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  4. Progesterone and Overlooked Endocrine Pathways in Breast Cancer Pathogenesis
 
review article

Progesterone and Overlooked Endocrine Pathways in Breast Cancer Pathogenesis

Brisken, Cathrin  
•
Hess Bellwald, Kathryn  
•
Jeitziner, Rachel  
2015
Endocrinology

Worldwide, breast cancer incidence has been increasing for decades. Exposure to reproductive hormones, as occurs with recurrent menstrual cycles, affects breast cancer risk, and can promote disease progression. Exogenous hormones and endocrine disruptors have also been implicated in increasing breast cancer incidence. Numerous in vitro studies with hormone-receptor-positive cell lines have provided insights into the complexities of hormone receptor signaling at the molecular level; in vivo additional layers of complexity add on to this. The combined use of mouse genetics and tissue recombination techniques has made it possible to disentangle hormone action in vivo and revealed that estrogens, progesterone, and prolactin orchestrate distinct developmental stages of mammary gland development. The 2 ovarian steroids that fluctuate during menstrual cycles act on a subset of mammary epithelial cells, the hormone-receptor-positive sensor cells, which translate and amplify the incoming systemic signals into local, paracrine stimuli. Progesterone has emerged as a major regulator of cell proliferation and stem cell activation in the adult mammary gland. Two progesterone receptor targets, receptor activator of NfκB ligand and Wnt4, serve as downstream paracrine mediators of progesterone receptor-induced cell proliferation and stem cell activation, respectively. Some of the findings in the mouse have been validated in human ex vivo models and by next-generation whole-transcriptome sequencing on healthy donors staged for their menstrual cycles. The implications of these insights into the basic control mechanisms of mammary gland development for breast carcinogenesis and the possible role of endocrine disruptors, in particular bisphenol A in this context, will be discussed below.

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Type
review article
DOI
10.1210/en.2015-1392
Web of Science ID

WOS:000362235300007

PubMed ID

26241069

Author(s)
Brisken, Cathrin  
Hess Bellwald, Kathryn  
Jeitziner, Rachel  
Date Issued

2015

Published in
Endocrinology
Volume

156

Issue

10

Start page

3442

End page

50

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
UPBRI  
UPHESS  
Available on Infoscience
January 4, 2016
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/121973
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