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Properties and regulation of 17β‐hydroxysteroid oxidoreductase of OVCAR‐3, CAOV‐3, and A431 cells: Effects of epidermal growth factor, estradiol, and progesterone
Author(s) -
Blomquist Charles H.,
Leung Benjamin S.,
Zhang Ruoping,
Zhu Youyang,
Chang Patricia M.
Publication year - 1995
Publication title -
journal of cellular biochemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.028
H-Index - 165
eISSN - 1097-4644
pISSN - 0730-2312
DOI - 10.1002/jcb.240590402
Subject(s) - a431 cells , medicine , chemistry , endocrinology , epidermal growth factor , progesterone receptor , cell culture , steroid , receptor , biology , apoptosis , hormone , biochemistry , cell cycle , cancer , molecular medicine , estrogen receptor , genetics , breast cancer
Abstract Although there is a growing body of evidence that 17β‐hydroxysteroid oxidoteductase plays a role the regulation of steroid levels in epithelial tumors of the endometrium and breast, out knowledge of its role in other gynecologic tumors is limited. In this investigation, the 17β‐hydroxysteroid oxidoreductase activity of cell lines derived from two ovarian tumors (OVCAR‐3, CAOV‐3) and an epidermoid tumor of the vulva (A431) was assayed under conditions which differentiate between 17β‐hydroxysteriod oxidoreductase type 1, a cytosolic isoform highly specific for estradiol, and type 2, a membrane bound isoform reactive with both estradiol and testosterone. On the basic of estradiol/testosterone activity ratios, all three cell lines appear to have type 2‐like activity, with the specific activity of A431 markedly greater than that of the other cell lines. Estradiol, progesterone, or EGE, alone or in combination, were without effect on the enzymatic activity of OVCAR‐3 cells. EGE decreased the activity of CAOV‐3 cells slightly. In contrast, EGE stimulated A431 17β‐hydroxysteriod oxidoreductase activity 7–8‐fold over a 5‐day exposure. Estradiol or progesterone, singly or in combination, also did not effect the enzymatic activity of A431 cells. However, progesterone inhibited the increase in activity seen in the presence of EGE. With EGE, estradiol, and progesterone together, the increase in enzymatic activity was comparable to that with EGE alone. The effects of estradiol and progesterone appear to result from steroid actions following binding of EGE to low‐affinity receptors on A431 cells. © 1995 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.

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