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Clinical and Genomic Crosstalk between Glucocorticoid Receptor and Estrogen Receptor α In Endometrial Cancer
Author(s) -
Jeffery M. Vahrenkamp,
Chieh-Hsiang Yang,
Adriana C. Rodriguez,
Aliyah Almomen,
Kristofer C. Berrett,
Alexis Trujillo,
Katrin P. Guillen,
Bryan E. Welm,
Elke A. Jarboe,
Margit M. JanátAmsbury,
Jason Gertz
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
cell reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.264
H-Index - 154
eISSN - 2639-1856
pISSN - 2211-1247
DOI - 10.1016/j.celrep.2018.02.076
Subject(s) - crosstalk , glucocorticoid receptor , endometrial cancer , estrogen receptor , cancer research , estrogen , receptor , nuclear receptor , biology , estrogen receptor beta , progesterone receptor , estrogen related receptor gamma , breast cancer , glucocorticoid , endocrinology , medicine , gene , cancer , genetics , transcription factor , physics , optics
Steroid hormone receptors are simultaneously active in many tissues and are capable of altering each other's function. Estrogen receptor α (ER) and glucocorticoid receptor (GR) are expressed in the uterus, and their ligands have opposing effects on uterine growth. In endometrial tumors with high ER expression, we surprisingly found that expression of GR is associated with poor prognosis. Dexamethasone reduced normal uterine growth in vivo; however, this growth inhibition was abolished in estrogen-induced endometrial hyperplasia. We observed low genomic-binding site overlap when ER and GR are induced with their respective ligands; however, upon simultaneous induction they co-occupy more sites. GR binding is altered significantly by estradiol with GR recruited to ER-bound loci that become more accessible upon estradiol induction. Gene expression responses to co-treatment were more similar to estradiol but with additional regulated genes. Our results suggest phenotypic and molecular interplay between ER and GR in endometrial cancer.

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