TY - JOUR
T1 - Phytoestrogens inhibiting androgen receptor signal and prostate cancer cell proliferation
AU - Wu, Jing
AU - Liu, Shu
AU - Shen, Xiao yan
AU - Yang, Nan yang
AU - Liu, Ying
AU - Tsuji, Ichiro
AU - Yamamura, Takaki
AU - Li, Jiang
AU - Li, Xiao meng
N1 - Funding Information:
Prostate cancer is the second most frequently diagnosed cancer of men and the fifth most common cancer among over-all cancers[1]. Since the cloning of its cDNA in 1988, the androgen receptor(AR) signaling activated by dihydrotestosterone(DHT) has been extensively studied and is considered to play critical roles in prostate cancer development and progression[2,3]. Upon binding to a ligand(e.g., DHT), AR dimerizes and translocates into the nucleus, in association with coregulatory factors, binds to the specific regulatory regions of AR target genes[4]. AR is activated by the binding of both of the androgenic hormones, testosterone and DHT. As the key androgen-regulated gene in the prostate gland, prostate specific antigen(PSA) is a sensitive and selective marker for prostate cancer screening and assessment[5]. Ligand-dependent activation leads to the binding of AR to androgen response elements(AREs) in the PSA promoter. Two functionally active AREs in the proximal PSA promoter and a third functionally active ARE in the upstream enhancer region ——————————— *Corresponding authors. E-mail: lixm441@nenu.edu.cn; ljiang@jlu.edu.cn Received March 18, 2013; accepted June 5, 2013. Supported by the Project of the Ministry of Science and Technology of China(No.2010DFA31430), the Project of the Ministry of Education of China(Nos.NCET-10-0316, 10SSXT147), the Project of the Jilin Provincial Science & Technology Department, China(Nos.20070719, 200905116) and the Project of the Changchun Science & Technology Department, China (No.2011114-11GH29). © Jilin University, The Editorial Department of Chemical Research in Chinese Universities and Springer-Verlag GmbH have been identified[6―8]. Biochemical and genetic studies reveal that both the enhancer and the proximal promoter in the PSA gene display androgen responsiveness but a maximal activity requires the presence of both, and the upstream enhancer is essential for high induction of promoter activity[6].
PY - 2013/10
Y1 - 2013/10
N2 - The androgen receptor(AR) signaling activated by dihydrotestosterone(DHT) plays critical roles in prostate cancer development and progression. Phytoestrogens, which are diphenolic compounds with estrogen and antiestrogen effects, can bind to estrogen receptors. However, their function on AR signaling has not been fully elucidated. In this study, dual-luciferase reporter assay, immunobloting, docking system test, MTT assay, immunofluorescence and chromatin immunoprecipitation(ChIP) assays were employed to examine the potential effects of three phytoestrogens(genistein, daidzein, flavone) on DHT-activated prostate specific antigen(PSA) activation, cell proliferation and AR transactivation in lymph node carcinoma of prostate(LNCaP) cells. Phytoestrogens were detected to down-regulate DHT-activated AR-mediated PSA promoter transactivation by dual-luciferase reporter system. Furthermore, three phytoestrogens, especially genistein, were demonstrated to significantly decrease AR-activated PSA protein expression by Western blotting analysis. MTT experiment proves that phytoestrogens, especially genistein, remarkably inhibits the DHT-induced cell proliferation in LNCaP cells. To provide reasonable explanations for experimental phenomena mentioned above, we did docking system test and detected phytoestrogens to share the same AR-binding site with DHT. To further prove the competition between phytoestrogen and DHT on AR binding, we examined the effects of phytoestrogens on DHT-activated AR nuclear translocation and immunofluorescence analysis which confirms that phytoestrogens, especially genistein, inhibit DHT-activated androgen receptor nuclear translocation. Results from ChIP show that phytoestrogens down-regulate DHT-induces AR binding to the androgen response elements(AREs, including AREI, AREII, and AREIII) in PSA promoter. Genistein remarkably down-regulates AR, binding to the AREI located in -250- -39 bp and AREIII in -4170- -3978 bp in the presence of DHT. In general, three phytoestrogens were identified to inhibit DHT-AR binding by competitively binding to AR and inhibit AR-mediated transactivation. And genistein shows the strongest effects among three phytoestrogens. Our findings confirm that phytoestrogens are AR antagonist in the regulation of AR-related PSA activation and cell proliferation, which provides valuable insights into the treatment of prostate cancer.
AB - The androgen receptor(AR) signaling activated by dihydrotestosterone(DHT) plays critical roles in prostate cancer development and progression. Phytoestrogens, which are diphenolic compounds with estrogen and antiestrogen effects, can bind to estrogen receptors. However, their function on AR signaling has not been fully elucidated. In this study, dual-luciferase reporter assay, immunobloting, docking system test, MTT assay, immunofluorescence and chromatin immunoprecipitation(ChIP) assays were employed to examine the potential effects of three phytoestrogens(genistein, daidzein, flavone) on DHT-activated prostate specific antigen(PSA) activation, cell proliferation and AR transactivation in lymph node carcinoma of prostate(LNCaP) cells. Phytoestrogens were detected to down-regulate DHT-activated AR-mediated PSA promoter transactivation by dual-luciferase reporter system. Furthermore, three phytoestrogens, especially genistein, were demonstrated to significantly decrease AR-activated PSA protein expression by Western blotting analysis. MTT experiment proves that phytoestrogens, especially genistein, remarkably inhibits the DHT-induced cell proliferation in LNCaP cells. To provide reasonable explanations for experimental phenomena mentioned above, we did docking system test and detected phytoestrogens to share the same AR-binding site with DHT. To further prove the competition between phytoestrogen and DHT on AR binding, we examined the effects of phytoestrogens on DHT-activated AR nuclear translocation and immunofluorescence analysis which confirms that phytoestrogens, especially genistein, inhibit DHT-activated androgen receptor nuclear translocation. Results from ChIP show that phytoestrogens down-regulate DHT-induces AR binding to the androgen response elements(AREs, including AREI, AREII, and AREIII) in PSA promoter. Genistein remarkably down-regulates AR, binding to the AREI located in -250- -39 bp and AREIII in -4170- -3978 bp in the presence of DHT. In general, three phytoestrogens were identified to inhibit DHT-AR binding by competitively binding to AR and inhibit AR-mediated transactivation. And genistein shows the strongest effects among three phytoestrogens. Our findings confirm that phytoestrogens are AR antagonist in the regulation of AR-related PSA activation and cell proliferation, which provides valuable insights into the treatment of prostate cancer.
KW - Androgen receptor
KW - Phytoestrogen
KW - Prostate cancer
KW - Prostate specific antigen(PSA)
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U2 - 10.1007/s40242-013-3123-6
DO - 10.1007/s40242-013-3123-6
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84885035092
VL - 29
SP - 911
EP - 916
JO - Chemical Research in Chinese Universities
JF - Chemical Research in Chinese Universities
SN - 1005-9040
IS - 5
ER -