Filardo Edward J
Division of Hematology & Oncology, The Warren Alpert School of Medicine, Brown University, Providence, RI 02818, United States.
J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol. 2018 Feb;176:38-48. doi: 10.1016/j.jsbmb.2017.05.005. Epub 2017 Jun 6.
Mechanisms of carcinogenesis by estrogen center on its mitogenic and genotoxic potential on tumor target cells. These models suggest that estrogen receptor (ER) signaling promotes expansion of the transformed population and that subsequent accumulation of somatic mutations that drive cancer progression occur via metabolic activation of cathecol estrogens or by epigenetic mechanisms. Recent findings that GPER is linked to obesity, vascular pathology and immunosuppression, key events in the development of metabolic syndrome and intra-tissular estrogen synthesis, provides an alternate view of estrogen-induced carcinogenesis. Consistent with this concept, GPER is directly associated with clinicopathological indices that predict cancer progression and poor survival in breast and gynecological cancers. Moreover, GPER manifests cell biological responses and a microenvironment conducive for tumor development and cancer progression, regulating cellular responses associated with glandular homeostasis and survival, invading surrounding tissue and attracting a vascular supply. Thus, the cellular actions attributed to GPER fit well with the known molecular mechanisms of G-protein coupled receptors, GPCRs, namely, their ability to transactivate integrins and EGF receptors and alter the interaction between glandular epithelia and their extracellular environment, affecting epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) and allowing for tumor cell survival and dissemination. This perspective reviews the molecular and cellular responses manifested by GPER and evaluates its contribution to female reproductive cancers as diseases that progress as a result of dysregulated glandular homeostasis resulting in chronic inflammation and metastasis. This review is organized in sections as follows: I) a brief synopsis of the current state of knowledge regarding estrogen-induced carcinogenesis, II) a review of evidence from clinical and animal-based studies that support a role for GPER in cancer progression, and III) a mechanistic framework describing how GPER-mediated estrogen action may influence the tumor and its microenvironment.
雌激素致癌的机制主要集中在其对肿瘤靶细胞的促有丝分裂和基因毒性潜力上。这些模型表明,雌激素受体(ER)信号传导促进了转化细胞群体的扩增,随后驱动癌症进展的体细胞突变积累是通过儿茶酚雌激素的代谢激活或表观遗传机制发生的。最近的研究发现,G蛋白偶联雌激素受体(GPER)与肥胖、血管病变和免疫抑制有关,这些是代谢综合征发展和组织内雌激素合成中的关键事件,这为雌激素诱导的致癌作用提供了另一种观点。与此概念一致,GPER与预测乳腺癌和妇科癌症进展及预后不良的临床病理指标直接相关。此外,GPER表现出细胞生物学反应以及有利于肿瘤发展和癌症进展的微环境,调节与腺体稳态和存活相关的细胞反应,侵入周围组织并吸引血管供应。因此,归因于GPER的细胞作用与G蛋白偶联受体(GPCR)的已知分子机制非常契合,即它们能够反式激活整合素和表皮生长因子(EGF)受体,并改变腺上皮与其细胞外环境之间的相互作用,影响上皮-间质转化(EMT),并使肿瘤细胞得以存活和扩散。本综述回顾了GPER表现出的分子和细胞反应,并评估了其对女性生殖系统癌症的影响,这些癌症是由于腺体稳态失调导致慢性炎症和转移而进展的疾病。本综述分为以下几个部分:I)关于雌激素诱导致癌作用的当前知识状态的简要概述,II)支持GPER在癌症进展中作用的临床和动物研究证据综述,III)描述GPER介导的雌激素作用如何影响肿瘤及其微环境的机制框架。