Neoplastic transformation of human breast epithelial cells by estrogens and chemical carcinogens
Open Access
- 1 January 2002
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Environmental and Molecular Mutagenesis
- Vol. 39 (2-3) , 254-263
- https://doi.org/10.1002/em.10052
Abstract
Sporadic breast cancer, the most common cancer diagnosed in American and Northern European women, is gradually increasing in incidence in most Western countries. Prevention would be the most efficient way of eradicating this disease. This goal, however, cannot be accomplished until the specific agent(s) or mechanisms that initiate the neoplastic process are identified. Experimental studies have demonstrated that mammary cancer is a hormone‐dependent multistep process that can be induced by a variety of compounds and mechanisms, that is, hormones, chemicals, radiation, and viruses, in addition to or in combination with genetic factors. Although estrogens have been shown to play a central role in breast cancer development, their carcinogenicity on human breast epithelial cells (HBECs) has not yet been clearly demonstrated. Breast cancer initiates in the undifferentiated lobules type 1, which are composed of three cell types: highly proliferating cells that are estrogen‐receptor negative (ER−), nonproliferating cells that are ER positive (ER+), and very few (2) is metabolized by the cytochrome P450 enzyme isoforms CYP1A1 and CYP1B1, which also activate benzo[a]pyrene (B[a]P), a carcinogen contained in cigarette smoke. We postulate that if estrogens are carcinogenic in HBECs, they should induce the same transformation phenotypes induced by chemical carcinogens and ultimately genomic changes observed in spontaneously developing primary breast cancers. To test this hypothesis we compared the transforming potential of E2 on the HBEC MCF‐10F with that of B[a]P. Both E2 and B[a]P induced anchorage‐independent growth, colony formation in agar methocel, and loss of ductulogenic capacity in collagen gel, all parameters indicative of cell transformation. In addition, the DNA of E2‐transformed cells expressed LOH in chromosome 11 at 11q23.3, 11q24.2–q25, and LOH at 13q12–q13. B[a]P‐induced cell transformation was also associated with LOH at 13q12–q13 and at 17p13.2. The relevance of these findings is highlighted by the observation that E2‐ and B[a]P‐induced genomic alterations in the same loci found in ductal hyperplasia, ductal carcinoma in situ, and invasive ductal carcinoma of the breast. Environ. Mol. Mutagen. 39:254–263, 2002.Keywords
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