Abstract

Long-term estrogen deprivation (LTED) with tamoxifen (TAM) or aromatase inhibitors leads to endocrine-resistance, whereby physiologic levels of estrogen kill breast cancer (BC). Estrogen therapy is effective in treating patients with advanced BC after resistance to TAM and aromatase inhibitors develops. This therapeutic effect is attributed to estrogen-induced apoptosis via the estrogen receptor (ER). Estrogen therapy can have unpleasant gynecologic and nongynecologic adverse events. Here, we study estetrol (E4) and a model Selective Human ER Partial Agonist (ShERPA) BMI-135. Estetrol and ShERPA TTC-352 are being evaluated in clinical trials. These agents are proposed as safer estrogenic candidates compared with 17β-estradiol (E2) for the treatment of endocrine-resistant BC. Cell viability assays, real-time polymerase chain reaction, luciferase reporter assays, chromatin immunoprecipitation, docking and molecular dynamics simulations, human unfolded protein response (UPR) RT2 PCR profiler arrays, live cell microscopic imaging and analysis, and annexin V staining assays were conducted. Our work was done in eight biologically different human BC cell lines and one human endometrial cancer cell line, and results were compared with full agonists estrone, E2, and estriol, a benchmark partial agonist triphenylethylene bisphenol (BPTPE), and antagonists 4-hydroxytamoxifen and endoxifen. Our study shows the pharmacology of E4 and BMI-135 as less-potent full-estrogen agonists as well as their molecular mechanisms of tumor regression in LTED BC through triggering a rapid UPR and apoptosis. Our work concludes that the use of a full agonist to treat BC is potentially superior to a partial agonist given BPTPE’s delayed induction of UPR and apoptosis, with a higher probability of tumor clonal evolution and resistance.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENTGiven the unpleasant gynecologic and nongynecologic adverse effects of estrogen treatment, the development of safer estrogens for endocrine-resistant breast cancer (BC) treatment and hormone replacement therapy remains a priority. The naturally occurring estrogen estetrol and Selective Human Estrogen-Receptor Partial Agonists are being evaluated in endocrine-resistant BC clinical trials. This work provides a comprehensive evaluation of their pharmacology in numerous endocrine-resistant BC models and an endometrial cancer model and their molecular mechanisms of tumor regression through the unfolded protein response and apoptosis.

Highlights

  • In 1944, Sir Alexander Haddow used high-dose synthetic estrogen therapy to treat metastatic breast cancer (MBC) (Haddow et al, 1944) in patients who were long-term ($5 years past menopause) estrogen-deprived (LTED) (Haddow, 1970)

  • Since all biologic experiments were performed against the WT receptor, we modeled the experimental structure by mutating Ser537 to Tyr using the Maestro software

  • Estetrol and Selective Human ER Partial Agonist (ShERPA) BMI-135 display activity similar to E2 but right shifted across eight BC cell lines that are estrogen-dependent (MCF-7:WS8, T47D: A18, MCF-7:PF, BT-474, and ZR-75-1), estrogen-independent (MCF-7:5C, MCF-7:2A, and MCF-7:RAL), endocrine-sensitive (MCF-7:2A), endocrine-resistant (MCF-7:PF, MCF-7:5C, and MCF-7:RAL), mutant p53 (T47D:A18), human epidermal growth factor receptor 2–positive (BT-474), luminal A (ZR75-1), and luminal B (BT-474)

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Summary

Introduction

In 1944, Sir Alexander Haddow used high-dose synthetic estrogen therapy to treat metastatic breast cancer (MBC) (Haddow et al, 1944) in patients who were long-term ($5 years past menopause) estrogen-deprived (LTED) (Haddow, 1970). S This article has supplemental material available at molpharm. In the 1970s, the translational research proposal of long-term adjuvant antihormone TAM therapy was successfully advanced (Jordan et al, 1979; Jordan and Allen, 1980). This strategy established TAM as the agent of choice for adjuvant therapy (Early Breast Cancer Trialists’ Collaborative Group, 1998)

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