Leptin, a product of adipocytes, is involved in the regulation of body weight and results strongly correlated to body fat content. An excess of fat mass represents a breast cancer risk factor particularly in postmenopausal women, where estrogen production by adipose tissue through its own aromatase activity stimulates tumor progression. Leptin stimulates estrogen production through the increase of aromatase expression and activity in human luteinized granulosa cells and adipose stromal cells. In the present study, we have examined the possible link that exists between leptin and breast cancer, focusing our attention on the direct effect of leptin on aromatase activity, which may enhance estrogen production and induce tumor cell growth stimulation. We have shown that leptin enhances aromatase mRNA expression, aromatase content, and its enzymatic activity in MCF-7. Aromatase expression appears to be regulated by tissue-specific promoter. It has been demonstrated that promoters II and 1.3 are the major promoters that drive aromatase expression in MCF-7. Transient transfection experiments using vector containing human aromatase promoters II and 1.3 sequence fused with luciferase reporter gene demonstrated that leptin is able to activate this promoter. In the presence of either mitogen-activated protein kinase inhibitor PD 98059 or ERK2 dominant negative as well as in the presence of STAT3 dominant negative, the stimulatory effects of leptin on aromatase promoter, enzymatic activity, and aromatase protein content were inhibited. Functional studies of mutagenesis and electrophoretic mobility shift assay revealed that the AP-1 motif is important in determining the up-regulatory effects induced by leptin on aromatase expression in MCF-7.
Leptin is a hormone with multiple biological actions, produced predominantly by adipose tissue. In humans, plasma levels correlate with total body fat, and high concentrations occur in obese women. Among its functions, leptin is able to stimulate normal and tumor cell growth. We demonstrated that leptin induces aromatase activity in MCF-7 cells evidencing its important role in enhancing in situ estradiol production and promoting estrogen-dependent breast cancer progression. Estrogen receptor ␣ (ER␣), which plays an essential role in breast cancer development, can be transcriptionally activated in a ligand-independent manner. Taking into account that unliganded ER␣ is an effector of mitogenactivated protein kinase (MAPK) signal and that leptin is able, via Janus kinase, to activate the Ras-dependent MAPK pathway, in the present study we investigate the ability of leptin to transactivate ER␣. We provided evidence that leptin is able to reproduce the classic features of ER␣ transactivation in a breast cancer cell line: nuclear localization, down-regulation of its mRNA and protein levels, and up-regulation of a classic estrogendependent gene such as pS2. Transactivation experiments with a transfected reporter gene for nuclear ER showed an activation of ER␣ either in MCF-7 or in HeLa cells. Using a dominant negative ERK2 or the MAPK inhibitor PD 98059, we showed that leptin activates the ER␣ through the MAPK pathway. The N-terminal transcriptional activation function 1 appears essential for the leptin response. Finally, it is worth noting that leptin exposure potentates also the estradiol-induced activation of ER␣. Thus, we are able to demonstrate that the amplification of estrogen signal induced by leptin occurs through an enhancing in situ E 2 production as well as a direct functional activation of ER␣.
The omega-3 long chain polyunsaturated fatty acids, docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), and eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA), elicit anti-proliferative effects in cancer cell lines and in animal models. Dietary DHA and EPA can be converted to their ethanolamide derivatives, docosahexaenoyl ethanolamine (DHEA), and eicosapentaenoyl ethanolamine (EPEA), respectively; however, few studies are reported on their anti-cancer activities. Here, we demonstrated that DHEA and EPEA were able to reduce cell viability in MCF-7 breast cancer cells whereas they did not elicit any effects in MCF-10A non-tumorigenic breast epithelial cells. Since DHA and EPA are ligands of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPARγ), we sought to determine whether PPARγ may also mediate DHEA and EPEA actions. In MCF-7 cells, both compounds enhanced PPARγ expression, stimulated a PPAR response element-dependent transcription as confirmed by the increased expression of its target gene PTEN, resulting in the inhibition of AKT-mTOR pathways. Besides, DHEA and EPEA treatment induced phosphorylation of Bcl-2 promoting its dissociation from beclin-1 which resulted in autophagy induction. We also observed an increase of beclin-1 and microtubule-associated protein 1 light chain 3 expression along with an enhanced autophagosomes formation as revealed by mono-dansyl-cadaverine staining. Finally, we demonstrated the involvement of PPARγ in DHEA- and EPEA-induced autophagy by using siRNA technology and a selective inhibitor. In summary, our data show that the two omega-3 ethanolamides exert anti-proliferative effects by inducing autophagy in breast cancer cells highlighting their potential use as breast cancer preventive and/or therapeutic agents.
The prevalence of obesity has been steadily increasing over the past few decades in several developed and developing countries, with resultant hazardous health implications. Substantial epidemiological evidence has shown that excessive adiposity strongly influences risk, prognosis, and progression of various malignancies, including breast cancer. Indeed, it is now well recognized that obesity is a complex physiologic state associated with multiple molecular changes capable of modulating the behavior of breast tumor cells as well of the surrounding microenvironment. Particularly, insulin resistance, hyperactivation of insulin-like growth factor pathways, and increased levels of estrogen due to aromatization by the adipose tissue, inflammatory cytokines, and adipokines contribute to breast cancerogenesis. Among adipokines, leptin, whose circulating levels increase proportionally to total adipose tissue mass, has been identified as a key member of the molecular network in obesity. This review summarizes the current knowledge on the epidemiological link existing between obesity and breast cancer and outlines the molecular mechanisms underlying this connection. The multifaceted role of the obesity adipokine leptin in this respect is also discussed.
Tumor phenotype is a result of the complex interactions between malignant cells and sorrounding stroma. However, the mechanisms by which cancer cells and fibroblasts, the most abundant and active part of the tumor stroma, interact remain to be elucidated. The K303R mutation of estrogen-receptor (ERα) was identified in 50% of invasive breast tumors and associated with poorer survival outcomes. Here, we show that human cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) stimulated proliferation and migration of wild-type (WT) ERα stably transfected breast cancer cells and to a higher extent in cells expressing the K303R ERα hyperactive receptor. We identified, for the first time, leptin, a known cytokine involved in breast cancer development, as a determinant for CAFs tumor-promoting activities in both WT and K303R ERα-expressing cells. Indeed, we found an increase in leptin receptor isoforms expression, and in its signalling activation in K303R-expressing cells compared to WT ERα clones. These data correlated well with the amplified effects of leptin on cell growth, motility and invasiveness in mutant cells. Mutant expression generated a leptin hypersensitive phenotype also in vivo. Lastly, K303R ERα cell-secreted factors stimulated CAFs proliferation and migration and their ability to secrete leptin. We demonstrated that the epidermal growth factor is the paracrine factor by which breast cancer cells affect CAFs phenotype. Thus, our work uncovers a bidirectional cross-talk between breast cancer cells and ‘educated’ CAFs, which leads via leptin signaling to increased tumor progression. The blockade of these intercellular communications might represent an effective strategy for molecular targeted therapies in breast cancer.
Leptin, a cytokine mainly produced by adipocytes, seems to play a crucial role in mammary carcinogenesis. In the present study, we explored the mechanism of leptin-mediated promotion of breast tumor growth using xenograft MCF-7 in 45-dayold female nude mice, and an in vitro model represented by MCF-7 three-dimensional cultures. Xenograft tumors, obtained only in animals with estradiol (E 2 ) pellet implants, doubled control value after 13 weeks of leptin exposure. In three-dimensional cultures, leptin and/or E 2 enhanced cellcell adhesion. This increased aggregation seems to be dependent on E-cadherin because it was completely abrogated in the presence of function-blocking E-cadherin antibody or EGTA, a calcium-chelating agent. In three-dimensional cultures, leptin and/or E 2 treatment significantly increased cell growth, which was abrogated when E-cadherin function was blocked. These findings well correlated with an increase of mRNA and protein content of E-cadherin in three-dimensional cultures and in xenografts. In MCF-7 cells both hormones were able to activate E-cadherin promoter. Mutagenesis studies, electrophoretic mobility shift assay, and chromatin immunoprecipitation assays revealed that cyclic AMP-responsive element binding protein and Sp1 motifs, present on E-cadherin promoter, were important for the up-regulatory effects induced by both hormones on E-cadherin expression in breast cancer MCF-7 cells. In conclusion, the present study shows how leptin is able to promote tumor cell proliferation and homotypic tumor cell adhesion via an increase of E-cadherin expression. This combined effect may give reasonable emphasis to the important role of this cytokine in stimulating primary breast tumor cell growth and progression, particularly in obese women. [Cancer Res 2007;67(7):3412-21]
In situ estrogen production by aromatase conversion from androgens plays an important role in breast tumor promotion. Here, we show that 17beta-estradiol (E2) can rapidly enhance aromatase enzymatic activity through an increase of aromatase protein phosphorylation in breast cancer cell lines. In vivo labeling experiments and site-directed mutagenesis studies demonstrated that phosphorylation of the 361-tyrosine residue is crucial in the up-regulation of aromatase activity under E2 exposure. Our results demonstrated a direct involvement of nonreceptor tyrosine-kinase c-Src in E2-stimulated aromatase activity because inhibition of its signaling abrogated the up-regulatory effects induced by E2 on aromatase activity as well as phosphorylation of aromatase protein. In addition, from our data it emerges that aromatase is a target of cross talk between growth factor receptors and estrogen receptor alpha signaling. These findings show, for the first time, that tyrosine phosphorylation processes play a key role in the rapid changes induced by E2 in aromatase enzymatic activity, revealing the existence of a short nongenomic autocrine loop between E2 and aromatase in breast cancer cells.
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