Endometriosis causes increased central sensitivity to noxious stimuli. Treatment with TSA significantly reduces lesion growth and may relieve pain symptoms in women with endometriosis, indicating that histone deacetylase inhibitors may be a promising therapeutic agent.
Adenomyosis is a fairly common gynecologic disease with unknown pathogenesis. We sought to investigate as to whether the promoter of progesterone receptor isoform B (PR-B) is hypermethylated in adenomyosis and to investigate the treatment of ectopic endometrial stromal cells with trichostatin A (TSA), a histone deacetylase inhibitor (HDI), and 5-aza-2-deoxycytidine (ADC), a demethylation agent, on PR-B gene and protein expression, and on cell viability. Ectopic endometrial tissue specimens were obtained from 9 women with adenomyosis whereas control endometrial tissue samples were obtained from 8 women with surgically diagnosed benign ovarian cysts but without any clinical history of endometriosis/adenomyosis/ myoma. Endometrial stromal cells were isolated, purified, cultured, and analyzed by methylation-specific polymerase chain reaction (PCR), real-time reverse transcriptase PCR (RT-PCR), and Western blot analysis, cell viability assays, and fluorescence-activated cell sorting. We found that none of the normal endometrial stromal cells had PR-B promoter methylation. In contrast, 2 out of 3 ectopic endometrial stromall cells had PR-B hypermethylation (P < .05). The treatment with both TSA and ADC elevated PR-B gene and protein expression in ectopic, but not in normal, endometrial stromal cells. Both TSA and ADC treatment dose-dependently reduced cell viability of ectopic endometrial stromal cells. Trichostatin A and ADC treatment also suppressed the cell cycle progression in ectopic endometrial stromal cells. Thus, this study provides the first piece of evidence that adenomyosis has epigenetic aberration and may also be an epigenetic disease amenable to rectification by pharmacological means. This perspective may shed new light onto the pathogenesis of adenomyosis and lead to novel ways to treat the disease.
These results suggest that TF is involved in adenomyosis-associated heavy menstrual bleeding and dysmenorrhea and thus may be a potential therapeutic target in treating symptomatic adenomyosis and perhaps also chronic pelvic pain in women with adenomyosis.
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