Effect of nomegestrol acetate on estrone-sulfatase and 17beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase activities in human breast cancer cells |
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Authors: | G Chetrite J Paris J Botella JR Pasqualini |
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Affiliation: | Steroid Hormone Research Unit, Paris, France. |
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Abstract: | It is well recognized that estradiol (E2) is one of the most important hormones supporting the growth and evolution of breast cancer. Consequently, to block this hormone before it enters the cancer cell or in the cell itself, has been one of the main targets in recent years. In the present study we explored the effect of the progestin, nomegestrol acetate, on the estrone sulfatase and 17beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (17beta-HSD) activities of MCF-7 and T-47D human breast cancer cells. Using physiological doses of estrone sulfate (E1S: 5 x 10(-9)M), nomegestrol acetate blocked very significantly the conversion of E1S to E2. In the MCF-7 cells, using concentrations of 5 x 10(-6)M and 5 x 10(-5) M of nomegestrol acetate, the decrease of E1S to E2 was, respectively, -43% and -77%. The values were, respectively, -60% and -71% for the T-47D cells. Using E1S at 2 x 10(-6) M and nomegestrol acetate at 10(-5) M, a direct inhibitory effect on the enzyme of -36% and -18% was obtained with the cell homogenate of the MCF-7 and T-47D cells, respectively. In another series of studies, it was observed that after 24 h incubation of a physiological concentration of estrone (E1: 5 x 10(-9)M) this estrogen is converted in a great proportion to E2. Nomegestrol acetate inhibits this transformation by -35% and -85% at 5 x 10(-7)M and 5 x 10(-5)M, respectively in T-47D cells; whereas in the MCF-7 cells the inhibitory effect is only significant, -48%, at 5 x 10(-5)M concentration of nomegestrol acetate. It is concluded that nomegestrol acetate in the hormone-dependent MCF-7 and T-47D breast cancer cells significantly inhibits the estrone sulfatase and 17beta-HSD activities which converts E1S to the biologically active estrogen estradiol. This inhibition provoked by this progestin on the enzymes involved in the biosynthesis of E2 can open new clinical possibilities in breast cancer therapy. |
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