Glucocorticoid and mineralocorticoid cross-talk with progesterone receptor to induce focal adhesion and growth inhibition in breast cancer cells.

Article Details

Citation

Leo JC, Guo C, Woon CT, Aw SE, Lin VC

Glucocorticoid and mineralocorticoid cross-talk with progesterone receptor to induce focal adhesion and growth inhibition in breast cancer cells.

Endocrinology. 2004 Mar;145(3):1314-21. doi: 10.1210/en.2003-0732. Epub 2003 Nov 14.

PubMed ID
14617569 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Progesterone receptor (PR), glucocorticoid receptor, and mineralocorticoid receptor belong to a subfamily of nuclear receptor superfamily with similar sequence and structural characteristics. Many reports have documented glucocorticoid-like effects of progesterone in various tissues. This study addresses the issue of cross-talk between corticosteroids and PR using PR-transfected MDA-MB-231 cells ABC28 and vector-transfected control cells CTC15. At physiological concentrations, dexamethasone, cortisol, and aldosterone mimic the effects of progesterone by inducing significant growth inhibition, cell spreading, and focal adhesions in PR-positive ABC28 cells. These hormones also induce progesterone-like effects in increasing the expression of p21(CIP1/WAF1) protein and decreasing the level of phospho-p42/p44 mAPK. Two lines of evidence suggest that these effects are mediated by cross-talk with PR. First, these compounds do not exhibit the same progesterone-like effects in PR-negative CTC15 cells. Second, PR blocker ZK98299 abolishes their effect on cell spreading and focal adhesion in ABC28 cells. The cross-talk is corticosteroid specific because estradiol and thyroid hormone triiodothyronine have no effect on PR-transfected cells ABC28. It is also interesting to note that dexamethasone induces a small but detectable increase of focal adhesions and limited growth stimulation in vector-transfected cells CTC15. In contrast, progesterone exhibits no detectable effect on CTC15 cells. This study provides evidence that glucocorticoid and mineralocorticoid cross-talk with PR to produce progesterone-like effects in breast cancer cells. Glucocorticoid receptor and PR share some overlapping activity in mediating focal adhesion but not in regulating cell proliferation.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Drug Targets
DrugTargetKindOrganismPharmacological ActionActions
ProgesteroneGlucocorticoid receptorProteinHumans
Unknown
Partial agonist
Details