Koga M, Musgrove E A, Sutherland R L
Garvan Institute of Medical Research, St. Vincent's Hospital, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Cancer Res. 1989 Jan 1;49(1):112-6.
The molecular basis of the growth-inhibitory effects of progestins or antiestrogens in human breast cancer has not been fully elucidated. Both direct actions and indirect actions, where the growth inhibition results from modulation of the production of, and/or the response to, growth factors, have been proposed. In this study the ability of some growth factors to modulate progestin-induced inhibition of cell proliferation was investigated in vitro, using T-47D human breast cancer cells. When T-47D cells grown in insulin-containing medium were treated for 4 to 5 days with the synthetic progestin, ORG 2058, at a concentration of 10 nM, cell numbers were reduced to 10 to 20% of control. Simultaneous treatment with epidermal growth factor (EGF) and ORG 2058 led to a partial reversal of the growth-inhibitory effect of the progestin. The magnitude of the effect of EGF was concentration dependent, being half-maximal at 0.48 ng/ml (0.08 nM) and maximal at concentrations greater than 5 ng/ml (greater than 0.8 nM), where cell numbers were increased by 50% compared to those in the presence of ORG 2058 alone. ORG 2058 was no more potent in the absence of insulin, and, after several passages in insulin-free medium, addition of insulin failed to modulate the effect of ORG 2058. However, when maximal concentrations of insulin (5 micrograms/ml) and EGF (10 ng/ml) were administered together with ORG 2058, insulin and EGF appeared to act synergistically to reduce the ORG 2058-induced inhibition of proliferation. In similar experiments in which cells were treated with hydroxyclomiphene, a potent antiestrogen, insulin was shown to partially reverse the growth-inhibitory effects of hydroxyclomiphene. Significant increases in cell number above hydroxyclomiphene-treated controls were apparent at insulin concentrations greater than 50 ng/ml, and at 5 micrograms/ml the increase was approximately 2-fold. In contrast to the situation with progestins, simultaneous treatment with EGF and insulin had only an additive effect in reversing the growth-inhibitory effect of the antiestrogen. The results are compatible with the hypothesis that part of the growth-inhibitory effects of progestin and antiestrogen on human breast cancer cell proliferation is mediated by inhibition of autocrine growth factor production. However, they do not exclude more direct mechanisms involving modulation of progesterone and/or estrogen receptors by EGF and/or insulin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
孕激素或抗雌激素对人乳腺癌生长抑制作用的分子基础尚未完全阐明。有人提出了直接作用和间接作用两种机制,间接作用是指生长抑制源于生长因子产生的调节和/或对生长因子反应的调节。在本研究中,使用T-47D人乳腺癌细胞在体外研究了一些生长因子调节孕激素诱导的细胞增殖抑制的能力。当在含胰岛素的培养基中生长的T-47D细胞用浓度为10 nM的合成孕激素ORG 2058处理4至5天时,细胞数量减少至对照的10%至20%。表皮生长因子(EGF)与ORG 2058同时处理导致孕激素生长抑制作用部分逆转。EGF的作用强度呈浓度依赖性,在0.48 ng/ml(0.08 nM)时达到半数最大效应,在浓度大于5 ng/ml(大于0.8 nM)时达到最大效应,此时与单独存在ORG 2058相比细胞数量增加了50%。在无胰岛素的情况下,ORG 2058的效力不更强,并且在无胰岛素培养基中传代几次后,添加胰岛素未能调节ORG 2058的作用。然而,当最大浓度的胰岛素(5微克/毫升)和EGF(10 ng/ml)与ORG 2058一起给药时,胰岛素和EGF似乎协同作用以减少ORG 2058诱导的增殖抑制。在类似的实验中,用强效抗雌激素羟氯米芬处理细胞,结果显示胰岛素可部分逆转羟氯米芬的生长抑制作用。在胰岛素浓度大于50 ng/ml时,细胞数量明显高于羟氯米芬处理的对照,在5微克/毫升时增加约2倍。与孕激素的情况相反,EGF和胰岛素同时处理在逆转抗雌激素的生长抑制作用方面仅具有相加效应。这些结果与以下假设一致,即孕激素和抗雌激素对人乳腺癌细胞增殖的部分生长抑制作用是由自分泌生长因子产生的抑制介导的。然而,它们并不排除涉及EGF和/或胰岛素对孕激素和/或雌激素受体调节的更直接机制。(摘要截短于400字)