Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0476089 (endometrial cancer)
11,379 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Estrogen is a major risk factor for endometrial cancer and it has been well-established that smokers have a significantly reduced risk of endometrial cancer. Localized levels of estrogen within the uterus may determine the estrogenic response. The objective of this research was to investigate effects of cigarette smoke related hydrocarbons (benzo(a)pyrene, BP) on uterine CYP1A1/2 and 1B1, enzymes involved in estrogen metabolism. Human endometrium epithelial cells (RL95-2) were incubated with various concentrations (0.05, 0.1, 0.5, 1, and 10mM) of BP for 48h. CYP1 catalytic activity, protein and mRNA levels were determined. Selective chemical and immuno-inhibitors were used to determine the contribution of individual CYP1 isoenzymes. Cells expressing CYP1A1, CYP1A2 and CYP1B1 were used for comparisons. CYP1A1/2 protein and mRNA levels were significantly elevated by BP. Low level of constitutive CYP1 activity was observed in RL95-2 cells, which was significantly induced by BP exposure (12-fold at 1mM). CYP1 activity in BP-induced cells was significantly inhibited by specific anti-CYP1A1 and high concentration of alpha-naphthoflavone (ANF, 100nM), but not by selective CYP1A2 (furafylline) and CYP1B1 (homoeriodictoyl) inhibitors and low concentration of ANF (5nM). These studies suggest that CYP1A2 and CYP1B1 are not induced by BP in the endometrial cells. It also appears that CYP1A1 is one of the major CYP450 enzymes induced by BP.
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PMID:Benzo(a)pyrene exposure induces CYP1A1 activity and expression in human endometrial cells. 1212 40

Metabolic activation of estradiol has been shown to be a key factor in endometrial carcinogenesis. 4-hydroxy estrogens (CYP1B1 metabolites) received particular attention because of their causative role in malignant transformation of various organs including endometrium. CYP1B1 displays the highest level of expression in endometrium. 4-hydroxy estrogens can bind to DNA via their quinone metabolites and cause oxidative damage in endometrial cancer. Moreover, the 4-hydroxy estrogens bind to the estrogen receptor and have estrogenic effects on target tissues. Six polymorphisms of the CYP1B1 gene have been described of which four result in amino acid substitutions; 1-13C-->T, codon 48C-->G, codon 119G-->T, codon 432C-->G, codon 449T-->C and codon 453A-->G. The polymorphisms on exons 2 and 3 have significant effects on the catalytic function of CYP1B1. Polymorphisms on specific regions of CYP1B1 gene result in hyperactivation of the protein and can lead to a higher susceptibility in the incidence of various cancers. Thus, inherited alterations in CYP1B1 hydroxylation activity may be associated with significant changes in estrogen metabolism and, thereby, may possibly explain inter-individual differences in endometrial cancer risk associated with estrogen-mediated carcinogenesis.
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PMID:CYP1B1 gene in endometrial cancer. 1277 Jul 47

The estradiol metabolites by CYP1B1 received particular attention because of their causative role in malignant transformation of endometrium. We hypothesize that polymorphisms of CYP1B1 gene can predict higher incidence of endometrial cancer. To test this hypothesis, the genetic distributions of six different CYP1B1 gene polymorphisms were investigated, by sequence-specific PCR and direct DNA sequencing, in 113 Japanese endometrial cancer patients and 202 healthy controls. We also investigated whether the expression of estrogen receptors (ERalpha and ERbeta), progesterone receptor, and androgen receptor genes are influenced by the CYP1B1 genotypes in endometrial cancer. The results of our study demonstrated that the distributions of CYP1B1 genotypes at codons 119 and 432 were significantly different between endometrial cancer patients and healthy normal controls. The relative risks of 119T/T and 432G/G in endometrial cancer were calculated as 3.32 and 2.49 compared with wild-types. The 119T/T showed significant correlation for positivities of ERalpha and ERbeta. The 432G/G also showed weak correlations for ERalpha positivity. Other loci, intron 1, codon 48, and codon 449 were not different between endometrial cancer patients and healthy normal control. This is the first report that demonstrates that the rare polymorphisms at codons 119 and 432 of CYP1B1 gene have higher risk for endometrial cancer, and positive correlations with ERalpha and ERbeta expressions in endometrial cancer.
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PMID:CYP1B1 gene polymorphisms have higher risk for endometrial cancer, and positive correlations with estrogen receptor alpha and estrogen receptor beta expressions. 2891 79

Although long-term tamoxifen therapy is associated with increased risk of endometrial cancer, little is known about the ability of endometrial tissue to biotransform tamoxifen to potentially reactive intermediates, capable of forming DNA adducts. The present study examined whether explant cultures of human endometrium provide a suitable in vitro model to investigate the tissue-specific biotransformation of tamoxifen. Fresh human endometrial tissue, microscopically uninvolved in disease, was cut into 1 x 2-mm uniform explants and incubated with media containing either 25 or 100 microM tamoxifen in a 24-well plate. Metabolites were analyzed by reversed-phase HPLC using postcolumn, online, photochemical activation and fluorescence detection. Three metabolites, namely, alpha-hydroxytamoxifen, 4-hydroxytamoxifen, and N-desmethyltamoxifen were identified in culture medium and tissue lysates. N-desmethyltamoxifen was found to be the major metabolite in both tissue and media extracts of tamoxifen-exposed explants. Incubations of tamoxifen with recombinant human cytochrome P-450s (CYPs) found that CYP2C9 and CYP2D6 produced all three of the above tamoxifen metabolites, while CYP1A1 and CYP3A4 catalyzed the formation of alpha-hydroxytamoxifen and N-desmethyltamoxifen, and CYP1A2 and CYP1B1 only formed the alpha-hydroxy metabolite. CYP2D6 exhibited the greatest activity for the formation of all three tamoxifen metabolites. Western immunoblots of microsomes from human endometrium detected the presence of CYPs 2C9, 3A, 1A1 and 1B1 in fresh endometrium, while CYPs 2D6 and 1A2 were not detected. Immunohistochemical (IHC) analysis also confirmed the presence of CYPs 2C9, 3A and 1B1 in fresh human endometrium and in viable tissue cultured for 24 h with or without tamoxifen. Together, the results support the use of explant cultures of human endometrium as a suitable in vitro model to investigate the biotransformation of tamoxifen in this target tissue. In addition, the results support the role of CYPs 2C9, 3A, 1A1 and 1B1 in the biotransformation of tamoxifen, including the formation of the DNA reactive alpha-hydroxytamoxifen metabolite, in human endometrium.
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PMID:Biotransformation of tamoxifen in a human endometrial explant culture model. 1464 36

The strategy of therapy and prognosis of reproductive system neoplasia generally depend on the steroid receptor status of tumor. The causes of formation of steroid receptor-free tumors are to be investigated. The genetic polymorphism of CYP19 (aromatase), CYP17 (17-hydroxylase; 17,20-lyase), CYP1B1 (4-estrogen hydroxylase) and COMT (catechol-O-methyl transferase) was studied in a total of 254 patients with breast and endometrial cancer, with particular reference to the association of certain polymorphisms and receptor status of tumor. It was found that the lack of estrogen receptor (ER) in breast tumor was due to a deficit in the A3A6 allele (p(0.01), while the absence of progesterone receptors was associated with a lower incidence of the A1A1 and A1A2 variants (p = 0.022) of tetranucleotide repeats in the CYP19 gene. In the same patients, receptor-negative tumors occurred more often (p = 0.032) than in combinations of higher level of 4-hydroxylase estradiol of S-allele in position 48 (Gly/Arg) of the CYP1B1 gene. Moreover, endometrial carcinoma patients tended to reveal (p = 0.058) an increased ratio of A6A7-CYP19 to allele A1-containing variant. No other distinctions between R(+) and R(-) tumors were identified. It is suggested that peculiar polymorphisms of steroidogenic enzymes may moderately influence the genesis of R(-) neoplasms which may be associated with either the rate of estrogen biosynthesis or, as in the case of CYP1B1, with formation of genotoxic derivatives of estrogens. The latter point is to be investigated further.
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PMID:[Genetic polymorphism of steroidogenic enzymes and steroid receptor level in tumors of the reproductive system]. 1517 18

CYP1B1 and COMT code for the key enzymes of catecholestrogen biosynthesis and metabolism, and their polymorphisms determine a variation of enzymic activities. RFLP analysis was used to study the allele and genotype frequency distributions of CYP1B1 polymorphisms Arg48Gly, Ala119Ser, and Val432Leu and COMT polymorphism Val158Met in 210 breast cancer patients, 138 endometrial cancer patients, and 152 healthy women. The COMT polymorphism showed no significant association with breast or endometrial cancer. For the first time, such association was observed for the CYP1B1 polymorphisms. CYP1B1 allele C (Arg48), which codes for the enzyme more active in estradiol 4-hydroxylation, was associated with higher risk of breast (OR = 3.22, CI 2.34-4.43, p = 0.000) and endometrial (OR = 2.43, CI 1.72-3.44, p = 0.000) cancer. Similar data were obtained for CYP1B1 allele G (Ala119): OR = 2.18, CI 1.58-3.01, p = 0.000 in breast cancer and OR = 2.52, CI 1.78-3.56, p = 0.000 in endometrial cancer. Risk of endometrial, but not breast, cancer was significantly higher in carriers of CYP1B1 genotype Val432/Val. This was explained by stronger estrogen dependence and, consequently, higher estrogen reactivity of the endometrium as compared with the mammary gland.
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PMID:[Polymorphisms of CYP1B1 and COMT in breast and endometrial cancer]. 1528 6

Allelic variations in CYP1B1 are reported to modulate the incidence of several types of cancer. To provide a mechanistic basis for this association, we investigated the impact of nonsilent allelic changes on the intracellular levels and post-translational regulation of CYP1B1 protein. When transiently expressed in COS-1 cells, either in the presence or absence of recombinant cytochrome P450 reductase, the cellular level of the CYP1B1.4 allelic variant (containing a Ser at the amino acid position 453; Ser453) was 2-fold lower compared with the other four allelic CYP1B1 proteins (containing Asn453), as analyzed by both immunoblotting and ethoxyresorufin O-deethylase activity. This difference was caused by post-translational regulation; as in the presence of cycloheximide, the rate of degradation of immunodetectable and enzymatically active CYP1B1.4 was distinctly faster than that of CYP1B1.1. Pulse-chase analysis revealed that the half-life of CYP1B1.4 was a mere 1.6 h compared with 4.8 h for CYP1B1.1. The presence of the proteasome inhibitor MG132 [N-benzoyloxycarbonyl (Z)-Leu-Leuleucinal] increased the stability not only of immunodetectable CYP1B1, but also--unexpectedly given the size of the proteasome access channel--increased the stability of enzymatically active CYP1B1. The data presented herein also demonstrate that CYP1B1 is targeted for its polymorphism-dependent degradation by polyubiquitination but not phosphorylation. Our results importantly provide a mechanism to explain the recently reported lower incidence of endometrial cancer in individuals carrying the CYP1B1*4 compared with the CYP1B1*1 haplo-type. In addition, the mechanistic paradigms revealed herein may explain the strong overexpression of CYP1B1 in tumors compared with nondiseased tissues.
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PMID:Proteasomal degradation of human CYP1B1: effect of the Asn453Ser polymorphism on the post-translational regulation of CYP1B1 expression. 1548 49

2-Hydroxylated metabolites of estrogen have been shown to have antiangiogenic effects and inhibit tumor cell proliferation, whereas 4-hydroxylated metabolites have been implicated in carcinogenesis. We examined whether polymorphisms in certain genes involved in estrogen metabolism are associated with endometrial cancer risk in a population-based case-control study with 371 cases and 420 controls. Based on previously published genotype-phenotype correlation studies, we defined variant alleles thought to increase estrogen 2-hydroxylation as presumptively low-risk (CYP1A1 m1 T6235C and m2 Ile(462)Val) and those thought to increase estrogen 4-hydroxylation as high-risk (CYP1A1 m4 Thr(461)Asn, CYP1A2 A734C, and CYP1B1 Leu(432)Val). Odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (95% CI) were calculated using unconditional logistic regression. Carrying at least one CYP1A1 m1 or m2 variant allele was associated with a decreased risk of endometrial cancer [ORs (95% CIs), 0.64 (0.44-0.93) and 0.54 (0.30-0.99), respectively]. No strong alteration in risk was observed among women with any of the putative high-risk alleles. When CYP1A1, CYP1A2, and CYP1B1 genotypes were combined and ranked by the number of putative low-risk genotypes carried, women with four or five low-risk genotypes had a reduced risk of endometrial cancer (OR, 0.29; 95% CI, 0.15-0.56) compared with women with one or none. No appreciable alteration in risk was observed among women carrying two or three low-risk genotypes. Some of our findings are consistent with the hypothesis that increased estrogen 2-hydroxylation is associated with decreased endometrial cancer risk, but replication of these results is required before any firm conclusions can be reached.
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PMID:Genetic factors in catechol estrogen metabolism in relation to the risk of endometrial cancer. 1573 58

Tamoxifen has been used in the management of receptor-positive breast cancer for >20 years. Usage confers an elevated risk of developing endometrial carcinoma. Its mechanism of carcinogenicity remains unresolved with controversy as to whether or not this is mediated through a genotoxic mechanism. Usage is not only associated with an elevated occurrence of endometrioid endometrial carcinoma, but also type 2 and mixed epithelial-stromal tumours (MESTs) that have a poorer prognosis. Following hysterectomy, endometrial tissues (n=18) classified as benign (n=6), non-tamoxifen-associated carcinoma (n=6) and tamoxifen-associated carcinoma (n=6) were obtained; quantitative gene expression was performed. Employing real-time RT-PCR, the relative gene expressions of phase I/II metabolic enzymes CYP1A2, CYP1B1 and CYP3A4, cathechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) and SULT2A1 were ascertained. Measurable mRNA transcripts, especially for those genes associated with tamoxifen bioactivation, were quantifiable in all the tissues examined. Whether this is evidence that generation of genotoxic tamoxifen metabolites may occur in human endometrial tissue remains to be ascertained.
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PMID:Quantifiable mRNA transcripts for tamoxifen-metabolising enzymes in human endometrium. 1850 16

Prunella vulgaris (PV), a commonly used Chinese herb, also known as Self-heal, has a wide range of reported medicinal activities. By screening multiple herbs using the endometrial cancer cell line, ECC-1, and an alkaline phosphatase detection assay, we found that PV displayed significant antiestrogenic activity. We investigated the possible usefulness of antiestrogenic activity using both in vitro and in vivo models of endometrial function. Using the well-differentiated, hormone-responsive endometrial cell line, ECC-1, PV extract, at concentrations that were not toxic to the cells, significantly reduced alkaline phosphatase activity and cell proliferation in response to estrogen in a dose-dependent manner. The expression of CYR61, an estrogen-induced protein, was blocked in ECC-1 cells by both the antiestrogen ICI 182,780 and PV extract. Interestingly, PV extract did not appear to directly inhibit estrogen signaling. Rather, we found that its activities were probably related to an ability to function as an aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR) agonist in ECC-1 cells. In support of this hypothesis, we noted that PV induced CYP1A1, CYP1B1, and AHR repressor expression in a dose-dependent manner--responses that were blocked by small interfering RNA treatment to reduce AHR and specific AHR antagonists. Ovariectomized immunodeficient RAG-2/gamma(c) knockout mice implanted with human endometrial xenografts developed implants only when treated with estrogen. Mice treated with estrogen and PV tea in their drinking water had fewer and smaller xenograft implants compared with their estrogen-treated counterparts that drank only water (P < 0.05). Analysis of the resulting implants by immunohistochemistry demonstrated persistent estrogen receptor (ER), but reduced proliferation and CYR61 expression. Mouse uterine tissue weight in PV-treated mice was not different from controls, and cycle fecundity of intact C57 female mice was unaffected by PV tea treatment. PV, or Self-heal, exhibits significant antiestrogenic properties, both in vitro and in vivo. This activity is likely due to the ability of PV-activated AHR to interfere with estrogen. This herb may be useful as an adjunct for the treatment of estrogen-dependent processes like endometriosis and breast and uterine cancers. Full characterization of this herb will likely provide new insights into the crosstalk between AHR and ESR1, with potential for therapeutic applications in women.
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PMID:Characterization of antiestrogenic activity of the Chinese herb, prunella vulgaris, using in vitro and in vivo (Mouse Xenograft) models. 1892 63


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