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Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter November 30, 2009

Differential effects of overexpression of ERα and ERβ in MCF10A immortalised, non-transformed human breast epithelial cells

  • Dhamayanthi Pugazhendhi and Philippa D. Darbre

Abstract

Background: Cellular effects of oestrogen are mediated by two intracellular receptors ERα and ERβ. However, to compare responses mediated through these two receptors, experimental models are needed where ERα and ERβ are individually stably overexpressed in the same cell type.

Methods: We compared the effects of stable overexpression of ERα and ERβ in the MCF10A cell line, which is an immortalised but non-transformed breast epithelial cell line without high endogenous ER expression.

Results: Clones of MCF10A cells were characterised which stably overexpressed ERα (10A-ERα2, 10A-ERα13) or which stably overexpressed ERβ (10A-ERβ12, 10A-ERβ15). Overexpression of either ERα or ERβ allowed induction of an oestrogen-regulated ERE-LUC reporter gene by oestradiol which was not found in the untransfected cells. Oestradiol also increased proliferation of 10A-ERα13 and 10A-ERβ12 cells, but not untransfected cells, by 1.3-fold over 7 days. The phytoestrogen, genistein, which is reported to bind more strongly to ERβ than to ERα, could induce luciferase gene expression from an ERE-LUC reporter gene at concentrations of 10−6 M and 10−5 M but only in the clones overexpressing ERβ and not in those overexpressing ERα. Clone 10A-ERβ12 also yielded growth stimulation with 10-6 M genistein. Finally, the overexpression of ERα, but not ERβ, gave rise to increased growth in semi-solid methocel suspension culture in the presence of 70 nM oestradiol, suggesting that overexpression of ERα, but not ERβ, produces characteristics of a transformed phenotype.

Conclusions: This provides a model system to compare effects of oestradiol with other oestrogenic ligands in cells stably overexpressing individually ERα or ERβ.


Corresponding author: Philippa D. Darbre, Biomedical and Pharmaceutical Sciences, School of Biological Sciences, The Hopkins Building, University of Reading, Whiteknights, Reading RG6 6UB, UK Phone: +44-118-378-7035, Fax: +44-118-378-6642,

Received: 2009-7-20
Accepted: 2009-10-15
Published Online: 2009-11-30
Published in Print: 2010-01-01

©2009 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin New York

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