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ABSTRACT: Linkage between retinoid and fatty acid receptors: implications
for breast cancer prevention
Certain dietary retinoids and polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs)
consistently inhibit progression of mammary carcinogenesis both
in animal studies and cell culture, but clinically, their effect
is inconsistent.
New evidence of synergistic interaction between
the nuclear receptors for the two groups of nutritional agents
suggests that appropriate selective ligands from each group might
be combined in breast cancer chemoprevention studies. Peroxisome
proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR) gamma is a nuclear receptor
that is activated by PUFAs, eicosanoids and antidiabetic agents such
as troglitazone.
Such activation can cause growth inhibition in human
mammary cancer cells in culture and the effect is enhanced by ligands
of retinoic acid receptor (RAR) and retinoid X receptor (RXR).
In
mouse mammary tissue in organ culture, an RXR-selective ligand has
been shown to enhance the effect of troglitazone in suppressing
carcinogen-induced pre-neoplastic changes. A PPAR/RXR heterodimer
is involved in tumour growth inhibition and has been shown to bind
directly to nuclear oestrogen response elements (ERE) independently
of oestrogen receptor (ER) activity.
A combination of an RXR-selective
retinoid with either troglitazone or else a long-chain n-3 PUFA, is
proposed for a short-term study in postmenopausal women after primary
surgery for intraductal breast cancer.
The resulting activation of
PPAR/RXR expression may increase response to retinoid administration,
especially in the presence of obesity and insulin resistance, because
of the ability of PPAR gamma ligands to reduce insulin-like growth
factor I (IGF-I) concentrations.
Serial core biopsies of breast tissue
over a short term are proposed to identify changes in phenotype,
which may influence progression to invasiveness.
In addition to
cytomorphological criteria, expression of ER alpha and beta, RAR
alpha and beta, and IGF-I receptor in the nucleus should be examined.
[10/10/2002; European Journal of Cancer Prevention]
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