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1.
Since the discovery of a specific membrane binding site for sex steroid binding protein (SBP) in human decidual endometrium and in hyperplastic prostate numerous speculations have been raised on the existence of an additional non-receptor-mediated system for steroid hormone action. In the present work SBP cell membrane binding was investigated in human estrogen target tissues other than those previously studied either in the absence of steroids or in the presence of varying amounts (10−10−10−6M) of estradiol, testosterone and dihydrotestosterone, respectively. Plasma membranes obtained by differential centrifugation from homogenized samples of pre-menopausal endometrium, endometrium adenocarcinoma, normal liver and post-menopausal breast showed a specific binding of highly purified [125I]SBP: a major displacement of labeled SBP was elicited by radioinert SBP, while no significant displacement occurred when other human plasma proteins were used as cold competitors (molar excess ranging 500–10,000-fold). A specific, time-dependent binding of [125I]SBP was also observed in MCF-7 and in Hep-G2 cell lines. The different patterns of specific binding, observed in membranes from different tissues when SBP was liganded with different sex steroid molecules, leads us to consider the tissue individuality of the receptor as a further entity in the membrane recognition system for SBP.  相似文献   

2.
The human plasma sex steroid binding protein (SBP) has been previously shown to be synthesized in liver cells. The hormonal regulation studies of hepatic SBP mRNA demonstrate that it is controlled by estradiol, antiestrogen tamoxifen, dihydrotestosterone, triiodothyronine and insulin in a similar way as secreted SBP. The metabolic inhibitor cycloheximide was unable to prevent the estrogen or thyroid hormone induced increase in SBP mRNA. The slight stimulation of SBP synthesis by estradiol suggests that non-steroidal factors may be involved in its regulation and that the estrogen regulatory mechanism could also be partly post-transcrptional. In endometrial (Ishikawa cells) and prostatic (LNCaP cells) carcinoma cells, SBP mRNA has been detected suggesting that SBP may play a role in the uptake and intracellular mechanism of action of sex steroid in target cells.  相似文献   

3.
The cellular distribution of human Sex Steroid Binding Plasma Protein (h-SBP) was studied in human cells and tissues by indirect immunofluorescence. h-SBP was detected in the cytoplasm of hepatocytes, of prostate and epididymis epithelial cells and in endometrium. Sexual and non-sexual skin, intestine epithelium, striated muscle and some rodent organs were not labelled. The intracellular localization of h-SBP indicate that h-SBP could be taken up from the extracellular compartment or synthesized in situ in sex steroid target organs, where it may play a role in hormone uptake. The hormonal regulation of h-SBP secretion by a human hepatoma cell line, H5A, showed that tri-iodothyronine was more potent than estradiol or tamoxifen, which acted as estrogen agonist, in increasing secreted h-SBP and the combined effect of both thyroid and estrogen hormones resulted in an additive stimulation of h-SBP secretion. As shown by Northern blot analysis, oligonucleotides synthesized from the known sequence of h-SBP hybridized with a RNA of approximately 2 kb which was more represented in H5A cells than in normal human liver, and was increased 2-3 times after hormonal stimulation of the cells. The presence of a poly(A+)RNA coding for h-SBP in the human liver indicated the hepatic synthesis of this protein.  相似文献   

4.
Sex steroid binding protein (SBP) receptor was detected on cell membranes obtained from human endometrium adenocarcinoma. The binding of SBP was proved to be highly specific, saturable, and at high affinity. It was, additionally, shown to occur at two sites at different affinities, as previously described for other human tissues. SBP was, therefore, demonstrated to recognized a specific receptor on endometrium adenocarcinoma membranes. The effect of steroid hormones on SBP-receptor interaction was also evaluated. Both dihydrotestosterone and estradiol were shown to inhibit the binding of SBP to its specific receptor on neoplastic membranes. Testosterone at a dose of 10(-9) M was shown not to interfere to a significant extent with SBP-receptor binding. The sensitivity for estradiol we had previously observed in normal premenopausal endometrium was completely lost in postmenopausal neoplastic tissue. These observations suggest that the SBP-membrane recognition system is still present in neoplastic postmenopausal endometrium, but it has been modified either by the postmenopausal endogenous milieu or by the neoplastic transformation.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Since it is currently believed that the biosynthesis of human sex steroid binding plasma protein (SBP) takes place in the liver, the secretion of this protein and its hormonal control were studied in a human hepatoma cell line. The human hepatoma-derived cell line, Hep G2, and a clone, H5A, isolated from Hep G2, were both found to secrete SBP-like protein. This protein had the same dihydrotestosterone binding parameters as plasma SBP, with a Kd ranging from 0.3 to 1 nM at 4 degrees C, and it cross-reacted with a monospecific goat anti-human SBP antiserum. In a chemically defined medium, SBP-like protein secretion was stimulated approx 2-fold by estradiol (1 microM) whereas a smaller concentration of estrogen (100 nM) has only a slight effect. A combined incubation with estradiol (100 nM) and triiodothyronine (10 nM) increased SBP-like protein secretion more than estradiol (1 microM) alone. In response to dexamethasone (100 nM) or tamoxifen (100 nM) treatment, a 3-fold increase is obtained. Therefore, these human parenchymal cells should provide a potent material for investigation of the hormonal regulation of SBP gene.  相似文献   

7.
8.
The role of the carbohydrate component of sex steroid-binding globulin (SBP) from human blood in the glycoprotein interaction with the recognition system for SBP-estrogen complexes in human decidual endometrium plasma membrane was studied. It was shown that the removal of N-acetylneuraminic acid residues from the oligosaccharide chains of SBP did not affect the steroid-binding or immunochemical properties of the glycoprotein. At the same time, the above modification of the glycoprotein resulted in a loss by SBP of its ability to specifically interact with the membrane recognition system. It is concluded that the oligosaccharide chains of SBP are involved in the formation of determinants needed for recognition of the SBP-estrogen complexes by endometrium cell plasma membranes.  相似文献   

9.
Regucalcin plays an important role in maintenance of intracellular Ca2+ homeostasis, suppresses cell proliferation, inhibits expression of oncogenes, and increases the expression of tumour suppressor genes. This suggests that regucalcin functions may be altered in cancer tissues. In this study the regucalcin expression in breast and prostate cancer cases was analysed by RT‐PCR and immunohistochemistry showing that the mRNA and/or protein are under‐expressed in these tumors. The effect of sex steroid hormones on regucalcin expression in breast and prostate cancer cells was determined by real‐time PCR. MCF‐7 and LNCaP cells were stimulated with 0, 1, and 10 nM of 17β‐estradiol (E2) or 5α‐dihydrotestosterone (DHT), respectively, for 0, 6, 12, 24, and 48 h. MCF‐7 cells were also stimulated with E2 conjugated to BSA (E2‐BSA). To explore the mechanisms underlying the sex steroid regulation of regucalcin expression, control treatments with ICI 182,780, flutamide and cyclohexamide were carried out. E2 effects regulating regucalcin expression were not abrogated in the presence of ICI 182,780, and were similar to those observed with E2‐BSA, which suggests the involvement of a membrane‐bound estrogen receptor. In LNCaP cells, DHT down‐regulated regucalcin expression, an effect inhibited by the presence of both flutamide and cyclohexamide, suggesting the involvement of androgen receptor and de novo protein synthesis. The loss of regucalcin expression in breast and prostate cancer cases and the regulation of its expression by sex steroid hormones suggest that it may be associated with development and progression of these human tumors. J. Cell. Biochem. 107: 667–676, 2009. © 2009 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

10.
Steroid sulfatase (STS; E.C. 3.1.6.2) is an enzyme involved in the local production of estrogens and androgens in target organs. Inhibitors of steroid sulfatase activity are considered novel therapeutic agents for the treatment of different pathologic conditions, including cancers of breast, endometrium, and prostate and disorders of the pilosebaceous unit. Evaluation of steroid sulfatase inhibition in cells up to now has been a cumbersome process, involving the extraction of a radioactive cleavage product into organic solvents. Here, we describe a rapid, nonradioactive cellular assay in microtiter plate format, using 4-methylumbelliferyl sulfate as a substrate. The reaction product, 4-methylumbelliferone, is read in a fluorescence microtiter plate reader. Several cell lines were assayed for sulfatase activity. To increase the sensitivity of the assay, we developed a Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cell line stably transfected with a cDNA encoding the human steroid sulfatase. The steroid sulfatase activity in transfected cells correlated with the presence of the enzyme in these cells, as determined by immunofluorescence. For most STS inhibitors tested, including estrone-3-O-sulfamate, the results from the CHO cellular assay were in good agreement with those from a standard cell-free assay.  相似文献   

11.
Mechanisms for 2-methoxyestradiol-induced apoptosis of prostate cancer cells   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
Bu S  Blaukat A  Fu X  Heldin NE  Landström M 《FEBS letters》2002,531(2):141-151
Prostate and breast carcinomas are sex hormone-related carcinomas, which are known to be associated with an over-expression of the proto-oncogene Bcl-2. Here, we report that 2-methoxyestradiol (2-ME), an endogenous metabolite of estrogen that does not bind to nuclear estrogen receptors, effectively induces apoptosis in Bcl-2-expressing human prostate and breast carcinoma cells in vitro and in a rat prostate tumor model in vivo. In several cell lines derived from prostate, breast, liver and colorectal carcinomas, 2-ME treatment led to an activation of c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) and phosphorylation of Bcl-2, which preceded the induction of apoptosis. In summary, our data suggest that 2-ME induces apoptosis in epithelial carcinomas by causing phosphorylation of JNK, which appears to be correlated with phosphorylation of Bcl-2.  相似文献   

12.
Human prostate and breast tumor cells produce luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) receptors on their cell surface even when they have lost dependency on sex steroid hormones for growth. To investigate whether LHRH can be used as a cell-binding moiety to deliver toxin molecules into prostate and breast tumor cells, LHRH-bovine RNase A conjugates were constructed using the chemical cross-linking method. The treatment of the LHRH receptor-positive cells such as prostate LNCapFGC and breast MCF7 tumor cells with LHRH-RNase A conjugates resulted in a dose-dependent inhibition of growth. The cytotoxic activities of these conjugates were effectively reduced by the presence of exogenous LHRH. Either free RNase A or LHRH alone did not affect the proliferation of these cells. The LHRH-RNase A conjugates did not show cytotoxicity against FRTL5 and TM4 cells which do not express the LHRH receptors. These results suggest that LHRH can be used as a cell-binding molecule for the specific delivery of toxin molecules into the cells which express LHRH receptors on their surface. Thus, a new class of biomedicines that act as fusion proteins between LHRH and toxins will give us a new avenue for the treatment of human prostate and breast cancers, regardless of their steroid hormone dependency.  相似文献   

13.
C Bonne  J P Raynaud 《Steroids》1975,26(2):227-232
Methyltrienolone (R 1881), 17beta-hydroxy-17alpha-methyl-estra-4,9,11-trien-3-one, a very active androgen, binds specifically to rat prostate cytosol with a higher affinity than androstanolone. Unlike the physiological hormone, however, it is not bound by human sex steroid plasma binding protein, SBP. This specific ligand is thus a useful tool for the detection of elusive androgen receptors and for their study, for instance, in human tumors where interference from plasma contamination has to be circumvented.  相似文献   

14.
The respective roles of sex steroids and hormones related to growth and metabolism, on SBP regulation have been studied in rainbow trout. In vivo, oestradiol (E2) supplementation induces a slow but significant increase of plasma SBP concentration. Testosterone or cortisol injections have no effect. In vitro, the steroid binding protein that accumulates in incubation medium of hepatic cell primary cultures has been characterized and found to be similar to blood SBP. Its production is increased by addition of E2 (maximum: + 300%). This effect develops slowly over several days of culture and is dose dependent; as little as 1–10 nM E2 is effective.

Recombinant rainbow trout GH (rtGH)—0.01 to 1 μg/ml—also increases SBB accumulation as compared to control cells and seems to maintain SBP production over culture duration. In preliminary experiments, (1) insulin-like growth factor (IGF) and SBP concentrations were found to change inversely after a 4 days stimulation with increasing concentrations of GH; (2) recombinant human IGF1 (250 ng/ml) tended to be inhibitory when SBP production was expressed per mg of total cellular protein, and a micromolar concentration of bovine insulin was clearly inhibitory.

Other hormones tested in vitro: triiodothyronine (10–1000 nM), thyroxine (100 nM), 17,20β-dihydroprogesterone (10–2000 nM), and testosterone (1–1000 nM) did not influence SBP concentration in hepatic cells culture media.  相似文献   


15.
Epidemiological and clinical evidence suggests that steroid hormones are intimately involved in the natural history of many cancers, including those of the breast, endometrium and prostate. However, it has been difficult to demonstrate that progressive changes in tumour development are related to circulating levels of steroids. This may be because further metabolism of steroids occurs locally within the tumour and its adjacent host tissue. Using the breast as an example, data has been reviewed that such local metabolism may (a) markedly change the biological potency of steroid hormones and (b) be associated with the risk, presence, pathology, stage and hormone sensitivity of cancer. The implications of these findings are discussed including the need to identify factors which regulate steroid metabolism in peripheral tissue and tumours. In this way the potential to influence the microenvironment around and within tumour cells may be realized in favour of the patient.  相似文献   

16.
Cui J  Huang L  Fan L  Zhou A 《Steroids》2008,73(3):252-256
Using beta-sitosterol as a starting material, (6E)-hydroximino-24-ethylcholest-4-en-3-one (1), a natural steroidal oxime from Cinachyrella alloclada and C. apion, was synthesized in four steps with a high overall yield. First, beta-sitosterol (5a) is transformed into the corresponding 24-ethylcholest-4-en-3,6-dione (6a) via oxidation with pyridinium chlorochromate (PCC). Selective reduction of 6a by NaBH(4) in the presence of CoCl(2) gives 24-ethylcholest- 4-en-3beta-ol-6-one (7a). The reaction of 7a with hydroxylamine hydrochloride offers the oxime 8a and the oxidation of 8a by Jones reagent gives the target steroid 1. (6E)-Hydroximinocholest-4-en-3-one (2) and (6E)-hydroximino-24-ethylcholest-4,22-dien-3-one (4) were synthesized by a similar method. The cytotoxicity of the synthesized compounds against sk-Hep-1 (human liver carcinoma cell line), H-292 (human lung carcinoma cell line), PC-3 (human prostate carcinoma cell line) and Hey-1B (human ovarian carcinoma cell line) cells were investigated. The presence of a cholesterol-type side chain appears to be necessary for the biological activity.  相似文献   

17.
Plasma sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG or SBP), the specific carrier for estradiol and androgens, after binding to its membrane receptor (SHBG-R), causes a significant increase of cAMP in the presence of estradiol, in both breast (MCF-7) and prostate (LNCaP) cancer cells maintained in serum-free medium. On the other hand, it has been proposed that estrogens, in addition to the well-known nuclear receptor pathway, exert their biological effect inducing cAMP, as a consequence of a direct membrane action, in breast cancer and uterine cells. The aim of the present study was to clarify this controversial issue by verifying if the cAMP increase in MCF-7 cells was a direct effect of estradiol, or if it was mediated by FCS proteins, such as bovine sex hormone-binding globulin; and to reevaluate the effect of human SHBG on cAMP induction in the presence of FCS. MCF-7 cells were maintained in DCC-FCS (treated with DCC to remove steroids), in SHBG-FREE/DCC-FCS (treated with DCC and with a specific affinity chromatography to remove bovine sex hormone-binding globulin), or in serum-free medium (SFM). It was observed that estradiol determined a significant time-dependent increase of cAMP only in MCF-7 cells maintained in 10% DCC-FCS. When cells were maintained in 10% SHBG-FREE/DCC-FCS, estradiol had no detectable effect. However, its ability to increase cAMP was observed again after the addition of human SHBG, in doses ranging from 5 to 50 nM. Moreover, in the presence of 10% SHBG-FREE/DCC-FCS, SHBG, even in the absence of estradiol, caused a significant increase of cAMP. In conclusion, the data reported in the present study suggest that the ability of estradiol to induce cAMP in MCF-7 cells is not due to a direct membrane effect of the hormone, but rather it is mediated by FCS. SHBG is one of the serum factors mediating estradiol action. Lastly, it was proven that SHBG triggers the cAMP pathway in MCF-7 cells in a physiologic culture condition and at physiologic concentrations.  相似文献   

18.
Hormones and cancer in humans   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Hormones play a major role in the aetiology of several of the commonest cancers worldwide, including cancers of the endometrium, breast and ovary in women and cancer of the prostate in men. It is likely that the main mechanisms by which hormones affect cancer risk are by controlling the rate of cell division, the differentiation of cells and the number of susceptible cells. Hormones have very marked effects on cell division in the endometrium; oestrogens stimulate mitosis whereas progestins oppose this effect. The risk for endometrial cancer increases with late menopause, oestrogen replacement therapy and obesity, and decreases with parity and oral contraceptive use; thus risk increases in proportion to the duration of exposure to oestrogens unopposed by progestins, probably because unopposed oestrogens stimulate endometrial cell division. The effects of hormones on breast epithelial cell division in non-pregnant women are much less clear-cut than their effects on the endometrium, but both oestrogens and progestins appear to stimulate mitosis. Breast cancer risk increases with early menarche, late menopause and oestrogen replacement therapy, probably due to increased exposure of the breasts to oestrogen and/or progesterone. Early first pregnancy and multiparity reduce the risk for breast cancer, probably due to the hormonally-induced differentiation of breast cells and the corresponding reduction in the number of susceptible cells. Hormones do not have marked direct effects on the epithelial cells covering the ovaries, but hormones stimulate ovulation which is followed by cell division during repair of the epithelium. Risk for ovarian cancer increases with late menopause and decreases with parity and oral contraceptive use, suggesting that the lifetime number of ovulations may be a determinant of risk. For all three of these cancers risk changes within a few years of changes in exposure to sex hormones and some of the changes in risk persist for many years, indicating that hormones can affect both early and late stages of carcinogenesis. Understanding of the role of sex hormones in the aetiology of prostate cancer and of some rarer cancers is less complete.  相似文献   

19.
TFDP3 has been previously identified as an inhibitor of E2F molecules. It has been shown to suppress E2F1-induced apoptosis dependent P53 and to play a potential role in carcinogenesis. However, whether it indeed helps cancer cells tolerate apoptosis stress in cancer tissues remains unknown. TFDP3 expression was assessed by RT-PCR, in situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry in normal human tissues, cancer tissues and prostate cancer tissues. The association between TFDP3 and E2F1 in prostate cancer development was analyzed in various stages. Apoptosis was evaluated with annexin-V and propidium iodide staining and flow-cytometry. The results show that, in 96 samples of normal human tissues, TFDP3 could be detected in the cerebrum, esophagus, stomach, small intestine, bronchus, breast, ovary, uterus, and skin, but seldom in the lung, muscles, prostate, and liver. In addition, TFDP3 was highly expressed in numerous cancer tissues, such as brain-keratinous, lung squamous cell carcinoma, testicular seminoma, cervical carcinoma, skin squamous cell carcinoma, gastric adenocarcinoma, liver cancer, and prostate cancer. Moreover, TFDP3 was positive in 23 (62.2%) of 37 prostate cancer samples regardless of stage. Furthermore, immunohistochemistry results show that TFDP3 was always expressed in coordination with E2F1 at equivalent expression levels in prostate cancer tissues, and was highly expressed particularly in samples of high stage. When E2F1 was extrogenously expressed in LNCap cells, TFDP3 could be induced, and the apoptosis induced by E2F1 was significantly decreased. It was demonstrated that TFDP3 was a broadly expressed protein corresponding to E2F1 in human tissues, and suggested that TFDP3 is involved in prostate cancer cell survival by suppressing apoptosis induced by E2F1.  相似文献   

20.
Prostate cancer is the commonest non-skin cancer in men. Incidence and mortality rates of this tumor vary strikingly throughout the world. Although several factors have been implicated to explain this remarkable variation, lifestyle and dietary factors may play a dominant role, with sex hormones behaving as intermediaries between exogenous factors and molecular targets in development and progression of prostate cancer. Human prostate cancer is generally considered a paradigm of androgen-dependent tumor; however, estrogen role in both normal and malignant prostate appears to be equally important. The association between plasma androgens and prostate cancer remains contradictory and mostly not compatible with the androgen hypothesis. Similar evidence apply to estrogens, although the ratio of androgen to estrogen in plasma declines with age. Apart from methodological problems, a major issue is to what extent circulating hormones can be considered representative of their intraprostatic levels. Both nontumoral and malignant human prostate tissues and cells are endowed with key enzymes of steroid metabolism, including 17betahydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (17betaHSD), 5beta-reductase, 3alpha/3betaHSD, and aromatase. A divergent expression and/or activity of these enzymes may eventually lead to a differential prostate accumulation of steroid derivatives having distinct biological activities, as it occurs for hydroxylated estrogens in the human breast. Locally produced or metabolically transformed estrogens may differently affect proliferative activity of prostate cancer cells. Aberrant aromatase expression and activity has been reported in prostate tumor tissues and cells, implying that androgen aromatization to estrogens may play a role in prostate carcinogenesis or tumor progression. Interestingly, many genes encoding for steroid enzymes are polymorphic, although only a few studies have supported their relation with risk of prostate cancer. In animal model systems estrogens, combined with androgens, appear to be required for the malignant transformation of prostate epithelial cells. Although the mechanisms underlying the hormonal induction of prostate cancer in experimental animals remain uncertain, there is however evidence to support the assumption that long term administration of androgens and estrogens results in an estrogenic milieu in rat prostates and in the ensuing development of dysplasia and cancer. Both androgen and estrogen have been reported to stimulate proliferation of cultured prostate cancer cells, primarily through receptor-mediated effects. As for estrogens, the two major receptor types, ERalpha and ERbeta, are expressed in both normal and diseased human prostate, though with a different cellular localization. Since these two receptors are different in terms of ligand binding, heterodimerization, transactivation, and estrogen response element activity, it is likely that an imbalance of their expression may be critical to determine the ultimate estrogen effects on prostate cancer cells. In prostate cancer, ERbeta activation appears to limit cell proliferation directly or through ERalpha inhibition, and loss of ERbeta has been consistently associated with tumor progression. Several splicing variants of both ERalpha and ERbeta exist. Little is known about their expression and function in the human prostate, although reciprocal regulation and interaction with gene promoter both warrant further investigation. In summary, although multiple consistent evidence suggests that estrogens are critical players in human prostate cancer, their role has been only recently reconsidered, being eclipsed for years by an androgen-dominated interest.  相似文献   

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