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Involvement of endoplasmic reticulum stress in regulation of endometrial stromal cell invasiveness: possible role in pathogenesis of endometriosis
Author(s) -
JongYeob Choi,
MinWha Jo,
Eunyoung Lee,
DongYun Lee,
DooSeok Choi
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
molecular human reproduction
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.143
H-Index - 122
eISSN - 1460-2407
pISSN - 1360-9947
DOI - 10.1093/molehr/gaz002
Subject(s) - pi3k/akt/mtor pathway , unfolded protein response , biology , protein kinase b , stromal cell , endoplasmic reticulum , cancer research , endocrinology , medicine , chop , microbiology and biotechnology , signal transduction
Endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress is known to reduce invasiveness in some cancer cells by inhibiting the AKT/mTOR pathway. A previous study from our laboratory suggested that ER stress is promoted by progesterone in human endometrial cells, which suggests that progesterone may inhibit endometrial cell invasiveness by up-regulating ER stress. Therefore, aberrant ER stress in response to progesterone may contribute to the altered invasiveness found in endometriotic tissues. To test this hypothesis, we elucidate whether ER stress is involved in regulation of human endometrial cell invasiveness through the AKT/mTOR pathway and if this involvement is associated with altered invasiveness in endometriotic cells. Specifically, we sought to determine the effects of ER stress on AKT/mTOR pathway by evaluating ER stress-mediated CHOP/TRIB3 signaling, a negative regulator of AKT. We found that ER stress marker GRP78 expression increased with CHOP and TRIB3 expression in normal endometrial stromal cells (NESCs) treated with tunicamycin, and this increase was accompanied by decreased AKT and mTOR activity and cellular invasiveness. Similarly, progesterone increased GRP78, CHOP and TRIB3 expression in NESCs. Subsequently, inhibition of AKT and mTOR activity decreased cellular invasiveness. This progesterone-induced decrease in cellular invasiveness was reversed by inhibition of ER stress. In contrast, progesterone did not change CHOP, TRIB3, AKT, mTOR or invasiveness in endometriotic cyst stromal cells. In contrast to normal endometrium, endometriotic tissues showed no changes in CHOP, TRIB3 and invasion-related proteins (MMP2 and MMP9) expression throughout the menstrual cycle. Taken together, our findings indicate that abnormal ER stress response to progesterone increased endometriotic stromal cell invasiveness via the AKT/mTOR pathway.

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