Effect of cadmium on estrogen receptor levels and estrogen-induced responses in human breast cancer cells

Pilar Garcia-Morales, Miguel Saceda, Nicholas Kenney, Nancy Kim, David S. Salomon, Marco M. Gottardis, Harrison B. Solomon, Peter F. Sholler, V. Craig Jordan, Mary Beth Martini

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

274 Scopus citations

Abstract

The effects of cadmium on estrogen receptor and other estrogen-regulated genes in the human breast cancer cell line MCF-7 were studied. Treatment of MCF-7 cells with 1 μM cadmium decreased the level of estrogen receptor 58%. Cadmium induced a parallel decrease in estrogen receptor mRNA (62%). Progesterone receptor levels increased 3.2-fold after cadmium treatment. This induction was blocked by the anti-estrogen ICI-164,384. Progesterone receptor mRNA was also increased by cadmium, as well as cathepsin D mRNA. An in vitro nuclear transcription run-on assay showed that cadmium increased the transcription of the progesterone receptor and pS2 genes and decreased transcription of the estrogen receptor gene. These are not general effects of heavy metals, as zinc, 25 and 100 μM, did not affect progesterone receptor protein and mRNA levels. Cadmium stimulated pS2 and progesterone receptor mRNAs in a clone of MDA-MB-231 cells transfected with the human estrogen receptor, but had no effect in MDA-MB-231 cells transfected with antisense estrogen receptor. Cadmium also stimulated an estrogen response element in transient transfection experiments. These data suggest that the effects of cadmium are mediated by the estrogen receptor independent of estradiol. In addition to its effect on gene expression, cadmium induced the growth of MCF- 7 cells 5.6-fold.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)16896-16901
Number of pages6
JournalJournal of Biological Chemistry
Volume269
Issue number24
StatePublished - Jun 17 1994
Externally publishedYes

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Biochemistry
  • Molecular Biology
  • Cell Biology

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