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Carcinogenesis |
Division of Medical Oncology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina 27710 [V. L. S., E. C. D.]; Division of Hematology and Oncology and the Comprehensive Cancer Center, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 43210 [K. M.]; School of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195 [M. P.]; and Program in Electron Microscopy, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research, Seattle, Washington 98109 [L. E. C.]
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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Normal proliferating mammary tissue, hyperplastic mammary epithelial cells, and noninvasive breast cancers such as ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) or lobular carcinoma in situ (LCIS) frequently exhibit low levels of ER expression relative to ER+ invasive cancers. Although it is not surprising that (a) tamoxifen reduced the incidence of ER+ invasive breast cancers in the BCPT and (b) did not prevent the emergence of ER- invasive breast cancers, the exact mechanism by which tamoxifen reduced the incidence of ER-poor, noninvasive breast cancers is unclear.
Tamoxifen has been shown to mediate both growth arrest and apoptosis (2, 3, 4) . Despite the extensive information related to the antitumor effects of tamoxifen in cancer cell culture, in experimental animals models, and in humans there is little information on how tamoxifen may act in noninvasive mammary epithelial cells. On the basis of information in the model system we have developed, we hypothesize that tamoxifen may not only act through a classic ER-dependent mechanism to eliminate ER+ cancer cells but under certain circumstances, may also act to target ER-poor, noninvasive, abnormal mammary epithelial cells. We hypothesize that this latter mechanism may be important in understanding how tamoxifen chemoprevention reduced the incidence of noninvasive breast cancer during the BCPT.
p53 is a cell cycle "checkpoint" protein important for cell cycle regulation and is functionally inactivated in human cancer at a high frequency (5) . p53 mutations are commonly detected in breast cancers and are associated with an increased risk of malignancy (6, 7, 8) . Overexpression of p53 protein in mammary epithelial cells is frequently detected in women at high risk for the development of breast cancer (9) and is associated with an increased risk of progression to breast cancer in women with benign breast disease (10) .
The E6 protein of the cancer-associated HPV-16 binds to p53 and targets it for degradation through the ubiquitin pathway (11, 12, 13) . Retroviral-mediated introduction of HPV-16 E6 protein into cells provides a model for the isolated loss of p53 function. We used this approach to acutely suppress p53 function in normal HMECs. Because p53 loss is associated with an increased risk of breast cancer, we can use this in vitro system to model tamoxifen-chemoprevention in a high-risk setting. We will use this system to test the hypothesis that loss of p53 function in HMECs increases sensitivity to tamoxifen-induced apoptosis. The advantage of this system is that we can test the ability of tamoxifen to prevent the occurrence of ER-poor noninvasive breast cancers in mammary epithelial cells that do not overexpress the ER. The disadvantage of this system is that we do not model the ability of tamoxifen to prevent ER+ breast cancer.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Cell Culture.
T47-D and MDA-MB-231 were obtained from American Type Culture
Collection (Manassas, VA). Normal HMEC strain AG11132 (M. Stampfer No.
172R/AA7) was purchased from the National Institute of Aging, Cell
Culture Repository (Coriell Institute; Ref. 14
). HMEC
strain AG11132 is a heterogeneous population of normal HMECs derived
from reduction mammoplasty (14)
. Cells were grown in
Mammary Epithelial Cell Basal Medium (Clonetics, San Diego, CA)
supplemented with 4 µl/ml bovine pituitary extract (Clonetics), 5
µg/ml insulin (UBI, Lake Placid, NY), 10 ng/ml epidermal growth
factor (UBI), 0.5 µg/ml hydrocortisone (Sigma),
10-5M isoproterenol (Sigma), and 10
mM HEPES buffer (Sigma) [Standard Medium]. Phenol
red-free Standard Medium was prepared using mammary epithelial cell
basal medium lacking phenol red (Clonetics). G418 (Life Technologies,
Inc., Grand Island, NY)-containing medium was prepared by the addition
of 300 µg/ml of G418 to the above Standard Medium. Cells were
cultured at 37°C in a humidified incubator with 5%
CO2/95% air. Mycoplasma testing was
performed as reported previously (15)
.
ER Immunostaining.
Approximately 5.0 x 103 cells
were plated per well in a 4-chamber slide (Corning) in Standard Medium
for 24 h. The cells were fixed in 10% paraformaldehyde in PBS for
20 min at room temperature. Determination of ER subcellular
expression by immunocytochemistry was performed as follows. Cells were
incubated with 100 µl of a 1:500 dilution of Immunotech mouse
antihuman ER (Coulter, France) in PBS with 1% BSA for 40 min at room
temperature. Slides were washed three times in PBS at room temperature
and then incubated with 100 µl of a 1:200 dilution of Biomouse IgG
peroxidase secondary antibody (Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) in
PBS at room temperature for 20 min. Slides were washed three times in
PBS at room temperature, developed with Elite ABC (Vector Laboratories)
as per manufacturers recommendations for 20 min at room temperature,
washed three times in PBS at room temperature, and couterstained with
methyl green.
Estrogen Binding Assays.
Approximately 2.0 x 105
cells
were plated per well in a 6-well plate (Corning) in Standard Medium for
24 h. The cells were washed with PBS and grown in phenol red-free
Standard Medium for 48 h. Each 6-well plate was dosed in
triplicate with one concentration of [2, 4, 6,
7-3H]estradiol (Amersham) at concentrations
ranging from 39.06 pM to 5.0 nM and [2, 4, 6,
7-3H]estradiol plus a 200-fold excess of
unlabeled estradiol (Sigma) and incubated at 37°C for 2 h. The
media was removed, and cells were washed twice with ice-cold PBS. One
ml of 95% ethanol was added per well for 30 min, cells were then
scraped and lysed by resuspension with a pipetman, and a 500-µl
aliquot taken for counts. To normalize cell number per well, 250 µl
of the remaining ethanol lysate was placed in a microfuge tube, spun at
2000 rpm, and the supernatant discarded. The remaining ethanol was
evaporated, and the pellet was resuspended in 50 µl of PBS. DNA
content in the cell pellet was quantitated using the diphenylamine
assay as described previously (1 cell = 7 pg DNA; Ref.
16
). The number of binding sites per microgram of DNA was
calculated by Scatchard analysis (17)
.
Retroviral Transduction.
The LXSN16E6 retroviral vector containing the HPV-16 E6 coding sequence
(generous gift of Denise Galloway, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research
Center, Seattle, WA) has been described previously (18)
.
AG11132 normal HMECs (passage 8) were plated in four T-75 tissue
culture flasks (Corning) in Standard Medium and grown to 50%
confluency. Transduction conditions for AG11132 cells with LXSN16E6 or
the control LXSN vector were as described previously (19)
.
HMEC-P parental cells, p53(+) HMEC-LXSN vector control cells, and
p53(-) HMEC-E6 cells expressing HPV-16 E6 were serially passaged in
culture as described previously (19)
.
Cell Synchronization.
Approximately 2 x 106 p53(+)
HMEC-LXSN or p53(-) HMEC-E6 cells were plated in a T-75 flask
(Corning) on Day -5 in Standard Medium and grown for 4 days (Day -1).
We previously observed that, on Day -1, >85% of growth
factor-depleted cells are in
G1-G0 phase,
trypsinize without difficulty, and rapidly resume proliferation in the
presence of fresh Standard
Medium.5
Cells were synchronized by this method before each experiment.
Northern Blotting.
RNA was extracted with guanidine hydrochloride and subjected to
Northern blotting in formaldehyde denaturing gels as described
previously (16)
. Ten µg of RNA were loaded per lane.
Molecular probes used in the Northern analysis are as follows: the
human ER-
probe is a 1.7-kb EcoRI and SalI
fragment of the pCMV-ER plasmid (generous gift of Geoffrey Green,
University of Chicago, Chicago, IL; Ref. 20
, 21
).
The 36B4 probe (700-bp PstI fragment) was used as a loading
control (22)
.
Western Blotting.
Preparation of cellular lysates and immunoblotting are as described
previously (16)
. Equal amounts of protein lysates (
100
µg of total protein) were loaded on 10% polyacrylamide gels; the
gels were run and then electroblotted (Hoeffer) at 80 mA for 45 min
onto Hybond-ECL membrane (Amersham). The membrane was blocked with 20%
BSA (Sigma) in PBS overnight at room temperature and then incubated
with a 1:100 dilution of mouse antihuman p53 (Oncogene Science Ab-2).
The membrane was washed three to five times at room temperature with
250 ml of PBS containing 0.1% Tween 20 and then incubated with either
a horseradish peroxidase-conjugated goat antimouse IgG (Jackson
ImmunoResearch) at a 1:35,000 dilution or a 1:2000 dilution of
horseradish peroxidase-conjugated Protein A (Sigma) for 1 h at
room temperature. The blot was washed again, and complexes were
detected by using enhanced chemiluminescent Western blotting
detection reagents (Amersham) as described by the manufacturer.
Cell Growth Curves.
p53(+) HMEC-LXSN vector controls and p53(-) HMEC-E6 cells were plated
in duplicate at 1 x 104
cells per
12-well tissue culture plates (Corning) on Day -1 and allowed to
adhere. On Day 0, the medium was replaced with Standard Medium with 0,
0.1, or 1.0 µM tamoxifen. Untreated controls received an
equivalent volume of ethanol solvent (0.01% final concentration).
Cells were trypsinized at 24-h time intervals and counted in
triplicate.
For estrogen competition experiments, p53(-) HMEC-E6 cells were plated as above. On Day 0 cells were first treated with either 0, 0.1, 1.0, or 5.0 µM estradiol for 1 h and then treated with either 0, 0.1, or 1.0 µM tamoxifen. Cells were trypsinized and counted as above.
DNA Staining of Cell Nuclei with Propidium Iodide and FACS
Analysis.
Approximately 5 x 105
p53(+)
HMEC-LXSN cells were treated with 1.0 µM tamoxifen on
Days 0, 1, 2, and 3 and harvested on Day 4. Cells were trypsinized and
nuclei were isolated and stained with propidium iodide, as
reported previously (23)
, and analyzed by FACScan. Ten
thousand events were collected in list mode fashion, stored, and
analyzed on Muticycle AV software (Phoenix Flow Systems, San Diego,
CA).
Electron Microscopy.
p53(-) HMEC-E6 cells and p53(+) HMEC-LXSN vector control cells were
plated on Day -1 in 6-well tissue culture plates (Corning). On Day 0,
cells were treated with 0.1 or 1.0 µM tamoxifen. Electron
microscopy was used as described previously (24)
.
Approximately 200 p53(-) HMEC-E6 cells were surveyed per data point at
0, 12, and 24 h after tamoxifen treatment for the presence or
absence of apoptosis and
200 p53(+) HMEC-LXSN cells were surveyed at
0, 1, 2, and 4 days.
Annexin Staining.
Annexin V-FITC/a (Boehringer Ingelheim, Heidelberg Germany) was used as
per manufacturers recommendation with some modification.
Approximately 5 x 105
p53(+)
HMEC-LXSN or p53(-) HMEC-E6 cells were plated in T75 flasks (Corning)
on Day -1 and allowed to adhere. On Day 0, the medium was replaced
with fresh Standard Medium, and tamoxifen was added for a final
concentration of 0.1 or 1.0 µM. Untreated controls
received an equivalent volume of ethanol solvent (0.01%). Cells were
harvested after 24 h (Day 1) and did not exceed 25% confluency.
Cells were trypsinized, washed in PBS, and resuspended in binding
buffer [10 mM HEPES/NaOH (pH 7.4), 140 mM
NaCl, and 2.5 mM CaCl2; filtered
through a 0.2 µm pore filter]. Cell density was adjusted to
25 x 105
cells/ml Five µl of
recombinant human Annexin V-FITC/a (BMS306F/a) was added to 195 µl of
cell suspension; the mixture was briefly mixed and incubated for 10 min
at room temperature in the dark. Cells were washed once and resuspended
in 190 µl of binding buffer. Cells were then analyzed by FACScan
(23
, 25)
.
Transcription and Protein Synthesis Inhibition.
Early passage p53(-) HMECs were treated with either the RNA or protein
synthesis inhibitor actinomycin D (Sigma) or cyclohexamide (Sigma) at
concentrations of 0, 0.1, 0.5, or 1.0 µg/ml for 1848 h. To
establish an inhibitor concentration that resulted in growth arrest but
less than 5% apoptotic or necrotic cells, inhibitor-treated early
passage p53(-) HMEC-E6 cells were analyzed as described above by
(a) growth curves, (b) propidium iodide staining
followed by FACS analysis to determine cell cycle distribution and the
percentage of necrotic cells, and (c) Annexin V binding to
determine the percentage of apoptotic cells. After the dose response
and toxicity curves were obtained, early passage p53(-) HMECs were
pretreated with either actinomycin D (0.5 µg/ml; Sigma) or
cyclohexamide (1.0 µg/ml; Sigma) for 3 h. Actinomycin D- and
cyclohexamide-treated and untreated controls were then treated with 0,
0.1, and 1.0 µM tamoxifen for 18 h. Cells
were analyzed for the presence of apoptosis by Annexin V binding as
described above.
Cytogenetic Analysis of Vector Control and Early Passage HMECs.
Cultures of p53(+) HMEC-LXSN (passage 10) and p53(-) HMEC-E6 (passages
10 and 18) were checked for sufficient numbers of dividing cells and
exposed to colcemid (Life Technologies, Inc.) at a final
concentration of 0.010.02 µg/ml for 23 h. Subsequently, the cells
were released from flasks by trypsinization, exposed to hypotonic
solution, and fixed as described previously (26)
.
Chromosome preparations were made, and, after appropriate aging, slides
were subjected to SKY, a method that enables simultaneous display of
all of the human chromosomes in different colors (27
, 28)
.
Additional slides were also stained with DAPI (Vector Laboratories)
alone. For SKY, the slides were hybridized with the SKY probe mixture,
containing combinatorially labeled painting probes for each of the
autosomes and sex chromosomes [Applied Spectral Imaging (ASI), Migdal
Haemek, Israel] for 4245 h at 37°C. The hybridization and
detection procedures were performed according to the manufacturers
(ASI) protocol, and chromosomes were counterstained with DAPI in
antifade solution. The multicolor hybridizations were visualized with
the SpectraCube SD 200 system (ASI) mounted on the Zeiss Axioplan 2
epifluorescence microscope (Carl Zeiss, Jena, Germany) using a custom
designed optical filter (SKY-1; Chroma Technology, Brattleboro, VT).
The DAPI images of all of the metaphase cells hybridized with the SKY
probe mixture were acquired using a DAPI-specific optical filter.
Spectral analysis and classification were performed using SkyView 1.2
visualization and analysis software (ASI, Carlsbad, CA). The assignment
of breakpoints in structural abnormalities was made on the comparison
of images of SKY-classified chromosomes with the images of the same
chromosomes stained with DAPI that were electronically inverted and
contrast-enhanced by SkyView 1.2 software. Karyotypic abnormalities
were classified according to the recommendations of the International
System for Human Cytogenetic Nomenclature ISCN (1995)
(29)
.
HPLC Analysis of Tamoxifen Metabolism.
HMEC-P (passage 10), HMEC-LXSN (passage 10), HMEC-E6 (passage 10), and
HMEC-E6 (passage 20) cells were treated for 2, 12, and 24 h with
0.1 µM [3H]tamoxifen combined
with 0.9 µM unlabeled tamoxifen. The cells were then
washed twice with ice-cold PBS, removed from the flask by scraping into
5 ml of ice-cold PBS, and pelleted. The pellet was extracted twice with
1 ml of methanol/ethyl acetate (1:3 v/v). The extracts were combined,
dried under a stream of argon, and redissolved using the same solvent.
Analysis of the extract was by HPLC using a C18 narrowbore column
(Vydac). The gradient used was: (a) 75% solvent A
[aqueous 1% triethylamine (Aldrich)]/25% solvent B [acetonitrile
(B&J) containing 1% triethylamine], which was held for 5 min after
sample injection; (b) a linear gradient to 80% solvent B
over 15 min; and (c) a continuation of 80% solvent B for 10
min. The flow rate was 0.3 ml/min, and 20 µl of extract, containing
approximately 50,000 dpm, was injected. Samples were held in amber
vials at 4°C and handled under low-light conditions. Unlabeled
tamoxifen and 4-hydroxytamoxifen were used as standards and were
monitored by UV absorption.
| RESULTS |
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Targeted Loss of p53 Expression in Early Passage HMECs is
Associated with Sensitivity to Tamoxifen-induced Apoptosis.
Early passage (passage 10) p53(-) HMEC-E6 cells but not p53(+)
HMEC-LXSN vector controls underwent tamoxifen-mediated apoptosis
in vitro as evidenced by characteristic morphological
changes and by Annexin V binding.
Electron microscopy of tamoxifen-treated p53(-) HMEC-E6 cells revealed
morphological changes characteristic of apoptosis (30)
.
The first morphological changes were observed 36 h after treatment.
At 6 h, passage 10 p53(-) HMEC-E6 cells that were treated with
1.0 µM tamoxifen exhibited margination of chromatin (data
not shown). After 24 h, 99% of cells exhibited cell shrinkage,
margination of chromatin, and formation of apoptotic bodies (Fig. 3D and E)
. In contrast, passage 10 p53(+)
HMEC-LXSN did not demonstrate morphological evidence of apoptosis after
treatment with 1.0 µM tamoxifen for 1, 2, or 4
days (Fig. 3B
and data not shown).
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Late passage p53(-) HMECs Acquire Resistance to Tamoxifen-mediated
Apoptosis.
p53(-) HMEC-E6 cells were passaged in the absence of tamoxifen and
tested for the presence or absence of tamoxifen-induced apoptosis at
passages 16, 18, and 27. p53(-) HMEC-E6 cells acquired resistance to
tamoxifen at passage 18 as evidenced by lack of morphological feature
characteristic of apoptosis (Fig. 3G)
and loss of Annexin V
binding (Fig. 4F)
. These observations suggest that serial
passaging of HMECs lacking p53 expression results in the rapid
acquisition of resistance to tamoxifen-mediated apoptosis.
ER Expression and Estrogen-binding Assays in p53(+) and p53(-)
HMECs.
Early and late passage (passage 10 and passage 18 respectively) p53(+)
HMEC-LXSN controls and p53(-) HMEC-E6 cells were tested for ER
expression by Northern analysis (ER-
) and by immunocytochemistry
(ER-
). All of the cells exhibited a low level of ER-
mRNA and
protein expression (data not shown). There was no difference in ER-
expression between tamoxifen-sensitive and -resistant cells.
p53(-) HMEC-E6 cells and p53(+) HMEC-LXSN vector controls were tested
for estrogen binding in triplicate. p53(+) HMEC-LXSN vector control
cells, early passage p53(-) HMEC-E6 cells, and late passage p53(-)
HMEC-E6 cells exhibited low numbers of estrogen-binding sites per cell
(Table 1)
. ER+ T47-D positive control cells exhibited a significantly higher
level of estrogen-binding sites relative to ER- MDA-MB-231 negative
control cells and HMECs (Table 1)
. These data show that all
HMEC-derived cells exhibit a low level of estrogen binding similar to
that of ER- breast cancer cell lines and that there was no difference
in estrogen binding in tamoxifen-sensitive and -resistant cells.
|
Twenty early passage p53(-) HMEC-LXSN vector control cells (passage 10) were analyzed. Nineteen (95%) p53(+) HMEC-LXSN vector control metaphase cells had a normal diploid karyotype, including 5 cells with random chromosome loss. One cell had trisomy 20 as the sole abnormality. No p53(+) HMEC-LXSN metaphase cell contained a whole arm translocation, a deletion, or a dicentric chromosome similar to those occurring in late passage p53(-) HMEC-E6 cells (see next page).
A total of 20 early passage p53(-) HMEC-E6 metaphase cells (passage 10) were karyotyped. Two cells were analyzed by SKY and 19 cells were analyzed using inverted and contrast-enhanced DAPI staining. The majority of cells (16 cells, 80%) had a normal diploid chromosome content, including 3 cells with random chromosome loss. The remaining four cells were aneuploid but had no structural changes.
In contrast to early passage cells, late passage p53(-) HMEC-E6
(passage 20) were markedly abnormal, with numerical and structural
chromosome aberrations. A total of 35 metaphase cells were analyzed: 27
using SKY and 8 using inverted and contrast-enhanced DAPI staining. No
cell had a normal diploid karyotype. The majority of cells (28 cells,
80%) were hypodiploid, with the modal chromosome number of 44 (range,
3284). There were five cells (14%) with a chromosome number greater
than 46: two hyperdiploid (49 and 55 chromosomes), two hypotriploid (61
and 63 chromosomes), and one hypotetraploid (84 chromosomes) cell.
Moreover, only one hypodiploid cell did not display any structural
chromosome rearrangement. The remaining 34 cells (97%) contained at
least one structural aberration (median 3, range 110). The
predominant types of structural changes were deletions, whole arm
translocations, and dicentric chromosomes with breakpoints in the
pericentromeric and/or telomeric regions. With the exception of
chromosomes 4 and 11, all chromosomes participated in structural
changes in at least one cell. However, the involvement of particular
chromosomes in aberrations was highly nonrandom. The most frequently
rearranged chromosomes were: chromosome 16 (24 cells, 69%), 21 (19
cells, 54%), 12 (16 cells, 46%), 17 (12 cells, 34%), and 20 (12
cells, 34%). In contrast, chromosomes 1, 13, and 19 were each involved
in 1 cell (3%) only. The observed structural and numerical chromosome
aberrations lead almost exclusively to net loss of genetic material.
Fig. 6
shows the frequency with which material from specific chromosome short
(p) and long (q) arms was lost because of structural aberrations or
whole chromosome loss in the late passage (passage 20) p53(-) HMEC-E6
cells. The most frequent losses involved the following chromosomal
arms: 16p (26 cells, 74%), 12p (17 cells, 49%), 21p (17 cells, 49%),
and 17p (14 cells, 40%). The high frequency of loss of 16p in late
passage p53(-) HMEC-E6 cells suggests that 16p harbors a gene(s) whose
loss may be important in the development of resistance to
tamoxifen-induced apoptosis.
|
| DISCUSSION |
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We developed a model of tamoxifen chemoprevention of ER-poor
noninvasive breast cancer to test how tamoxifen may act in HMECs that
have acutely lost p53 expression. The p53(-) and p53(+) HMECs used in
our experiments exhibited low levels of ER expression and minimal
estrogen binding (Table 1)
characteristic of proliferating normal
luminal mammary epithelial cells. The concentration of tamoxifen (1.0
µM) used in our chemoprevention model is similar to those
plasma levels achieved in women receiving 20 mg/day of tamoxifen
(36)
. We observed that tamoxifen rapidly induced apoptosis
in early passage p53(-) HMEC-E6 cells (first observed at 3 h) and
was not blocked by inhibitors of RNA and protein synthesis (Fig. 5)
,
nor was it blocked by estradiol (Fig. 2C)
. These
observations suggest that the induction of apoptosis in p53(-) HMEC-E6
cells by tamoxifen may be activated through a nongenomic signaling
pathway that is different from conventional slow-acting, ER-mediated
transcription. These observations are clinically relevant because the
identification of nongenomic pathways of antiestrogen action may
uncover important novel targets for breast cancer prevention
strategies.
Abnormal p53 expression in benign breast tissue is associated with the
subsequent development of breast cancer and may represent a very early
event in breast carcinogenesis (9
, 10)
. We observe that
HMECs with normal cellular p53 levels undergo
G1-G0-phase arrest but not
apoptosis when treated with 1.0 µM tamoxifen (Figs. 3
and 4)
. In contrast, early passage HMECs with HPV-16 E6-suppressed p53
levels readily undergo apoptosis when treated with 1.0 µM
tamoxifen (Figs. 3
and 4)
. These observations provide evidence that
tamoxifen-mediated apoptosis in HMECs occurs in the absence of p53
expression.
There is extensive experimental evidence supporting the role of p53 in
promoting apoptosis (37
, 38)
. However, the role of p53 in
apoptosis is not unequivocal. Adenovirus-mediated expression of
17-ß-estradiol-F1 in human breast and ovarian carcinoma
cells lacking p53 results in apoptosis (39)
, and apoptosis
and remodeling of mammary gland tissue during involution proceeds
through p53-independent pathways (40)
. Furthermore, a
majority of the observations delineating a requirement of p53 for
effective apoptosis have been made in experimentally transformed cells
lines or in cancer cell lines. Loss of p53 function confers genetic
instability, and studies of p53 function in these model systems may be
complicated by mutations acquired subsequent to p53 inactivation. This
possibility is supported by our observation that HMECs with HPV-16
E6-suppressed p53 levels rapidly acquire resistance to
tamoxifen-mediated apoptosis with in vitro passaging (Figs. 3
and 4)
. We observed that p53(-) HMEC-E6 exhibited marked chromosomal
instability and acquired nonrandom losses of chromosome 16, 12, 21, and
17 within 10 passages of transduction (Fig. 5)
.
We observe a differential mechanism of action of tamoxifen in normal cells versus early passage HMECs with HPV-16 E6suppressed p53 expression and hypothesize that the acute loss of p53 expression may sensitize HMECs to tamoxifen-mediated apoptosis. This possibility is supported by the recent observation that the acute loss of p53 expression enhances the sensitivity of fibroblasts to apoptosis induced by chemotherapeutic agents (41, 42, 43) . Alternatively, it is also possible, that the expression of HPV-16 E6 may result in molecular events independent of the targeted degradation of p53. However, enhanced sensitivity to p53-independent apoptosis by paclitaxel and other chemotherapeutic agents has been observed in normal human fibroblasts expressing HPV-16 E6, human placental cells expressing SV40 T antigen, and mouse embryonic fibroblasts isolated from p53 -/- transgenic mice (42) . These observations support our hypothesis that enhanced sensitivity to apoptosis is attributable to the specific loss of p53 function and not caused by a p53-independent effect of HPV-16 E6.
The ability of tamoxifen to inhibit proliferation has been extensively
studied. However, the molecular mechanism by which tamoxifen initiates
apoptosis is poorly understood. Activation of apoptosis by tamoxifen in
HMECs with HPV-16 E6-suppressed p53 function may be initiated by
(a) tamoxifen-induced growth inhibition or (b)
DNA damage induced by tamoxifen or (c) may be caused
by an indirect mechanism such as the induction of a secondary mediator
of apoptosis, e.g., TGF-ß. The first possibility is less
likely because induction of
G1-G0-phase arrest by
all-trans-retinoic acid in HMECs with HPV-16 E6-suppressed
p53 expression does not result in apoptosis (19)
. We
cannot exclude the possibility that tamoxifen may activate apoptosis by
initiating DNA damage. Tamoxifen is thought to primarily act as an ER
agonist/antagonist, but there is also evidence that tamoxifen may cause
DNA damage. Recently, analysis of the p53 gene in 40
endometrial tumors indicate an excess of G:C
A:T transitions at
non-CpG sites in 91% of the tumors arising in women taking tamoxifen
relative to 19% in controls (44)
.
Although the acute inactivation of p53 expression in HMECs is
associated with tamoxifen-mediated apoptosis, p53(-) HMEC-E6 cells
rapidly develop resistance as they are subsequently passaged in culture
in the absence of tamoxifen (Figs. 3
and 4)
. Acquired resistance to
tamoxifen-mediated apoptosis in our in vitro system may be
the result of several mechanisms. First, there might be a change in ER
expression or a difference in tamoxifen metabolism in late passage
p53(-) HMEC-E6 cells. However, there was no difference in ER
expression, estrogen binding, or tamoxifen metabolism in
tamoxifen-resistant and -sensitive HMECs. Second, there might be a loss
of down-stream effector targets of the ER. Third, serial passaging of
HMECs lacking p53 function in tissue culture might favor the clonal
expansion of cells harboring resistance to apoptosis. We cannot exclude
the second possibility; however, we have observed resistance to other
mediators of apoptosis in late passage HMECs lacking p53 function (data
not shown), which suggests that resistance to tamoxifen apoptosis is
attributable to the evolution of a population of cells with generalized
defects in the cellular apoptotic machinery.
We observe a preferential loss of chromosome 16p (74%) in late passage p53(-) HMEC-E6 cells correlating with the development of resistance to tamoxifen. Cells were analyzed at the passage in which resistance was first observed, before the potential emergence of a dominant clonal population. The high frequency of chromosome 16p loss suggests that the loss of a particular gene(s) in this region may be critical for the development of resistance to tamoxifen.
One of the most frequent aberrations observed in breast cancer is the loss of material from chromosome 16 (45 , 46) . However, cytogenetic, restriction fragment length polymorphism, and loss of heterozygosity analyses have primarily identified loss of chromosome 16q rather than 16p (45 , 47, 48, 49) . This does not exclude the possibility that there are small deletions involving 16p, not detected by cytogenetic analysis, or point mutations present in genes located on 16p. The role of 16p in determining sensitivity to tamoxifen-mediated growth regulation and apoptosis is unknown. It has been observed that loss of heterozygosity at 16p13 is detected in a majority of benign and malignant microdissected papillary neoplasms of the breast (50) . Papillary carcinoma of the breast is a specific category of breast cancer characterized by a papillary, arborescent growth pattern with fibrovascular support. These tumors are typically low grade and intraductal. Additional experiments will be necessary to investigate the potential relationship between the loss of 16p in our in vitro system and papillary neoplasms of the breast.
Recently, the effect of tamoxifen chemoprevention on mammary tumor development was tested in proto-neu transgeneic mice that spontaneously develop hormone-independent carcinomas overexpressing the neu protein (51) . If virgin transgenic mice were treated with tamoxifen when subclinical mammary tumors were present, tamoxifen slightly accelerated tumor development. In contrast, mice that were treated with tamoxifen before subclinical tumors were present demonstrated a 50% reduction of tumor incidence. Light microscopy revealed normal ductal branching but a complete regression of acini. These observations are similar to what we observe in our model system, suggesting that tamoxifen may be effective in preventing hormone-independent breast cancers, only if given early during mammary carcinogenesis.
In summary, we developed an in vitro model of tamoxifen chemoprevention of ER-poor noninvasive breast cancer to investigate how tamoxifen might act in HMECs that have acutely lost p53 function. We propose that the acute loss of p53, mediated in our model system, by expression of HPV-16 E6 may sensitize HMECs to tamoxifen-mediated apoptosis, but that, because of the genetic instability of these cells, resistance rapidly develops. Resistance to tamoxifen-mediated apoptosis is associated with a preferential loss of chromosome 16p, which suggest a potential role for a gene(s) located in this region that is critical for tamoxifen-mediated apoptosis. Observations in our model system have important clinical implications because they predict a critical role for early institution of tamoxifen chemoprevention before the development of p53 mutations and are consistent with clinical studies that show an association between abnormal p53 expression in breast cancer and a poor response to tamoxifen chemotherapy. By investigating how tamoxifen might target the elimination of abnormal cells in our model system, novel sites of therapeutic intervention can be identified, giving rise to more effective strategies for the prevention of breast cancer.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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plasmid from
Geoffrey Green. | FOOTNOTES |
|---|
1 Supported by V-Foundation Award (to V. L. S.),
R01CA88799 (to V. L. S.), 2P30CA14236-26 (V. L. S., E. C. D.),
NIH National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney
Disease Grant 2P30DK 35816-11 (V. L. S.), a Susan G. Komen
Breast Cancer Investigator Award, an American Cancer Society New
Investigator Award (V. L. S.), and 5P30CA16058 (K. M.). ![]()
2 To whom requests for reprints should be
addressed, at Box 2628, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC
27710. Phone: (919) 668-2455; Fax: (919) 668-2458; E-mail: seewa001{at}mc.duke.edu ![]()
3 K. M. and E. C. D. made equal contributions
as second authors. ![]()
4 The abbreviations used are:
BCPT, Breast Cancer Prevention Trial; HMEC, human mammary epithelial
cell; ER, estrogen receptor; HPV-16, human papillomavirus type 16;
FACS, fluorescent-activated cell sorting; HPLC, high-performance liquid
chromatography; SKY, spectral karyotyping; DAPI,
4,6-diamino-2-phenyliodole. ![]()
Received 2/28/00. Accepted 11/13/00.
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