Despite the important roles of both prolactin (PRL) and 17beta-estradiol (E2) in normal mammary development as well as in breast cancer, and coexpression of the estrogen receptor (ER) and PRL receptor in many mammary tumors, the interactions between PRL and E2 in breast cancer have not been well studied. The activating protein 1 (AP-1) transcription factor, a known regulator of processes essential for normal growth and development as well as carcinogenesis, is a potential site for cross-talk between these hormones in breast cancer cells. Here we demonstrate that PRL and E2 cooperatively enhance the activity of AP-1 in MCF-7-derived cells. In addition to the acute PRL-induced ERK1/2 activation, PRL and E2 also individually elicited delayed, sustained rises in levels of phosphorylated p38 and especially ERK1/2. Together, these hormones increased the dynamic phosphorylation of ERK1/2 and c-Fos, and induced c-fos promoter activity. Synergistic activation of the transcription factor, Elk-1, reflected the PRL-E2 interaction at ERK1/2 and is a likely mechanism for activation of the c-fos promoter via the serum response element. The enhanced AP-1 activity resulting from the interaction of these hormones may increase expression of many target genes that are critical for oncogenesis and may contribute to neoplastic progression.
The essential role of prolactin (PRL) in normal mammary gland growth and differentiation has implicated this hormone in the development and progression of breast cancer. Although Stat5 is the best-characterized mediator of PRL signals, PRL also activates multiple other signals, whose roles in normal and pathologic processes are not well understood. We have shown that PRL stimulates activating protein-1 (AP-1) activity in breast cancer cells, and can cooperate with estradiol in this pathway. AP-1 modulates many processes critical for carcinogenesis, including cell proliferation, survival, transformation, invasion and angiogenesis, and is elevated in many neoplasms, including breast tumors. Here, we investigated the relationship between PRL signals to AP-1 and Stat5. We found that PRL activation of Stat5a and Stat5b, but not Stat1 or Stat3, reduced PRL signals to AP-1, without altering estradiol-induced AP-1 activity. The truncation mutant, Stat5/D53C, but not Stat5Y699F, was an effective inhibitor, consistent with a requirement for Stat5 dimerization and nuclear accumulation, but not its C-terminal transactivation activity. The association of Stat5 with AP-1 proteins suggests that this underlies the inhibition. Predictably, the ability of PRL to activate Stat5 and AP-1 was inversely related in mammary cell lines. Further, reduction of Stat5 protein with siRNA in T47D cells, which contain elevated Stat5, increased PRLinduced AP-1 signals, transcripts for the AP-1 target, matrix metalloproteinase-2 and associated invasive behavior. This study points to the importance of cell context in determining the spectrum of PRL-induced actions, which is critical for understanding the contributions of PRL to breast cancer.
Identification of biomarkers that indicate an increased risk of breast cancer or that can be used as surrogates for evaluating treatment efficacy is paramount to successful disease prevention and intervention. An ideal biomarker would be identifiable before lesion development. To test the hypothesis that changes in cell turnover precede mammary carcinogenesis, we evaluated epithelial cell proliferation and apoptosis in mammary glands from transgenic mice engineered to develop mammary cancer due to expression in mammary epithelia of transforming growth factor ␣ (TGF-␣) or c-myc. In transgenic glands, before lesion development, epithelial cell turnover was enhanced overall compared with nontransgenic glands, indicating that aberrant cell turnover in normal epithelia may contribute to tumorigenesis. In addition, in tumor-containing glands, proliferation in normal epithelia was higher than in tumor-free transgenic glands, suggesting these cell populations influence one another. Finally, although c-myc glands displayed a uniformly high epithelial cell turnover regardless of age, cell turnover was reduced with aging in nontransgenic and TGF-␣ mice, indicating that some growth and death regulatory mechanisms remain intact in TGF-␣ epithelia. These observations support the evaluation of cell turnover as a biomarker of cancer risk and indicator of prevention/treatment efficacy in preclinical models and warrant validation in human breast cancer.
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