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Query: EC:2.7.10.1 (
ERK
)
95,504
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The proliferative effect of estrogens on breast cancer cell (BCC) is mainly mediated through estrogen receptors (ER). Non-transcriptional effects of estrogens, exerted through activation of several protein kinases, may also contribute to BCC proliferation. However, the relative contribution of these two responses to BCC proliferation is not known. We characterized a novel estrogenic receptor ligand which possess Akt and
ERK
activating properties distinct from that of 17beta-estradiol. Early and delayed waves of activation of these kinases were detected upon estrogenic challenge of BCC, but only molecules able to promote a significant, delayed activation of
ERK
-induced BCC proliferation.
Estrogen
-induced cell cycle progression was not sensitive to the inhibition of
ERK
-regulating kinases MEK1 and 2. ERalpha was found to be necessary, but not sufficient for kinases activation. Thus, estrogens elicit a distinct pattern of early and delayed activation of
ERK
and Akt, and early protein kinase activation is probably not involved in BCC proliferation. Structural variations in the estrogen molecule may confer novel biological properties unrelated to estrogen-dependent transcriptional activation.
...
PMID:Cell cycle regulation of breast cancer cells through estrogen-induced activities of ERK and Akt protein kinases. 1592 90
Inappropriate exposure of neonatal sheep to estrogen during critical developmental periods inhibits or retards endometrial gland morphogenesis and reduces uterine growth. Studies were conducted to identify mechanisms mediating estrogen disruption of neonatal ovine uterine development by analysis of candidate growth factor systems and using suppression subtraction hybridization (SSH). In study 1, sheep were exposed either to corn oil as a control or to estradiol valerate (EV) from birth to Postnatal Day (PND) 14, which ablated endometrial gland development. Estradiol valerate decreased uterine FGF7 (fibroblast growth factor 7) and
MET
(hepatocyte growth factor receptor) expression and increased INHBA (inhibin betaA). The SSH identified a number of genes responsive to EV, which included GSTM3 (glutathione S-transferase), IDH1 (cytosolic NADP-isocitrate dehydrogenase), PECI (peroxisomal D(3),D(2)-enoyl-coenzyme A isomerase), OAS1 (2',5'-oligoadenylate 40/46-kDa synthetase), IGFBP3 (insulin-like growth factor-binding protein-3), TEGT (testis-enhanced gene transcript), CXCL10 (interferon-gamma-inducible protein 10), and IGLV (immunoglobulin V). These mRNAs were expressed predominantly in the endometrial epithelia (GSTM3, IDH1, PEC1, OAS1, and TEGT), stroma (IGFBP3), or immune cells (CXCL10 and IGLV). In study 2, effects of estrogen exposure on uterine gene expression were determined during three different critical developmental periods (PNDs 0-14, 14- 28, and 42-56).
Estrogen
exposure decreased expression of the SSH-identified genes, particularly those from PNDs 0-14. These studies suggest that estrogen disruption of postnatal uterine development involves period-specific effects on expression of genes predominantly in the endometrial epithelium. The SSH-identified, estrogen-disrupted genes represent new candidate regulators of postnatal endometrial adenogenesis.
...
PMID:Estrogen disruption of neonatal ovine uterine development: effects on gene expression assessed by suppression subtraction hybridization. 1597 82
Estrogen
and its receptor (ER) are critical for development and progression of breast cancer. This pathway is targeted by endocrine therapies that either block ER functions or deplete ER's estrogen ligand. While endocrine therapies are very effective, de novo and acquired resistance are still common. Laboratory and clinical data now indicate that bidirectional molecular crosstalk between nuclear or membrane ER and growth factor receptor pathways such as
HER2
/neu is involved in endocrine resistance. Preclinical data suggest that blockade of selected growth factor receptor signaling can overcome this type of resistance, and this strategy is already being tested in clinical trials.
...
PMID:Endocrinology and hormone therapy in breast cancer: new insight into estrogen receptor-alpha function and its implication for endocrine therapy resistance in breast cancer. 1616 39
Estrogen
is well-established as a mitogenic factor implicated in the tumorigenesis and progression of breast cancer via its binding to the estrogen receptor alpha (ERalpha). Recent data indicate that chromatin inactivation mediated by histone deacetylation (HDAC) and DNA methylation is a critical component of ERalpha silencing in human breast cancer cells. The aim of this study was to determine the expression of the HDAC1 gene in malignant human breast tissue and to correlate our observations with available clinical information. In the present study, the level of expression of HDAC1 mRNA was assessed by LightCycler-based quantitative real-time reverse transcriptase (RT)-PCR analysis in 162 cases of invasive carcinoma of the breast. Associations between HDAC1 mRNA expression and different clinicopathological factors were sought. It was found that HDAC1 mRNA was expressed at significantly higher levels in tumors from patients over 50 years of age and in those tumors without axillary lymph node involvement, that are less than 2 cm, that are of a non-high histological grade, that are
HER2
negative and that are ERalpha/PgR positive. Patients with tumors displaying high levels of HDAC1 mRNA expression tended to have a better prognosis in terms of both disease-free and overall survival. However, univariate and multivariate analysis did not show HDAC1 mRNA expression level to be an independent prognostic factor for either disease-free or overall survival. These results imply that HDAC1 mRNA expression could have potential as an endocrine response marker and may have prognostic implications for breast cancer progression.
...
PMID:Quantitation of HDAC1 mRNA expression in invasive carcinoma of the breast*. 1617 92
Estrogen
receptors (ERs) stimulate genomic effects by acting as nuclear transcription factors as well as non-genomic effects by activating distinct cytoplasmic protein kinase cascades. Non-genomic effects have been implicated in numerous cellular processes, such as proliferation, differentiation, apoptosis and vasorelaxation. To exploit non-genomic effects mediated by ERalpha for novel hormone replacement regimens, we screened a focused library of steroid receptor ligands to identify compounds exhibiting properties different from estradiol, i.e. substances that selectively stimulate non-genomic signal transduction pathways while exhibiting low genomic activities. Treatment of breast cancer cells and osteosarcoma cells with estradiol, estren, substance A and substance B led to non-genomic activation of Akt (protein kinase B) and extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2 (ERK1/2) signaling cascades mediated by Src (Rous Sarcoma Virus, non-receptor tyrosine kinase) and phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase (PI3K) stimulation. Such compounds leading to prominent Akt/
ERK
activation but exhibiting only weak genomic properties were applied in vasorelaxation assays, modeling physiological non-genomic ER responses. As expected from PI3K and Src activation data, substances were as effective as estradiol in mediating vasorelaxation. We assume that these pathway-selective estrogen receptor ligands may serve as potent lead structures for novel hormone replacement strategies exhibiting lesser side effects than the existing treatment paradigms.
...
PMID:Identification of estrogen receptor ligands leading to activation of non-genomic signaling pathways while exhibiting only weak transcriptional activity. 1620 30
Estrogen
and progestin combination in hormone replacement therapy (HRT) increases the incidence of breast cancer, but decreases the endometrial cancer risk of unopposed estrogen. Therefore, a SERM such as Tibolone, that delivers the beneficial, but not the adverse side effects, of steroid hormones would be clinically advantageous. However, data from the Million Women Study suggests that Tibolone increases the risk of both breast and endometrial cancer. Herein, we assessed the estrogenic and progestagenic actions of Tibolone using transvaginal sonography studies and an in vitro model of breast (ZR-75, MCF7) and endometrial cancer (Ishikawa). The known cancer associated proteins (ER,
EGFR
, STATS, tissue factor and Bcl-xL) were selected for study. Transvaginal sonography demonstrated that postmenopausal women treated with Tibolone displayed a thinner endometrium than in the late proliferative phase, but had a phenotype characteristic of the secretory phase, thus demonstrating the estrogenic and progestagenic actions of this SERM. In vitro, Tibolone acted as an estrogen in downregulating ER and upregulating Bcl-xL, yet as progesterone, increasing STAT5 and tissue factor in breast cancer cells. The increase in tissue factor by Tibolone correlated with its coagulative potential. Interestingly,
EGFR
was up-regulated by progesterone in the breast and by estrogen in endometrial cells, while Tibolone increased protein levels in both cell types. In conclusion, this study further demonstrates the estrogenic and progestagenic nature of Tibolone. The pattern of regulation of known oncogenes in cells of breast and endometrial origin dictates caution and vigilance in the prescription of Tibolone and subsequent patient monitoring.
...
PMID:In vivo and in vitro estrogenic and progestagenic actions of Tibolone. 1623 3
Sex differences in myocardial recovery have been reported after acute ischemia and reperfusion injury.
Estrogen
and the estrogen receptor are critical determinants of cardiovascular sex differences. However, the mechanistic pathways responsible for these differences remain unknown. We hypothesized that estrogen receptor-alpha is an important modulator of 1) myocardial functional recovery after ischemia and 2) inflammatory signaling via MAPK. To study this, adult male and female wild-type (WT) and estrogen receptor-alpha knockout (ER1KO) mouse hearts were isolated, perfused via Langendorff model, and subjected to 20 min of ischemia and 60 min of reperfusion. Myocardial contractile function (left ventricular developed pressure and positive and negative first derivative of pressure) was continuously recorded. After ischemia-reperfusion, hearts were assessed for expression of inflammatory cytokines (ELISA) and activation of MAPK and caspase-3 (Western blot analysis). Data were analyzed with two-way ANOVA or Student's t-test, and P < 0.05 was statistically significant. ER1KO females exhibited significantly less functional recovery than WT females and were similar to WT males. Activated
ERK
was increased in female WT hearts compared with female ER1KO. Activated JNK was decreased in female WT hearts compared with female ER1KO. No significant differences were found between male WT, female WT, male ER1KO, and female ER1KO in activated p38 MAPK, proinflammatory cytokine expression, and proapoptotic signaling. Estrogen receptor-alpha plays a role in the protection observed in the female heart. Differential activation of MAPK may mediate this protection. Further studies are necessary to delineate these mechanistic pathways.
...
PMID:Estrogen receptor-alpha mediates acute myocardial protection in females. 1641 70
The fact that the genetic alterations of PTEN are frequently found in hormone-dependent cancers, such as endometrial, breast, and prostate cancers, might suggest the involvement of PTEN in the hormone-dependent cell growth of such tumors.
Estrogen
promotes the cell growth of the tumors by inducing peptide growth factors in part. We analyzed the possible involvement of PTEN in peptide-growth factor-dependent cell growth in endometrial carcinoma cells. PTEN-null Ishikawa cells were efficiently infected with recombinant adenovirus at 20 MOI (multiplicity of infection) to express PTEN protein. In PTEN-IK cells, phospho-Akt/PKB was down-regulated regardless of the consistent expression of Akt/PKB. The cell growth of parental IK cells was significantly stimulated by EGF and IGF-I, and PTEN-IK cells were further sensitized to the EGF-or IGF-I-growth stimulation.
EGFR
antibody could completely compromise the stimulatory effects of EGF in both cell lines. Wortmannin, a PI3K inhibitor, or UO126, a MAPK inhibitor, partly suppressed EGF-mediated cell growth stimulation in both cell lines. EGF augmented the level of phospho-Akt/PKB of PTEN-IK cells more effectively than that of parental IK cells. These results imply that the dysfunction of PTEN leads cells into a less-sensitive phenotype to peptide growth factors by constitutive activation of the PI3K/Akt/PKB signaling pathway in endometrial carcinoma.
...
PMID:PTEN sensitizes epidermal growth factor-mediated proliferation in endometrial carcinoma cells. 1652 71
Although rapid signaling by estrogen at the plasma membrane is established, it is controversial as to the nature of the receptor protein.
Estrogen
may bind membrane proteins comparable to classical nuclear estrogen receptors (ERs), but some studies identify nonclassical receptors, such as G protein-coupled receptor (GPR)30. We took several approaches to define membrane-localized estrogen-binding proteins. In endothelial cells (ECs) from ERalpha/ERbeta combined-deleted mice, estradiol (E2) failed to specifically bind, and did not activate cAMP,
ERK
, or phosphatidyinositol 3-kinase or stimulate DNA synthesis. This is in contrast to wild-type ECs, indicating the lack of any functional estrogen-binding proteins in ERalpha/ERbeta combined-deleted ECs. To directly determine the identity of membrane and nuclear-localized ER, we isolated subcellular receptor pools from MCF7 cells. Putative ER proteins were trypsin digested and subjected to tandem array mass spectrometry. The output analysis identified membrane and nuclear E2-binding proteins as classical human ERalpha. We also determined whether GPR30 plays any role in E2 rapid actions. MCF7 (ER and GPR30 positive) and SKBR-3 (ER negative, GPR30 positive) cells were incubated with E2. Only MCF7 responded with significantly increased signaling. In MCF7, the response to E2 was not different in cells transfected with small interfering RNA to green fluorescent protein or GPR30. In contrast, interfering RNA to ERalpha or ER inhibition prevented rapid signaling and resulting biology in MCF7. In breast cancer and ECs, nuclear and membrane ERs are the same proteins. Furthermore, classical ERs mediate rapid signals induced by E2 in these cells.
...
PMID:Nature of functional estrogen receptors at the plasma membrane. 1664 38
Both male and female rat growth plate cartilage cells possess estrogen receptors (ERs), but 17beta-estradiol (E(2)) activates protein kinase C (PKC) and PKC-dependent biological responses to E(2) only in cells from female animals. PKC signaling can elicit genomic responses via mitogen activated protein kinase (MAPK) and E(2) has been shown to activate
ERK
MAPK in many cells, suggesting that MAPK may play a role in growth plate chondrocytes as well. We tested if E(2) increases MAPK activity and if so, whether the response is limited to female cells, if it is PKC-dependent, and if the mechanism involves traditional ER pathways. We also determined the contribution of MAPK to the biological response of growth plate chondrocytes and assessed the relative contributions of
ERK
, p38 and JNK MAPKs. Female rat costochondral cartilage cells were treated with E(2) and MAPK-specific activity determined in cell layer lysates. The mechanism of MAPK activation was determined by treating the cells with E(2) conjugated to bovine serum albumin (E(2)-BSA) to assess if membrane receptors were involved; stereospecificity was determined using 17alpha-estradiol; PKC and phospholipase C (PLC) dependence was determined using specific inhibitors; and the ER agonist diethylstilbestrol, the ER antagonist ICI 182780, and tamoxifen were used to assess the role of traditional ER pathways. E(2) regulation of ERK1/2 MAPK was assessed and the relative roles of ERK1/2, p38 and JNK MAPKs determined using specific inhibitors. E(2) caused a rapid dose-dependent activation of MAPK that was greatest in cells treated for 9 min with 10(-9) M hormone; activity remained elevated for 3 h. E(2)'s effect on MAPK was stereospecific and comparable to that of E(2)-BSA. It was insensitive to
DES
and ICI 182780, dependent on PKC and PLC, blocked by tamoxifen and it did not require gene transcription or translation. E(2) had no effect on ERK1 or ERK2 mRNA or protein but it caused a rapid phosphorylation of ERK1/2 at 9 min. Inhibition of ERK1/2 and p38 MAPK reduced the stimulatory effects of E(2) on alkaline phosphatase activity and [(35)S]-sulfate incorporation. These results suggest that E(2) regulates MAPK through a sex-specific membrane-mediated mechanism that does not involve cytosolic ERs in a traditional sense and that ERK1/2 and p38 mediate the downstream biological effects of the hormone.
...
PMID:Sex-specific regulation of growth plate chondrocytes by estrogen is via multiple MAP kinase signaling pathways. 1671 47
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