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Receptor status and subsequent sensitivity of subclones of MCF-7 human breast cancer cells surviving exposure to diethylstilbestrol.

Lorne J. Brandes, +1 more
- 01 Jun 1983 - 
- Vol. 43, Iss: 6, pp 2831-2835
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TLDR
There is no clear relationship between ER status and sensitivity to DES and that there is no way of predicting the ultimate status of cells surviving DES treatment; the mechanisms by which some MCF-7 cells survive prolonged exposure to DES are not certain.
Abstract
The estrogen receptor (ER)-positive human breast cancer cell line MCF-7 was incubated continuously in the presence of pharmacological concentrations of diethylstilbestrol (DES) in an attempt to correlate receptor status with DES sensitivity. It was consistently observed that cytotoxicity occurred at DES concentrations greater than 5 X 10(-6)M; however, a small percentage of cells, both from the wild-type MCF-7 line and from subclones derived in soft agar from single MCF-7 cells, survived, with altered morphology, up to 4 months of continuous exposure to DES concentrations ranging from 5 X 10(-6) to 1 X 10(-4)M. Characterization of seven regenerated surviving cell populations suggested that they remained ER positive; no evidence could be found for a block in the pathway of hormonal activation, as determined by progesterone receptor induction, to explain the ability of these cells to survive DES. Three regenerated cell populations were reexposed to DES. Two remained as sensitive to growth inhibition as untreated parent cells from which they were derived; however, one of these, designated MCF-7(35-1), was found to have autonomously high progesterone receptor (463 +/- 94 fmol/mg of cytosol; Kd = 1.8 +/- 0.2 X 10(-9)M) which was not significantly stimulated by the addition of 1 X 10(-8)M 17beta-estradiol for 72 hr. The third population, designated MCF-7(35-3), which survived initial exposure to 5 X 10(-5)M DES for 109 days and which remained ER positive (27 +/- 3 fmol/mg of cytosol; Kd = 0.8 +/- 0.2 X 10(-10)M) and progesterone receptor inducible, demonstrated significantly decreased sensitivity (p = 0.025) on reexposure to DES; conversely, significantly increased sensitivity (p less than 0.03) to the antiestrogen tamoxifen was observed. The mechanisms by which some MCF-7 cells survive prolonged exposure to DES are not certain; the data suggest that there is no clear relationship between ER status and sensitivity to DES and that there is no way of predicting the ultimate status of cells surviving DES treatment.

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References
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The Attractions of Proteins for Small Molecules and Ions

TL;DR: The number and variety of known compounrjs between proteins and small molecules are increasing rapidly and make a fascinating story as discussed by the authors, and there are many compounds of serum albumin, which was used during the war by many chemists, most of whom found at least one 6ew compound.
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Estrogen receptors in human breast cancer.

TL;DR: Specific quantitative techniques have been used to measure the cytoplasmic estradiol-binding protein (EBP) in human mammary carcinoma tissue specimens, indicating an excellent correlation between the presence of abundant tumor EBP and endocrine-induced breast cancer regressions.
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Estrogen control of progesterone receptor in human breast cancer. Correlation with nuclear processing of estrogen receptor.

TL;DR: MCF-7 cells of human breast cancer origin responded to estradiol (E) treatment with increased levels of progesterone receptor (PgR) showing that human breast cells which have undergone malignant changes can continue to synthesize a specific protein under hormone control.
Journal ArticleDOI

Estrogen Control of Progesterone Receptor in Human Breast Cancer: Role of Estradiol and Antiestrogen*

TL;DR: Tamoxifen is found to have dual dose-dependent estrogenic/antiestrogenic properties and the action of the antiestrogen nafoxidine is not biphasic in MCF-7 cells; it does not induce PgR over a wide dose range and at high doses, the compound inhibits cell growth.
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