Abstract

Mammary ductal dysplasia is a phenotype observed in precancerous lesions and early-stage breast cancer. However, the mechanism of dysplasia formation remains elusive. Here we show, by establishing a novel dysplasia model system, that estrogen, a female hormone, has the potential to cause mammary ductal dysplasia. We injected estradiol (E2), the most active form of estrogen, daily into scid mice with a defect in nonhomologous end joining repair and observed dysplasia formation with cell proliferation at day 30. The protooncogene Myc is a downstream target of estrogen signaling, and we found that its expression is augmented in mammary epithelial cells in this dysplasia model. Treatment with a Myc inhibitor reduced E2-induced dysplasia formation. Moreover, we found that isoflavones inhibited E2-induced dysplasia formation. Our dysplasia model system provides insights into the mechanistic understanding of breast tumorigenesis and the development of breast cancer prevention.

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