The Major Pre- and Postmenopausal Estrogens Play Opposing Roles in Obesity-Driven Mammary Inflammation and Breast Cancer Development.

TitleThe Major Pre- and Postmenopausal Estrogens Play Opposing Roles in Obesity-Driven Mammary Inflammation and Breast Cancer Development.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2020
AuthorsQureshi R, Picon-Ruiz M, Aurrekoetxea-Rodriguez I, de Paiva VNunes, D'Amico M, Yoon H, Radhakrishnan R, Morata-Tarifa C, Ince T, Lippman ME, Thaller SR, Rodgers SE, Kesmodel S, Vivanco MDel Mar, Slingerland JM
JournalCell Metab
Volume31
Issue6
Pagination1154-1172.e9
Date Published2020 06 02
ISSN1932-7420
Abstract

Many inflammation-associated diseases, including cancers, increase in women after menopause and with obesity. In contrast to anti-inflammatory actions of 17β-estradiol, we find estrone, which dominates after menopause, is pro-inflammatory. In human mammary adipocytes, cytokine expression increases with obesity, menopause, and cancer. Adipocyte:cancer cell interaction stimulates estrone- and NFκB-dependent pro-inflammatory cytokine upregulation. Estrone- and 17β-estradiol-driven transcriptomes differ. Estrone:ERα stimulates NFκB-mediated cytokine gene induction; 17β-estradiol opposes this. In obese mice, estrone increases and 17β-estradiol relieves inflammation. Estrone drives more rapid ER+ breast cancer growth in vivo. HSD17B14, which converts 17β-estradiol to estrone, associates with poor ER+ breast cancer outcome. Estrone and HSD17B14 upregulate inflammation, ALDH1 activity, and tumorspheres, while 17β-estradiol and HSD17B14 knockdown oppose these. Finally, a high intratumor estrone:17β-estradiol ratio increases tumor-initiating stem cells and ER+ cancer growth in vivo. These findings help explain why postmenopausal ER+ breast cancer increases with obesity, and offer new strategies for prevention and therapy.

DOI10.1016/j.cmet.2020.05.008
Alternate JournalCell Metab
PubMed ID32492394
Grant ListR01 CA210440 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States

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