
[Cancer Research 60, 4993-5001, September 15, 2000]
© 2000 American Association for Cancer Research
Estrogens, BRCA1, and Breast Cancer1
Leena Hilakivi-Clarke2
Lombardi Cancer Center, Georgetown University, Washington, D.C. 20007
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ABSTRACT
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Findings obtained in in vitro assays and animal studies
indicate that estrogens might influence the activity of the tumor
suppressor gene BRCA1, and BRCA1 in turn may suppress the activity of
the estrogen receptor. This review will discuss the possibility that
interactions between estrogens and BRCA1 partly explain why elevated
circulating estrogen levels appear to increase breast cancer risk among
postmenopausal women but not among young women. A hypothesis is
proposed that estrogens have a dual role in affecting breast cancer
risk. In young women whose breasts have not yet accumulated critical
mutations required for cancer initiation and promotion, activation of
BRCA1 by estrogens helps to maintain genetic stability and induce
differentiation, and therefore estrogens do not increase breast cancer
risk. Breasts of older women, in contrast, are likely to contain
transformed cells whose growth is stimulated by estrogens. Although
BRCA1 is also probably activated by estrogens in older women, its
function may have been impaired, for example, due to increased
methylation associated with aging. Estrogen exposure in women who carry
germ-line mutations in BRCA1 may always increase breast cancer risk
because estrogens would be able to cause DNA damage and increase
genetic instability without being opposed by BRCA1-induced repair
activity. This might lead to an increase in the number of overall
mutations, including those that initiate breast cancer. In addition to
increasing genetic instability, reduced BRCA1 activity may also be
linked to changes in the mammary gland morphology that predispose
individuals to breast cancer. For example, a persistent presence of
lobules type 1, which are the least differentiated lobular structures
in the human breast, is seen in the BRCA1 mutation carriers. The aim of
this review is to discuss the role of premenopausal estrogens in breast
cancer and to initiate more research that would lead to novel means of
reducing breast cancer risk, particularly among BRCA1 mutation
carriers.
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Introduction
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The role of estrogens in affecting breast cancer risk during
premenopausal years has remained largely unknown. Several factors
related to reproduction appear to predispose women to breast cancer.
For example, women with early onset of menarche (menstruation begins at
<12 years) or late menopause (menopause occurs after 55 years) have an
increased risk of developing breast cancer (1)
. These
findings suggest that the longer the exposure to ovarian estrogens, the
higher the risk. This view is supported by the fact that surgically
induced menopause before age 45 years and the resulting removal of
ovarian estrogens markedly reduce breast cancer risk
(2, 3, 4, 5)
. Furthermore, the partial
ER3
agonist tamoxifen, which blocks the actions of estrogens in the breast,
effectively prevents primary and recurring breast tumor development
(6)
. However, it is not clear that there is a correlation
between high estrogen exposure and high breast cancer risk during the
years when women have functional ovaries. In fact, an increase in
breast cancer risk may be seen after a modest reduction in circulating
estrogens, such as that produced by unilateral ovariectomy (4
, 5)
, oral contraceptive (7
, 8)
or contraceptive
depot use [both of which inhibit ovulation and ovarian estrogen
production (9
, 10)
], or low body weight and low fat
intake (11, 12, 13, 14)
. In contrast, an increase in exposure to
circulating estrogens during premenopausal years caused by several
pregnancies (15)
, short menstrual cycle length (16
, 17)
, high BMI (18)
, or a high fat intake
(11)
may reduce the risk of developing breast cancer. High
BMI or fat intake are indirect indicators of increased estrogenicity: a
considerable amount of estrogen production occurs in adipose tissue,
which is a site for conversion of adrenal androgens to estrogens,
particularly in prepubertal girls and postmenopausal women.
A hypothesis is proposed here that estrogens might play a dual role in
affecting breast cancer risk. On one hand, there is evidence to
indicate that estrogens might serve as preinitiators, initiators, and
promoters of breast cancer. We generally associate estrogens with
promotion of the growth of existing malignancies in the breast (Fig. 1)
. However, these hormones and their metabolic products are also shown
to induce direct and indirect free radical-mediated DNA damage, genetic
instability, and mutations in cells in culture and in vivo
(19)
, suggesting a role for estrogens in cancer
initiation. Furthermore, estrogens may serve as preinitiators. For
example, elevated fetal estrogen levels can permanently alter the
morphology of the mammary gland (20)
and cause a
persistent presence of epithelial structures (TEBs) that are known to
be sites of malignant growth (21)
. Data obtained in animal
models and indirect evidence in humans indicate that high in
utero estrogenicity increases breast cancer risk (20
, 22
, 23)
.

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Fig. 1. Estrogens may increase breast cancer risk by acting as a
preinitiator (if the exposure occurs during fetal life), an initiator
(by inducing direct or indirect free radical-mediated DNA damage), or a
proliferator (stimulating the growth of existing malignant cells in
postinitiated breast). The proposed mechanisms by which
in utero estrogen exposure increases breast cancer risk
include a persistent presence of mammary epithelial structures that
serve as sites of tumor initiation and changes in the pattern of
expression of genes that are relevant to breast cancer.
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In contrast to these adverse effects of estrogens on the breast, in
certain circumstances, such as during pregnancy that occurs before age
20 years (1
, 15
, 24)
and during the prepubertal period and
childhood (11
, 14
, 25)
, estrogens actually reduce breast
cancer risk. The reduced risk could be achieved through
estrogen-induced activation of certain tumor suppressor genes,
including BRCA1 (26, 27, 28)
and p53 (29)
that
are critical in DNA damage repair and in maintaining genetic stability,
thus reducing the likelihood that breast cancer will be initiated. The
interaction between estrogens and tumor suppressors might be important
during the early reproductive years, when the breast does not yet
contain any malignancies. Once breast cancer initiation has taken
place, estrogens might promote the growth of transformed cells, leading
to the development of detectable breast cancer. Because estrogens
increase BRCA1 expression in human breast cancer cells in
vitro (27
, 28) , they are also likely to do so in
women whose breast contains malignant cells. However, given that breast
cancer initiation has already occurred, the function of one or more
tumor suppressors may be impaired at this point (failure in tumor
suppressor gene function is believed to contribute to cancer
initiation). In women carrying a mutated BRCA1 gene,
estrogens may always induce genetic instability because the mutated
BRCA1 is unable to correct genetic alterations. Evidence is presented
below to support this hypothesis.
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Why Would Estrogen Exposure during Reproductive Years not Increase
Breast Cancer Risk?
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In addition to the reproductive system and the breast, estrogens
are required for the development and function of many other tissues.
Estrogens are of critical importance in bone development and the
maintenance of bone density (30
, 31)
and a healthy
cardiovascular system (32
, 33)
. Estrogens are also
required for neuronal growth and differentiation, and these hormones
are linked to cognitive functions (34)
and mood (35
, 36)
. Because estrogens possess several essential functions, it
would be surprising if a complementary system did not exist in parallel
with estrogens to protect tissues like the breast from the adverse
effects of estrogens.
Estrogens exhibit both beneficial and harmful effects on the
breast. The breast undergoes periods of varying sensitivity to the
adverse effects of estrogens (37)
. These hormones are
needed during normal breast development, particularly during puberty
and pregnancy (38)
. For example, although pregnancy
markedly increases circulating estrogen levels, pregnancy before age 20
years reduces breast cancer risk (24)
. In contrast, a
similar pregnancy-induced increase in estrogen levels after age 30
years increases breast cancer risk (1)
. One explanation
for the differential effects of estrogens during pregnancy in younger
and older women is that in addition to stimulating epithelial growth,
pregnancy estrogens participate in eliminating (by differentiation)
those epithelial structures that are most vulnerable to malignant
transformation (39)
. However, differentiation to mature
ductal structures is protective only in a breast that does not yet
contain any malignant cells, and older women are more likely than young
women to have acquired transformed cells, which, when stimulated with
estrogens, could lead to breast cancer.
The fact remains that estrogens increase proliferation and genetic
instability, perhaps by inducing free radical-mediated DNA damage and
mutations (19)
. Genetic instability, in turn, increases
the probability that normal cells are turned to the malignant pathway.
It is therefore critical to ensure that whereas estrogens are needed
for the optimal function of several important systems, another
mechanism(s) exists that activates DNA repair pathways to respond to
the genomic damage initiated by estrogens and that may also occur
during rapidly proliferating states. In addition, these genes that are
activated by estrogens may also directly regulate the ER, perhaps by
suppressing its activity. We propose that a network of normal tumor
suppressor genes is activated by estrogens, which then protect the
breast from an estrogen-induced increase in genetic damage and,
ultimately, from neoplastic changes. Candidate estrogen-regulated tumor
suppressor genes are BRCA1 and p53.
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Breast Cancer Susceptibility Gene BRCA1
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Breast cancer is heritable in certain families. In some of these
families, a breast cancer susceptibility locus on human chromosome 17q
has been identified (40
, 41)
. This locus codes for a tumor
suppressor protein BRCA1. Mutations in BRCA1 account for at least 50%
of inherited breast cancers and approximately 5% of all breast cancer
cases (40)
.
A murine equivalent to human Brca1, Brca1, is expressed in a wide
variety of tissues, including the breast (26)
. The level
of expression is highest in tissues containing rapidly proliferating
cells that are also involved in differentiation. In mice, Brca1
is expressed broadly during embryogenesis, whereas after birth, the
expression shifts to a more tissue-specific pattern (26)
.
High levels of Brca1 mRNA can be detected in the mouse mammary gland
around puberty and during pregnancy. During lactation, Brca1 expression
in the mammary gland is low, but it is elevated again after lactation,
resulting in higher Brca1 expression in parous mice than in nulliparous
mice (26)
.
The expression pattern of Brca1 during normal development suggests that
this gene is tightly linked to the regulation of cellular proliferation
(42)
. This conclusion is supported by observations that
BRCA1 mRNA levels exhibit a cell cycle-dependent pattern: expression is
low in cells arrested in G0 or early
G1 and highest at the
G1-S-phase transition (42, 43, 44)
.
BRCA1 protein also undergoes hyperphosphorylation during late
G1 and S phases, indicating that the protein is
then being activated. However, BRCA1 expression is not limited to cell
proliferation. Rajan et al. (42)
have shown
that Brca1 mRNA levels are high in postconfluent HC11 mammary
epithelial cells during differentiation and when treated with insulin
and glucocorticoids. Because proliferation rates under these conditions
are low, and differentiation is high, Brca1 also appears to be involved
in the process of differentiation of the breast.
The work by Gowen et al. (45)
suggests that
BRCA1 plays a key role in repairing oxidative DNA damage. This probably
indicates that in rapidly proliferating tissues, BRCA1 may help to
maintain the integrity of the genetic material. Furthermore, BRCA1
interacts with RAD51, a protein that has been implicated in DNA
recombination and repair (46)
. The fact that BRCA1 has
also been identified as a p53-interacting protein (47)
lends further support to the idea that BRCA1 may be involved in
repairing DNA damage. BRCA1 has been shown to act as a transcriptional
coactivator and increase the p53-dependent transcription from P21 and
BAX promoters (47)
. DNA-damaging agents trigger a
transient induction of p53, and this gene has been strongly implicated
in DNA damage repair.
Besides p53, several other proteins that interact with BRCA1 have been
identified, including c-myc, BAP-1 (48)
, and
retinoblastoma susceptibility gene RB1 (49)
. The c-myc
oncogene is closely linked to breast carcinogenesis, and it is one of
the early response genes activated in G1 phase,
resulting in the activation of a number of other genes with important
roles in cell cycling. It has been suggested that BRCA1 down-regulates
c-myc activity (48)
. BAP-1 is a novel protein found on the
basis of its interaction with BRCA1 (50)
. BAP-1 might
enhance BRCA1-mediated growth inhibition, at least in human breast
cancer cells (50)
. Inherited mutations in one of the RB1
alleles result in the development of retinoblastoma and/or osteosarcoma
and increase susceptibility to other cancers. It was recently shown
that the product of the RB1 gene, Rb, regulates the
expression of both the murine Brca1 and human
BRCA1 genes (49)
. BRCA1 also transactivates the
expression of p21, the major cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor involved
in the inhibition of cell cycle progression and induction of apoptosis,
in a p53-independent manner (51)
.
In summary, BRCA1 has been implicated to have a primary role in DNA
damage response by processing signals that arise after damage
(48)
. This role results from cross-talks with other
critical elements of signal transduction pathways and causes cell cycle
arrest, DNA repair, and perhaps apoptosis.
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Estrogens and BRCA1
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The fact that Brca1 expression is induced during puberty and
pregnancy, when estrogen levels are dramatically increased, suggests
that estrogens might stimulate the expression of this gene. This
suggestion is supported by a finding showing that
E2, together with progesterone, increases the
level of Brca1 expression in the mammary glands of ovariectomized mice
(26)
. Studies in ER-positive MCF-7 and BT20T human breast
cancer cells indicate that depletion of estrogens significantly reduces
BRCA1 mRNA expression, and the expression is increased again by
treatment with E2 (27
, 28)
. It
should be noted that no estrogen-responsive element has been identified
within the promoter of the BRCA1 gene, and the increase in
BRCA1 mRNA expression by estrogens probably occurs via an
estrogen-initiated increase in overall RNA synthesis (52)
.
It is essential to determine how and why estrogens stimulate BRCA1
expression. BRCA1 mRNA expression and ER mRNA expression are closely
linked to each other, suggesting a functional relationship between the
two genes (53)
. Furthermore, methylation of the BRCA1
promoter appears to be strongly correlated with a lack of ER or
progesterone receptor expression (54)
. In accordance with
these observations, BRCA1 was recently shown to have an ability to
regulate the cellular response to estrogens (55)
. In
in vitro studies conducted using human breast cancer cells,
BRCA1 protein inhibited ER-
-mediated transcriptional pathways
related to cell proliferation. This finding suggests that in addition
to maintaining genomic stability during periods of rapid cellular
division and multiplication, BRCA1 may also suppress signaling
initiated by estrogen-induced activation of ER-
. Thus, during
puberty and pregnancy, when estrogens and BRCA1 expression are both
significantly increased, the function of BRCA1 may be to protect the
breast from estrogen-induced genetic instability by inhibiting
ER-mediated pathways, inducing differentiation, and repairing genetic
damage. BRCA1 might also be particularly important in controlling
cellular proliferation. A loss of BRCA1 function leads to increased
proliferation of malignant cells in cell culture (56
, 57)
,
and stable transfection of wild-type BRCA1 into these cells inhibits
their growth (58)
. However, activation of BRCA1 seen
during puberty and pregnancy does not seem to block proliferation
occurring in the breast at these times.
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BRCA1 and Breast Cancer
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Germ-line mutations only occur in one BRCA1 allele because
homozygous deletion of BRCA1 is lethal in utero. However,
germ-line BRCA1 mutation carriers who develop breast cancer often
exhibit loss of heterozygosity of the wild-type BRCA1 locus
(59)
. Thus, both BRCA1 alleles appear to be lost in those
breast cancer cases where BRCA1 is the precipitating genetic lesion. It
is possible that a loss of one allele, through a germ-line mutation,
may alter the function of other genes, leading to a dramatic genomic
instability. This instability then creates an environment in which the
loss of function of wild-type BRCA1 is highly likely. It is not
inconceivable that loss of wild-type BRCA1 is not a causative factor in
the development of inherited breast cancer but rather a side effect.
Somewhat surprisingly, somatic mutations in BRCA1 are extremely rare in
sporadic breast cancer (40
, 60)
. Instead, in sporadic
breast cancers, the level of normal BRCA1 protein is often reduced
either through loss of heterozygosity of one BRCA1 allele or by other
means (56
, 61)
. Down-regulation of the normal BRCA1 may be
caused, for example, by alternative splicing (62)
,
aberrant methylation (63, 64, 65)
, or defects in subcellular
localization of the BRCA1 protein (66)
. Failure of
transcriptional regulation by ER may also be responsible for reduced
BRCA1 mRNA levels in sporadic breast cancer (67)
.
The level of BRCA1 expression in sporadic breast cancer is related to
the degree of invasiveness of the tumor. Compared with normal breast
tissue, BRCA1 expression is lowest in invasive cancer (56)
and is intermediately reduced in in situ carcinomas
(68)
. However, the latter finding has not been confirmed
in all studies, and there are reports indicating higher BRCA1 mRNA
levels in ductal carcinoma in situ than in normal mammary
epithelium (56)
. The decreased BRCA1 expression might be a
causal event, reflecting tumor progression, or a secondary effect
caused by changes in upstream regulatory pathways controlling BRCA1
expression (69)
. In either case, reduced BRCA1 expression
rather than loss of function of both alleles is linked to sporadic
breast cancer.
Taken together, BRCA1 mutations appear to cause breast cancer only when
present in the germ line, although the reasons for this are unknown.
Furthermore, in germ-line mutation carriers, both alleles are lost at
the time the tumor is detected, whereas in sporadic breast cancer,
BRCA1 expression is reduced but not completely lost. This suggests that
a loss of function of wild-type BRCA1 in germ-line mutation carriers
has to occur, whereas this is not the case in sporadic breast cancer.
It is possible that BRCA1 may function differently in embryonic
versus adult cells (69)
. During embryogenesis,
BRCA1 is of critical importance for cell proliferation; thus,
homozygous germ-line lesions result in an early cell proliferation
defect that kills the embryos. Consequently, cellular events leading to
breast cancer might be different in BRCA1 mutation carriers
versus women who develop sporadic breast cancer but exhibit
reduced BRCA1 expression as adults. In the mutation carriers, the
presence of only one functional BRCA1 allele in utero may
create an environment of increased genetic instability, increasing the
probability that mutations in other critical genes will occur. This
argument is supported by the fact that p53, another tumor suppressor
gene, which is called "the guardian of the genome," is more
frequently inactivated in BRCA1 mutation-associated tumors than in
sporadic breast cancer (70
, 71)
. Up to 90% of BRCA1
mutation-associated tumors harbor a p53 mutation and/or p53 protein
accumulation [which occurs due to either a mutation in the
p53 gene or alterations in p53 upstream signaling pathways
(71)
]. These events might also lead to a loss of
wild-type BRCA1, which may or may not be essential for tumor
initiation.
In sporadic breast cancer, normal BRCA1 function might be reduced due
to various environmental factors. The environmental exposures that may
alter BRCA1 expression levels in women who develop sporadic breast
cancer include PAHs or changes in circulating estrogen levels. PAHs are
widely present in our environment, and they reduce BRCA1 mRNA
expression in human breast cancer cells (72)
. We propose
that BRCA1 levels might be reduced by an exposure to a low estrogenic
environment. Changes in estrogen exposure levels can be caused by
differences in the amount of adipose tissue or differences in the use
of contraceptive drugs, hormone replacement therapy, or exposure to
environmental estrogens. It is possible that an interindividual
variability in estrogen levels in women contributes to the lowering and
increasing of BRCA1 expression.
There is some indirect evidence that estrogen-induced activation of
BRCA1 may be important in protecting the breast. For example, the
phytoestrogen genistein (73)
, which is a major active
component in soy products and may reduce the risk of developing
premenopausal breast cancer (74)
, increases the expression
of BRCA1 in human breast cancer cells in culture (75)
.
Because genistein exhibits weak estrogenic activities, and estrogens
also up-regulate BRCA1, the results suggest that estrogenic compounds
may reduce breast cancer risk by activating normal BRCA1. Another
observation in support of the estrogen/Brca1 link is that high
estrogenicity before the onset of puberty in animal models reduces
breast cancer (76, 77, 78)
, and Brca1 is up-regulated at
puberty (26)
. Increased estrogenicity before the
initiation of ovarian estrogen production might activate BRCA1 earlier
than normal, which could further help to maintain genomic stability at
puberty. The surge of ovarian estrogens at puberty is likely to
increase estrogen-induced DNA damage and impair repair mechanisms. This
speculation is based primarily on results obtained in animal models.
However, high prepubertal estrogenicity might also protect the human
breast. It has been noted that in humans, indicators of high
estrogenicity during childhood and early premenopausal years are linked
to inhibition rather than initiation of breast cancer (14
, 25)
. Thus, estrogenic exposures at these times, perhaps through
estrogen-induced activation of BRCA1, may be involved in reducing the
probability that normal cells would later turn to the malignant
pathway.
It has been suggested that the rarity of BRCA1 mutations in sporadic
breast cancer is due to the greater likelihood of BRCA1 inactivation by
nonmutational mechanisms than by mutation. One nonmutational mechanism
of BRCA1 inactivation that has been observed in sporadic breast cancer
is methylation (64)
. Hypermethylation of CpG-rich areas
located within the promoter of genes may be a common mechanism of
silencing tumor suppressor genes. Hypermethylation has been shown
to increase with age (79)
, and if this occurs in the
BRCA1 gene, it could help to explain why estrogens increase
breast cancer risk in older women. Theoretically, exposing older women
to estrogens results in tumor promotion that methylated BRCA1 cannot
prevent. Besides aging, it is not known what induces hypermethylation
in women with sporadic breast cancer. One of the pathways could be
through an exposure to various environmental agents that promote
hypermethylation of important cancer-related genes (80)
,
possibly including BRCA1. The possibility also exists that low
circulating E2 levels might contribute to the
induction of hypermethylation (81)
.
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BRCA1 Mutation Carriers and Estrogens
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If one of the BRCA1 alleles is lost due to a mutation, as is the
case in familial breast cancer, estrogens might be more likely to cause
genomic instability than if both alleles were functioning normally.
This would mean that estrogen exposure, particularly during puberty and
young adulthood, increases the penetrance of breast cancer in germ-line
BRCA1 mutation carriers. Although approximately 70% of women who carry
a germ-line BRCA1 mutation will develop breast cancer by age 70 years
(82)
, the remaining 30% do not. It is not known whether
the age at onset of puberty or menopause, circulating estrogen levels,
body weight, diet, exercise, alcohol intake, or other factors that
affect estrogen levels alter breast cancer risk among germ-line BRCA1
mutation carriers. Oral contraceptives, when used before first
pregnancy, may increase breast cancer risk in BRCA1 carriers
(83)
. In contrast, smoking appears to reduce breast cancer
risk in these women (84)
. Oral contraceptive use reduces
the exposure to ovarian estrogens, and exposure to the synthetic
estrogen is lower than that to estrogen originating from the
ovaries. Smokers are reported to have lower circulating estrogen levels
than nonsmokers, although the association has not been confirmed in all
studies (85, 86, 87)
. Thus, based on these observations, it
cannot be determined whether high levels of estrogens increase breast
cancer risk in women with BRCA1 mutations.
However, there are four important observations that suggest that
estrogens may indeed increase the penetrance of breast cancer in BRCA1
mutation carriers. First, men heterozygous for BRCA1 mutations do not
exhibit an increased incidence of breast cancers (88)
,
indicating that low estrogen and/or high androgen levels might be
protective. Second, bilateral prophylactic ovariectomy is associated
with a significantly reduced breast cancer risk in women who carry a
BRCA1 mutation (89)
. Third, women possessing germ-line
mutations in BRCA1 are particularly susceptible to breast cancer as a
result of pregnancy (90
, 91)
. Pregnancy increases
circulating estrogen levels by approximately 10-fold. Fourth, women
with a strong family history of breast cancer (approximately 50% of
these women are BRCA1 mutation carriers, and most of the others carry a
mutation in some other tumor suppressor gene) exhibit a 4-fold increase
in breast cancer risk if they had a high BMI at the age of 12 years
(92)
. As indicated above, a high BMI during childhood
clearly reduces sporadic breast cancer risk (14
, 25)
. The
last two findings strongly suggest that a mutated BRCA1 cannot protect
the breast from the cancer-initiating/promoting effects of estrogens.
Women who do not carry germ-line BRCA1 mutations but have lost the
function of the normal BRCA1 gene by other means should also
exhibit an estrogen-induced increase in breast cancer risk. Such a loss
may be more likely to have occurred in older versus younger
women. Relatively consistent evidence shows that elevated estrogen
levels during postmenopausal years increase breast cancer risk.
Postmenopausal women who have high circulating estrogen levels
(93
, 94)
, are obese (95)
, or are exposed to
hormone replacement therapy (96)
exhibit an increase in
breast cancer risk, although not all studies support these findings.
The probability of genetic mutations is believed to increase with age,
but no evidence exists thus far to indicate that the BRCA1
gene is mutated in older women (or in young women, for that matter) who
develop sporadic breast cancer. However, older women may have acquired
mutations in genes in which BRCA1 acts as a coactivator, such as p53,
and this could potentially lead to a reduction in BRCA1 activity as
well. As discussed above in connection to the differential effect of
pregnancy on breast cancer risk in young and older women, breasts of
older woman are more likely to contain preneoplastic and neoplastic
cells than those of young women. Based on what we currently know about
cancer initiation (loss of function of tumor suppressor genes and
overexpression of oncogenes allow normal cells to turn to a malignant
pathway), the function of one or more tumor suppressor genes, possibly
including BRCA1, in women with preneoplastic lesions is more likely to
have been lost in older women than in young women. Methylation of BRCA1
is also among the potential mechanisms that could inactivate this gene
in older women (64
, 79)
. Thus, although estrogens
stimulate BRCA1 in older women, BRCA1 is not able to repair and
maintain genomic stability because it has lost its function (or
function is impaired) in the process that has allowed preneoplastic
lesions to occur in the first place.
 |
Estrogens, BRCA1, and Mammary Gland Morphology
|
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It is generally believed that mutations in tumor suppressor genes
and oncogenes are required for breast cancer initiation to occur.
However, alterations in normal communications between stroma and
parenchyma, perhaps reflecting or occurring in parallel with epigenetic
changes, might be essential in tumor formation. It has been argued that
the structure of the breast tissue has to be critically altered for
malignant transformation to progress, even in the presence of multiple
chromosomal mutations (97)
. We have been studying changes
in the mammary epithelial tree in mice and rats exposed to estrogenic
compounds during the in utero period. In utero
estrogenic exposures that increase breast cancer risk in animal models
increase the number of TEBs in the offsprings mammary gland and
prevent their differentiation (20
, 98)
. TEBs contain a
rapidly proliferating population of epithelial cells and drive ductal
growth (21)
. In mice and rats, the presence of TEBs is
highest around puberty, and the TEBs subsequently differentiate to
lobulo-alveolar units, becoming virtually nonexistent in the adult
gland (21)
. Animal data indicate that TEBs are the primary
targets for carcinogen-induced malignant growth (21)
, and
the corresponding structure in the human breast, terminal ductal lobule
unit, may also be the site most susceptible to the development of human
breast cancer (99)
. Interestingly, in animals, the mammary
structure exhibiting the highest level of Brca1 mRNA is the TEB in
virgin animals and the alveoli during pregnancy (26)
.
It was noted recently that breasts of women who are germ-line BRCA1
mutation carriers exhibit a high number of the least differentiated
lobules type 1, regardless of whether they are parous or not
(100)
. Normal (noncarrier) women show a long-lasting
reduction in the number of lobules type 1 and an increase in the number
of well-differentiated lobules type 3 after pregnancy
(101)
. It is possible that the persistent presence of
lobules type 1 in the BRCA1 mutation carriers results from an
interaction between high in utero estrogen exposure and one
nonfunctional BRCA1. Another possibility is that one mutated
BRCA1 gene is sufficient to prevent normal differentiation
of the human breast that occurs during pregnancy.
High estrogenicity during fetal life may contribute to high breast
cancer incidence among BRCA1 mutation carriers. Although estrogen
levels are significantly higher in pregnant women than in nonpregnant
women (102)
, there is still a 46-fold variability in
these levels among women who are undergoing apparently normal
pregnancies. Thus, some pregnant women (and their fetus) are exposed to
significantly higher levels of estrogens during pregnancy than other
pregnant women. It has been hypothesized that the highest range of
fetal estrogen exposure levels increases later breast cancer risk
compared with the lowest range of fetal estrogen exposure levels
(22
, 103)
. This hypothesis is supported by indirect
epidemiological evidence showing that high birth weight, which is
linked to a high fetal estrogenic environment (104)
,
increases breast cancer risk (105
, 106)
. Dizygotic twins
also are exposed to an increased fetal estrogenic environment and
exhibit increased breast cancer risk as adults (107
, 108)
.
However, a recent study comparing pregnancy estrogen levels between
Asian and Caucasian women suggests that high pregnancy
E2 levels may not increase breast cancer risk if
birth weight is not simultaneously increased (109)
.
In accordance with the changes seen in the mammary gland morphology in
animals exposed to high in utero estrogenicity, high
placental weight in humans, which indicates high fetal estrogen
exposure, is associated with high density mammographic parenchymal
patterns (110)
. High density mammographic patterns, in
turn, are associated with increased breast cancer risk
(111)
. It remains to be determined whether or not the high
number of lobules type 1 in the breasts of BRCA1 mutation carriers
reflects high fetal estrogen levels, and whether or not they contribute
to increasing breast cancer risk in these women also remains to be
determined.
Another observation suggesting a link between high in utero
estrogenicity and breast cancer in BRCA1 mutation carriers is that
in utero exposure to a high estrogenic environment reduces
total ER content (including both the classical ER-
and novel ER-ß
subtypes) in the normal mammary gland and in breast tumors
(112, 113, 114)
. Breast cancers in BRCA1 carriers are often
ER-
negative (115
, 116)
. This could indicate that
germ-line BRCA1 mutation carriers who develop breast cancer are those
who also were exposed to the highest range of estrogen levels during
fetal life, which then down-regulated ER expression in the breast.
However, it can also be argued that continuous adult exposure to high
estrogen levels both down-regulates breast ER levels and increases
breast cancer risk in women who are BRCA1 mutation carriers. Whether or
not low ER levels in the breast are causally related to the development
of breast cancer in the mutation carriers is not known.
 |
Brca1 and Mammary Tumorigenesis in Animal Models
|
|---|
In animal models, loss of one Brca1 allele is not sufficient to
promote cancer. For example, although homozygous deletions of Brca1 in
knockout mouse models are lethal early in embryonic development
(117, 118, 119)
, mice carrying heterozygous deletions of Brca1
are phenotypically normal and do not exhibit an increased
predisposition to tumorigenesis (120)
. However, when the
remaining Brca1 gene is inactivated in mature heterozygous
brca1 knockout mice, mice will develop breast cancer
(121)
.
There is no evidence that reduced Brca1 expression is
related to carcinogen-induced rodent breast cancer models or to models
in which mammary tumors are seen in mice exhibiting activated
neu or activated ras oncogenes. This appears to
contradict the human data showing reduced BRCA1 expression in sporadic
breast cancer versus normal tissue. Brca1 mRNA expression
levels are similar in mammary tumors induced by carcinogens
7,12-dimethylbenz(a)antracene or methylnitrosourea or by
activation of neu or ras oncogenes and in
nonmalignant cells (122)
. The key to understanding the
apparent species difference in BRCA1 expression in tumors and
nonmalignant tissues might lie in the factors that cause breast cancer
in women versus rats. In women, the underlying genetic and
molecular events that initiate breast cancer have remained largely
unknown, whereas in animal models, the causal factor is apparent (for
example, carcinogen exposure or overexpression/knockout of a specific
gene). Environmental exposures and changes in hormonal status might
play a major role in human breast cancer, although the details are far
from being clear. It is possible that these hormonal/environmental
factors lead to reduced BRCA1 expression. For example, a recent study
indicates that the PAH benzo(a)pyrene reduces BRCA1 mRNA
levels in MCF-7 human breast cancer cells (72)
. This, in
turn, might cause increased genetic instability and cell proliferation,
mutations in a gatekeeper gene, and, finally, breast cancer. In most
rodent models, it is carcinogens and oncogenes that induce mammary
tumors, not hormonal/environmental factors, although they clearly
affect the promotion and progression stage of rodent mammary
tumorigenesis and may serve as preinitiators (20)
.
 |
Tumor Suppressor Gene p53
|
|---|
Germ-line and somatic mutations in the p53 tumor suppressor gene
predispose carriers to a wide variety of cancers, including breast
cancer (123)
. Mutation of p53 is the most common somatic
alteration in sporadic breast cancer, with an estimated frequency of
1246% in invasive breast cancers (124)
. p53 has an
ability to recognize and bind to damaged DNA, repair it, and induce
both cell cycle arrest and apoptosis (125)
. p53 has thus
been categorized as both a caretaker and gatekeeper tumor suppressor
gene (126)
.
Like BRCA1, expression of p53 mRNA may be modulated by estrogens. T47D
human breast cancer cells exhibit a reduction in p53 expression when
grown in medium depleted of endogenous steroids, and subsequent
E2 administration increases p53 expression
(29)
. Furthermore, E2 administration
increases p53 expression in human endometrial adenocarcinomas growing
in nude mice (127)
. In hamster kidney, chronic
administration of the synthetic estrogen diethylstilbestrol also
increases p53 expression (128)
. In addition to the fact
that both p53 and BRCA1 seem to be induced by estrogens and play a role
in DNA repair, their relationship is shown to be more than merely
general. Several lines of evidence indicate that p53 is associated with
breast cancer in BRCA1 mutation carriers. First, mutations in p53 occur
at a high frequency in tumors of BRCA1 mutation carriers
(70)
. Second, BRCA1 enhances p53-mediated transcription
(51)
, as evident from the observation that transfection of
cells with mutated BRCA1 inhibits p53-mediated transcription of
effector genes (47)
. Furthermore, BRCA1 stimulates many
p53-responsive genes, although it can also stimulate expression of
these genes independent of p53 (47)
. A mutation in p53 may
also be associated with down-regulation of BRCA1 in women who develop
sporadic breast cancer.
It has been suggested that because E2 promotes
human breast cancer cell proliferation, the induction of p53 may
indicate that in vitro E2 stimulates
p53 to regulate proliferation (129)
. We propose that this
also applies in vivo in the human breast. Thus,
premenopausal women exposed to elevated estrogen levels may also
exhibit an increase in p53 expression. If p53 is normal, it guards the
genome against somatic mutations that might initiate cancer; if it is
mutated or silenced by other means, it is unable to prevent increased
genetic instability induced by estrogens, and breast cancer risk is
increased.
 |
Other Tumor Suppressor Genes
|
|---|
Besides BRCA1 and p53, other tumor suppressor genes have been
identified, including BRCA2. In theory, they may protect the breast
from the adverse effects of estrogens. For example, the
BRCA2 gene on chromosome 13q is another tumor suppressor
gene linked to heritable breast cancer (130
, 131)
. There
are striking similarities in the expression patterns and functions of
Brca1 and Brca2 (26
, 69)
. Brca2 is expressed in the same
tissues and cell types as Brca1 (42
, 132)
. Furthermore,
BRCA2 expression is also induced by estrogens (28)
and is
high during puberty and pregnancy (42
, 132)
. It is
plausible that many other tumor suppressor genes will be identified in
the breast that are either stimulated or inhibited by estrogens or
independent of these hormones. Estrogens at different time points
during development, as well as the level of estrogenicity originating
from ovaries versus that of non-gonadal estrogens,
are likely to affect breast cancer risk in a manner that is determined
by a response to the total network of signaling pathways of estrogens.
 |
Conclusions
|
|---|
There is a considerable amount of confusion among scientists and
lay people as to whether the risk of breast cancer can be reduced by
altering lifestyle, including dietary modifications and exercise
patterns. A low-fat diet is known to reduce serum estrogen levels, but
low body weight does not reduce premenopausal breast cancer risk
(11, 12, 13, 14
, 25)
. A high fiber content reduces circulating
estrogen levels by increasing fecal excretion of the hormone
(133)
but does not consistently reduce breast cancer risk
(134)
. Similarly, exercise reduces estrogen levels
(135)
without necessarily reducing the risk of developing
breast cancer (136)
. The consistent findings indicating
that an early onset of puberty increases breast cancer risk are
believed to support the idea that early estrogen exposure increases
breast cancer risk; however, it may merely reflect an exposure to an
elevated in utero estrogenic environment because this
environment both accelerates puberty onset and increases breast cancer
risk (20)
. Therefore, it is of critical importance to
clarify the link between estrogens, particularly changes in
estrogenicity induced by lifestyle factors, and human breast cancer.
We propose that estrogens have a dual role in affecting breast cancer
risk by interacting with tumor suppressor genes on one hand and by
stimulating cell proliferation, as summarized in Fig. 2
, on the other hand. Kinzler and Vogelstein (126)
describe
BRCA1 as a "caretaker" tumor suppressor gene. A caretakers role
is to maintain the integrity of the genome. Thus, high estrogen levels
may increase normal BRCA1 expression in an attempt to ensure genomic
stability in the face of a potential estrogen-induced increase in
genomic damage. Mutated BRCA1 in inherited breast cancer or
down-regulated BRCA1 in sporadic breast cancer is unable to repair
genomic damage induced by high levels of estrogens, increasing the
likelihood that other mutations will occur and that a normal cell will
ultimately become transformed. This interaction between
estrogens and BRCA1 probably explains, at least in part, why BRCA1
mutation carriers exhibit a significantly increased risk of breast
cancer and a moderately increased cancer risk in other
estrogen-regulated sites (ovaries, prostate, and possibly the colon),
but not in non-estrogen-regulated tissues. One way to test the
hypothesis that an interaction between estrogens and BRCA1 determines
whether estrogens increase or reduce breast cancer risk is to determine
BRCA1 expression levels in relation to BMI, fat intake, or circulating
estrogen levels in women to find out whether these factors are
associated with tumor suppressor activity. Another way to test the
hypothesis is to determine whether women who carry a germ-line BRCA1
mutation show an increase in breast cancer penetrance when exposed to
the highest levels of estrogens in utero (i.e.,
women who had a high birth weight) or during puberty (i.e.,
women who consumed a high-fat diet or had a high BMI). If this turns
out to be true, perhaps penetrance of breast cancer in BRCA1 mutation
carriers can be reduced by dietary modifications that reduce pregnancy
estrogen levels and body weight throughout life.

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|
Fig. 2. Proposed effects of high circulating estrogen levels
(originating from the environment, adipose tissue, and ovaries) on
breast cancer risk in (A) normal breast (for example, in
young women) and (B) breast containing transformed cells
(for example, in older women or in women with germ-line BRCA1
mutations). In normal breast, estrogens stimulate normal tumor
suppressor genes, which then reduce and eliminate genetic errors and
may induce cell differentiation, leading to reduced breast cancer risk.
In the breast containing transformed cells, estrogens also stimulate
tumor suppressor genes, but because at least some of them are already
mutated/inactivated, they are not able to correct existing mutations or
induce differentiation. In this breast, estrogens further promote the
growth of transformed cells, leading to the development of detectable
breast cancer.
|
|
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
|
|---|
I thank Drs. Marc Lippman, Robert Clarke, and Todd Skaar and
graduate student Kerrie Bouker (Department of Oncology, Georgetown
University, Washington, D.C.); Drs. Irma Russo and Jose Russo (Fox
Chase Cancer Center, Philadelphia, PA); Dr. Lars Vatten
(Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim, Norway);
and Dr. Anssi Auvinen (University of Tampere, Tampere, Finland)
for reading and commenting the contents of the review. In addition, I
thank James Welch, a graduate student at the Department of Oncology in
Georgetown University, for drawing the figures for this review.
 |
FOOTNOTES
|
|---|
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked advertisement in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
1 Supported by grants from the American Cancer
Society, the American Institute for Cancer Research, Cancer Research
Foundation of America, the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation, and
the Department of Defense. 
2 To whom requests for reprints should be
addressed, at Research Building, Lombardi Cancer Center, Room W405,
Georgetown University, 3970 Reservoir Road NW, Washington, D.C.
20007-2197. Phone: (202) 687-7237; Fax: (202) 687-7505; E-mail: Clarkel{at}gunet.georgetown.edu 
3 The abbreviations used are: ER, estrogen
receptor; BMI, body mass index; E2, estradiol; TEB,
terminal end bud; PAH, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon. 
Received 12/16/99.
Accepted 7/20/00.
 |
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