Abstract

Leptin, a product of adipocytes, is involved in the regulation of body weight and results strongly correlated to body fat content. An excess of fat mass represents a breast cancer risk factor particularly in postmenopausal women, where estrogen production by adipose tissue through its own aromatase activity stimulates tumor progression. Leptin stimulates estrogen production through the increase of aromatase expression and activity in human luteinized granulosa cells and adipose stromal cells. In the present study, we have examined the possible link that exists between leptin and breast cancer, focusing our attention on the direct effect of leptin on aromatase activity, which may enhance estrogen production and induce tumor cell growth stimulation. We have shown that leptin enhances aromatase mRNA expression, aromatase content, and its enzymatic activity in MCF-7. Aromatase expression appears to be regulated by tissue-specific promoter. It has been demonstrated that promoters II and 1.3 are the major promoters that drive aromatase expression in MCF-7. Transient transfection experiments using vector containing human aromatase promoters II and 1.3 sequence fused with luciferase reporter gene demonstrated that leptin is able to activate this promoter. In the presence of either mitogen-activated protein kinase inhibitor PD 98059 or ERK2 dominant negative as well as in the presence of STAT3 dominant negative, the stimulatory effects of leptin on aromatase promoter, enzymatic activity, and aromatase protein content were inhibited. Functional studies of mutagenesis and electrophoretic mobility shift assay revealed that the AP-1 motif is important in determining the up-regulatory effects induced by leptin on aromatase expression in MCF-7.

Highlights

  • Leptin, the product of the ob gene, secreted by adipocytes, is involved in body weight control and results strongly correlated to body fat content [1,2,3]

  • Leptin Effect on Cell Proliferation in MCF-7 Cell Line—We evaluated the effects of leptin on MCF-7 cell line proliferation by measuring changes in the rate of DNA synthesis ([3H]thymidine incorporation)

  • Mammary adipose tissue is an important source of paracrine mitogens and anti-mitogens including insulin-like growth factor, transforming growth factor ␣, cytochines and leptin [28]

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Summary

Introduction

The product of the ob gene, secreted by adipocytes, is involved in body weight control and results strongly correlated to body fat content [1,2,3]. It has been recently shown that leptin receptors (short and long isoforms) are expressed in normal mammary epithelial cells [12] and in human breast cancer cell lines [13, 14]. Previous studies have demonstrated that leptin stimulates estrogen production by increasing aromatase expression and activity in human luteinized granulosa [18] and adipose stromal cells [19]. The aim of the present study is to investigate whether leptin per se was able to stimulate aromatase expression and activity in breast cancer epithelial cells, addressing its potential role in enhancing local estrogen production and thereby inducing tumor cell growth stimulation

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