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Propecia Research Today is a free monthly online journal that collates and summarizes the latest research about Propecia, including details on baldness, hair loss, side-effects, results.


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Enhanced formation of non-phenolic androgen metabolites with intrinsic oestrogen-like gene transactivation potency in human breast cancer cells: a distinctive metabolic pattern.

Pérez-Palacios G, Santillán R, García-Becerra R, Borja-Cacho E, Larrea F, Damián-Matsumura P, González L, Lemus AE

Reproductive Health Research, Training and Communication Unit, School of Medicine, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Hospital General de México and Instituto Nacional de Perinatología, México City, México.

Breast cancer is a sex steroid hormone-dependent malignant neoplasia. The role of oestradiol in this malignancy has been well documented; however, the involvement of androgens has remained controversial. To determine the role of non-phenolic androgen metabolites in human breast cancer, we studied the metabolism of [(14)C] testosterone and [(14)C] androstenedione in oestrogen-dependent MCF-7 cells and non-oestrogen-dependent MDA-MB 231 cells, at different substrate concentrations (1-10 muM) and time periods (30 min-48 h). Cultured non-oestrogen-dependent HeLa and yeast cells served as controls. Metabolites were identified and quantified by reverse isotope dilution. A distinctive pattern of androgen metabolism was identified in MCF-7 cells, being the 5alpha-androstane-3alpha,17beta-diol (3alpha,5alpha-diol) and its 3beta epimer (3beta,5alpha-diol), the major conversion products of testosterone (48.3%), with 5alpha-dihydrotestosterone as intermediary. The formation of 3alpha,5alpha-diol and 3beta,5alpha-diol (diols) was substrate concentration- and time-dependent, and abolished by finasteride. In contrast, very little of any diol formation was observed in MDA-MB 231, HeLa and yeast cell incubations. Additional enzyme gene expression studies revealed an overexpression of 5alpha-steroid reductase type-1 in MCF-7 cells, as compared with MDA-MB 231 cells. The oestrogen-like activities of diols were assessed in HeLa cells co-transfected with expression vectors for alpha or beta subtypes of the human oestrogen receptor (hER) genes and for an oestrogen-responsive reporter gene. The results show that 3beta, 5alpha-diol and to a lesser extent 3alpha,5alpha-diol bind with high relative affinity to hERalpha and hERbeta. Both diols induced hER-mediated reporter gene transactivation in a dose-response manner, similar to that induced by oestradiol, though with lower potency, an effect that was abolished by ICI-182 780. Furthermore, 3beta,5alpha-diol and to lesser extent 3alpha,5alpha-diol induced MCF-7 cell proliferation. The overall results demonstrated that MCF-7 cells exhibit enhanced expression and activity of androgen-metabolising enzymes, leading to rapid and large diol formation, and provide evidence that these androgen metabolites exert a potent oestrogen-agonistic effect, at genomic level, in oestrogen-dependent breast cancer cells. The data suggest that diols may act as in situ intracrine factors in breast cancer and that its formation can be pharmacologically inhibited.

Published 27 September 2006 in J Endocrinol, 190(3): 805-18.
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Propecia Research Today Archive:

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