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02/14/05 --
New research is shedding light on why estrogenic hormones produce unintended
results in women, giving hope to the idea that new drugs might reach their
targets and work more effectively. Ultimately it could mean that
postmenopausal women would know that hormone-replacement therapy would have
only its intended result.
"It's very difficult right
now for women to make a choice about taking estrogen or other estrogen-like
compounds, and, I think, it's equally difficult for physicians to try to
tell women what they should do," said Ann M. Nardulli, a professor in the
department of molecular and integrative physiology at the University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Nardulli was the principal
investigator of a study published in the Jan. 7 issue of the Journal of
Biological Chemistry. In the study, Nardulli, doctoral student Jennifer R.
Schultz and postgraduate researcher Larry N. Petz added fuel to the argument
that the long-held model for how an estrogen receptor binds to DNA and, in
turn, regulates gene transcription is need of retooling.
Nardulli's team has found
four discrete regions of the human progesterone receptor gene that confer
hormone responsiveness. In the study, the activities of estradiol, tamoxifen,
raloxifene and the soy phytoestrogens genestein and daidzein were examined
and compared in uterine, mammary and bone cell lines. The researchers found
vast differences based on the four regions.
"The model has always been
that the estrogen receptor binds to DNA to activate transcription, but now
we show that that's not always the case," Nardulli said. "Binding doesn't
occur equally well in different kinds of tissue, and it requires a broader
vision on how transcription changes the functions in cells."
The value of
hormone-replacement therapy has come under scrutiny because of links to
various cancers. It's also been discovered that women taking tamoxifen to
protect against a relapse of breast cancer were more susceptible to getting
uterine cancer. Other research, conducted at Illinois by food scientist
William Helferich, has shown that the soy phytoestrogen genestein in doses
similar to that found in supplements may negate the ability of tamoxifen to
stop cancer redevelopment. Many women take soy supplements to control hot
flashes.
The discovery in 1996 of a
second estrogen receptor, or binding protein, began to rewrite conventional
wisdom. Instead of just one receptor, now known as ER-alpha, researchers
began studying the second one, ER-beta. ER-alpha is predominant in the
uterus, liver, mammary gland, bone and cardiovascular systems; ER-beta is
most expressed in the prostate, ovary and urinary tract.
Researchers also have found
that many estrogen-responsive genes don't have estrogen response elements --
long considered the cornerstone of estrogen receptor binding and
transcription. Instead, as in the human progesterone receptor gene, they
have multiple binding sites for activator proteins such as the four regions
identified in Nardulli's lab.
The four regions in
progesterone receptor gene are known as AP-1 and Sp1 sites. The Sp1 sites,
Nardulli said, are "pretty potent activators that get transcription going"
when exposed to most of the hormones tested. The AP-1 sites by themselves
were weak -- responsive somewhat to estrogen but not to the other hormones.
Mutating an AP-1 site in the context of a larger gene region dramatically
reduces transcription. Her lab's findings also supported previous evidence
that ER-alpha is much more potent than ER-beta.
"Turning on the expression of
genes in a cell is not like turning on a light switch, because you have many
different estrogen responsive genes in one cell," Nardulli said. "So, do you
want to turn on all the genes to the same extent, or do you want to
differentially regulate them? What researchers really would like to do is
develop a hormone drug -- a ligand -- that targets exactly the tissues you
want to affect without affecting any others."
Such work is already
beginning to take shape in other labs at Illinois.
A team
led by John A. Katzenellenbogen, a professor of chemistry, and his wife,
Benita S. Katzenellenbogen, a professor of molecular and integrative
physiology and of cell and structural biology in the College of Medicine at
Urbana-Champaign, recently have produced a series of synthesized,
non-steroidal estrogenic
compounds that seek out and
bind with ER-beta very selectively.
In a paper appearing online
in advance of regular publication in the Journal of Medicinal Chemistry,
published by the American Chemical Society, the Katzenellenbogens report
that their compounds work on ER-beta nearly identically to estradiol, but
they have almost no effect on the other estrogen receptor, ER-alpha.
"These compounds might prove
useful as selective pharmacological probes to study the biological actions
of estrogens mediated through ER-beta, and they might lead to the
development of useful pharmaceuticals," they wrote in the journal paper.
Source: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
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