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Vol. 62, Issue 5, 1027-1035, November 2002
Departments of Pharmaco-Biology (M.M., A.V., D.B., G.F.) and
Cellular Biology (A.C., M.S., S.A.), University of Calabria, Rende,
Italy; and Department of Cellular Biology, University of Geneva,
Sciences III, Geneva, Switzerland (D.P.)
High consumption of soybean products, such as phytoestrogens, has been
hypothesized to contribute to a reduced incidence of prostate cancer in
Southeast Asian people, although there have been inconsistent results
among studies. Human LNCaP cells, extensively used as a model for
androgen-dependent prostate tumor, express the androgen receptor (AR)
mutant T877A promiscuously transactivated by estrogens and other
ligands, which may further facilitate cancer progression. Here, for the
first time to our knowledge, we demonstrate that genistein and
quercetin, two phytoestrogens abundantly present in soybeans, activate
either the AR mutant T877A in LNCaP or in transfected Chinese hamster
ovary cells. This observation is supported by their capability to
induce AR accumulation in the nuclear compartment of LNCaP together
with mRNA down-regulation of the androgen target genes AR and PAP, and
PSA up-regulation. Of interest, at concentrations eliciting
transcriptional activity, both genistein and quercetin stimulate LNCaP
cell growth, whereas at high levels, they become cytotoxic
independently of AR expression, as ascertained in steroid receptor-negative Hela cells. The results of our study provide evidence
that phytoestrogens may regulate several signaling processes in LNCaP
cells; however, further studies are needed to assess their potential
capability to restrain prostate tumor progression.
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