Phytoestrogens may inhibit proliferation of MCF-7 cells, an estrogen-responsive breast adenocarcinoma cell line [electronic resource].
Abstract (Summary)
After menopause, a woman’s production of 17?-estradiol, the predominant female
sex hormone, declines. This change is associated with increased risk of
osteoporosis/osteopenia and atraumatic bone fracture, cardiovascular disease, and breast
and ovarian cancers. Phytoestrogens are non-steroidal compounds isolated from plants
that have antagonistic, weak agonistic, or super-agonistic estrogenic effects in
mammalian tissues; they have emerged as a potential therapeutic to alleviate postmenopausal
symptoms. While some epidemiological evidence indicates that dietary
consumption of phytoestrogens can alleviate post-menopausal health risks, other research
suggests that phytoestrogens may not be completely safe.
The research presented in this thesis indicates that a high concentration and
sustained dose of phytoestrogens may be necessary to achieve antiestrogenic effects.
MCF-7 cells, an estrogen-sensitive breast adenocarcinoma cell line, were used as a model
system, and proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) was used as a marker of cell
proliferation. Immunoblotting shows that genistein, a commercially purified
phytoestrogen, promotes cell proliferation when administered for 24 hours, but may
reduce proliferation when cells were treated for 48 hours. Genistein and estrogen have an
additive effect on cells that were treated simultaneously with both hormones for 24 hours.
In contrast, Promensil™, an over-the-counter phytoestrogen dietary supplement, was able
to abolish expression of PCNA after 48 hours, and at high concentrations prevented
estrogen-induced upregulation of PCNA after 48 hours. The clinical significance of these
findings is that phytoestrogens may reduce the risk of breast cancer, but only after
sustained high doses, which may be difficult if patient non-compliance is at issue.
ii
Additionally, because cell proliferation and not cell survival was investigated, we cannot
say whether phytoestrogens are cytotoxic to breast cancer cells, only that they reduce
proliferation.
iii
Bibliographical Information:
Advisor:
School:Worcester Polytechnic Institute
School Location:USA - Massachusetts
Source Type:Master's Thesis
Keywords:phytoestrogens breast cell proliferation
ISBN:
Date of Publication: