Impact of Oestradiol and Progesterone on Antioxidant Activity in Normal Human Breast Epithelial Cells in Culture
- 1 January 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Free Radical Research
- Vol. 28 (3) , 241-249
- https://doi.org/10.3109/10715769809069276
Abstract
The risk of developing breast cancer increases after long term use of oestrogen and progestagen, and carcinogenesis in the breast is partly due to oxidative damage to DNA bases. Therefore, we studied the effects of 17 beta-oestradiol and progesterone on the antioxidative status and the vulnerability to oxidative stress exhibited by normal human breast epithelial cells in culture. After exposure to hydrogen peroxide, cells grown with oestradiol alone or with both oestradiol and progesterone showed significantly decreased viability compared to cells grown in medium without added hormones. There was, however, no difference in hydrogen peroxide degradation rate between controls and hormone treated cultures. When desferrioxamine was added, the viability increased and the hydrogen peroxide degradation rate decreased. The levels of several antioxidants were altered in cells grown in the presence of oestradiol and progesterone: the concentrations of glutathione reductase and catalase decreased significantly while the levels of glutathione peroxidase and reduced glutathione did not change. The alterations in enzyme activity and cell vulnerability were more pronounced in cultures treated with a combination of oestradiol and progesterone. We conclude that the redox balance in the cultured normal human breast epithelial cells was altered by treatment with oestradiol and progesterone, and that this change led to the increased death of cells subsequently exposed to hydrogen peroxide. This effect may have implications for sex hormone dependent diseases of the breast.Keywords
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