Abstract
A hormone-independent but hormone-responsive subpopulation (MCF7/MIII) of the hormone-dependent MCF-7 human breast cancer cell line (R. Clarke et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 86: 3649–3653, 1989) was further passaged in ovariectomized nude mice and re-established in vitro as the continuous cell line MCF7/LCC1. The lag time to the appearance of proliferating tumors in ovariectomized animals is significantly reduced in MCF7/LCC1 when compared with MCF7/MIII cells. In gel denaturation/renaturation analysis of tumor, genomic DNA does not reveal significant differences in the pattern of detectable DNA amplifications between parent MCF-7 cells and MCF7/LCC1 cells. In the absence of estrogen, steadystate levels of phosphoinositol turnover are similar in both MCF-7 and MCF7/LCC1 cells, but turnover is increased by estrogen only in MCF-7 cells. MCF7/MIII and MCF7/LCC1, but not MCF-7 cells, express a high baseline level of the estrogen-regulated pS2 mRNA. The baseline level of expression of progesterone receptor protein, but not mRNA, is higher in MCF7/LCC1 when compared with either MCF-7 or early passage MCF7/MIII cells. However, while the estrogen receptor is also an estrogen-regulated gene, MCF7/MIII and MCF7/LCC1 cells retain estrogen receptor levels equivalent to the parental MCF-7 cells. These data indicate that progression to hormone independence can occur without major gene amplifications or a high constitutive induction of phosphoinositide metabolism. Thus, DNA amplifications may be acquired during the early initiation and/or promotional events of carcinogenesis. Significantly, acquisition of a hormone-independent but responsive phenotype in human breast cancer is associated with perturbations in the expression of specific estrogen-regulated genes.
Footnotes
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↵1 This work was supported by USPHS Grants 1-R55-CA51782, 5-R01-CA58022 (R. C.), and 5-U01-CA51908 and Grant 1P30-CA51008 from the National Cancer Institute (M. E. L., R. C.); Research Grant 90BW65 from the American Institute for Cancer Research (R. C.); Fellowships from the Danish Cancer Society and National Cancer Institute/European Organization for Reasearch on Treatment of Cancer Exchange Program (N. B.); and Fondation pour la Recherche Medicale, and L'Association pour la Recherche sur le Cancer (V. B.).
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- Received October 3, 1991.
- Accepted October 26, 1992.
- ©1993 American Association for Cancer Research.