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  • In the Model Cell Lines of Moderately and Poorly Differentiated Endometrial Carcinoma, Estrogens Can Be Formed via the Sulfatase Pathway.

In the Model Cell Lines of Moderately and Poorly Differentiated Endometrial Carcinoma, Estrogens Can Be Formed via the Sulfatase Pathway.

Frontiers in molecular biosciences (2021-11-23)
Renata Pavlič, Marija Gjorgoska, Eva Hafner, Maša Sinreih, Kristina Gajser, Stefan Poschner, Walter Jäger, Tea Lanišnik Rižner
ABSTRACT

Endometrial cancer (EC) is the most common gynecological malignancy in resource-abundant countries. The majority of EC cases are estrogen dependent but the mechanisms of estrogen biosynthesis and oxidative metabolism and estrogen action are not completely understood. Here, we evaluated formation of estrogens in models of moderately and poorly differentiated EC: RL95-2 and KLE cells, respectively. Results revealed high expression of estrone-sulfate (E1-S) transporters (SLCO1A2, SLCO1B3, SLCO1C1, SLCO3A1, SLC10A6, SLC22A9), and increased E1-S uptake in KLE vs RL95-2 cells. In RL95-2 cells, higher levels of sulfatase and better metabolism of E1-S to E1 were confirmed compared to KLE cells. In KLE cells, disturbed balance in expression of HSD17B genes led to enhanced activation of E1 to E2, compared to RL95-2 cells. Additionally, increased CYP1B1 expression and down-regulation of genes encoding phase II metabolic enzymes: COMT, NQO1, NQO2, and GSTP1 suggested decreased detoxification of carcinogenic metabolites in KLE cells. Results indicate that in model cell lines of moderately and poorly differentiated EC, estrogens can be formed via the sulfatase pathway.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Cyclosporin A, Ready Made Solution, 1 mg/mL in DMSO
Sigma-Aldrich
Insulin solution human, sterile-filtered, BioXtra, suitable for cell culture
Sigma-Aldrich
Fetal Bovine Serum, Heat Inactivated, non-USA origin, sterile-filtered, suitable for cell culture
Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-GAPDH antibody, Mouse monoclonal, clone GAPDH-71.1, purified from hybridoma cell culture