肾上腺素能阻断则没有这种作用。这些结果与以下假设一致,即α2-肾上腺素能信号传导可通过自身受体机制抑制交感神经儿茶酚胺释放,从而调节β-肾上腺素能信号传导对肿瘤进展相关生物学的既定影响。