3.9 Article

Estrogen Receptor β Induces Antiinflammatory and Antitumorigenic Networks in Colon Cancer Cells

Journal

MOLECULAR ENDOCRINOLOGY
Volume 25, Issue 6, Pages 969-979

Publisher

ENDOCRINE SOC
DOI: 10.1210/me.2010-0452

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Texas Emerging Technology Fund [300-9-1958]
  2. Lars Hierta's Memorial Foundation
  3. Magnus Bergvall's Foundation
  4. Swedish Cancer Society
  5. Robert A. Welch Foundation

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Several studies suggest estrogen to be protective against the development of colon cancer. Estrogen receptor beta (ER beta) is the predominant estrogen receptor expressed in colorectal epithelium and is the main candidate to mediate the protective effects. We have previously shown that expression of ER beta reduces growth of colorectal cancer in xenografts. Little is known of the actions of ER beta and its effect on gene transcription in colon cancers. To dissect the processes that ER beta mediates and to investigate cell-specific mechanisms, we reexpressed ER beta in three colorectal cancer cell lines (SW480, HT29, and HCT-116) and conducted genome-wide expression studies in combination with gene-pathway analyses and cross-correlation to ER beta-chromatin-binding sites. Although induced gene regulation was cell specific, overrepresentation analysis of functional classes indicated that the same biological themes, including apoptosis, cell differentiation, and regulation of the cell cycle, were affected in all three cell lines. Novel findings include a strong ER beta-mediated down-regulation of IL-6 and downstream networks with significant implications for inflammatory mechanisms involved in colon carcinogenesis. We also discovered cross talk between the suggested nuclear receptor coregulator PROX1 and ER beta, demonstrating that ER beta both regulates and shares target genes with PROX1. The influence of ER beta on apoptosis was further explored using functional studies, which suggested an increased DNA-repair capacity. We conclude that reexpression of ER beta induces transcriptome changes that, through several parallel pathways, converge into antitumorigenic capabilities in all three cell lines. We propose that enhancing ER beta action has potential as a novel therapeutic approach for prevention and/or treatment of colon cancer. (Molecular Endocrinology 25: 969-979, 2011)

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