Abstract

BackgroundIn breast cancer, progesterone receptor (PR) positivity or abundance is positively associated with survival and treatment response. It was initially believed that PR was a useful diagnostic marker of estrogen receptor activity, but increasingly PR has been recognised to play an important biological role in breast homeostasis, carcinogenesis and metastasis. Although PR expression is almost exclusively observed in estrogen receptor positive tumors, few studies have investigated the cellular mechanisms of PR action in the context of ongoing estrogen signalling.MethodsIn this study, we contrast PR function in estrogen pretreated ZR-75-1 breast cancer cells with vehicle treated ZR-75-1 and T-47D breast cancer cells using expression microarrays and chromatin immunoprecipitation-sequencing.ResultsEstrogen cotreatment caused a dramatic increase in the number of genes regulated by progesterone in ZR-75-1 cells. In T-47D cells that have naturally high levels of PR, estrogen and progesterone cotreatment resulted in a reduction in the number of regulated genes in comparison to treatment with either hormone alone. At a genome level, estrogen pretreatment of ZR-75-1 cells led to a 10-fold increase in the number of PR DNA binding sites detected using ChIP-sequencing. Time course assessment of progesterone regulated genes in the context of estrogen pretreatment highlighted a series of important regulatory pathways, including those driven by epithelial growth factor receptor (EGFR). Importantly, progesterone applied to cells pretreated with estradiol resulted in switching of the PAM50-determined intrinsic breast cancer subtype from Luminal A to Basal-like, and increased the Oncotype DX® Unscaled Recurrence Score.ConclusionEstrogen pretreatment of breast cancer cells increases PR steady state levels, resulting in an unequivocal progesterone response that upregulates key members of growth factor pathways. The transformative changes progesterone exerts on the breast cancer subtype suggest that these subtyping tools should be used with caution in premenopausal women.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12885-015-1819-3) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • In breast cancer, progesterone receptor (PR) positivity or abundance is positively associated with survival and treatment response

  • We observed that treatment of the cell lines with progesterone resulted in increased steady state levels of FK506 binding protein 5 (FKBP5) in T-47D cells but not in ZR-75-1 cells (Fig. 1a)

  • This observation is not due to methodological artefacts as we were able to observe an increase in FKBP5 in ZR-75-1 cells in response to the androgen 5alpha-dihydrotestosterone (DHT)

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Summary

Introduction

Progesterone receptor (PR) positivity or abundance is positively associated with survival and treatment response. PR expression is almost exclusively observed in estrogen receptor positive tumors, few studies have investigated the cellular mechanisms of PR action in the context of ongoing estrogen signalling. The primary cellular mediator of estrogen is the intracellular transcription factor estrogen receptor alpha (ERα), which is expressed in 75 % of early breast cancers [4]. ERα and PR positivity as assessed via immunohistochemistry of primary breast cancer is currently the gold standard indicator for hormonal therapy, applied either at the time of diagnosis or subsequent to surgical, chemotherapeutic and/or radiation management. PR appears to be more than a mere diagnostic indicator of estrogenic activity, as clinical studies have demonstrated it to be an independent biomarker of endocrine therapy response as well as a prognostic biomarker in postmenopausal breast cancers [12, 16,17,18]. Smaller studies in premenopausal women have found that tumours containing higher PR positivity had the best response to tamoxifen [19]

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