학술논문

Molecular mediators of mammographic density
Document Type
Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
Source
Subject
616.99
Cancer research
Mammographic density
breast cancer
Language
English
Abstract
Mammographic density (MD), created predominantly by increased stromal tissue, is a major breast cancer risk factor, though little is known about the biological mechanisms mediating it. Tamoxifen prevents breast cancer in a subset of high risk women via mechanisms that appear dependent on reduction of MD. Animal models suggest tamoxifen remodels the mammary stroma to a tumour-inhibitory phenotype. This study aims to analyse the effect of tamoxifen on human breast fibroblast function and identify pro-tumourigenic pathways contributing to density-associated risk. Methods Primary human breast fibroblasts from normal, high risk or breast cancer patients were treated with hydroxytamoxifen (100nM-5μM). Fibroblast function was analysed by measuring: proliferation, expression of stromal proteins fibronectin and collagen 1; effects on TGF-β signalling and up-regulation of myofibroblast marker SMA. Genome wide analysis was performed using RNA-Seq. Significantly deregulated pathways were validated by PCR, western blotting and mass spectrometry. Results Fibroblasts from 23 patients were treated with hydroxytamoxifen. All patients showed reduced proliferation with treatment. 62% of patients showed reduced fibronectin expression. TGF- β-mediated up-regulation of SMA and fibronectin were consistently inhibited by tamoxifen. RNA-Seq analysis revealed down-regulation of Wnt signalling, an established profibrogenic and pro-tumourigenic pathway. In addition, there was significant modulation of many metabolic pathways, including components of the microsomal anti-oestrogen binding site (AEBS). Binding of tamoxifen to the AEBS inhibits cholesterol epoxide hydrolase (ChEH) enzyme activity, promoting an anti-tumourigenic phenotype. The effects of tamoxifen on fibroblasts could be partly replicated using tesmilifene, a commercially available 5 inhibitor of ChEH. Mass spectrometry analysis confirmed an altered cholesterol metabolite profile in tamoxifen treated fibroblasts. Conclusion These data indicate that tamoxifen can directly remodel the mammary stromal microenvironment, generating a less 'reactive' stroma. Thus, tamoxifen impacts on multiple pathways, many independent of the oestrogen receptor, to create a tumourinhibitory microenvironment. This offers exciting potential for patient monitoring and alternative breast cancer prevention strategies.

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