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. 1991 Mar;6(3):431-7.

Decrease of c-erbB-2 and c-myc RNA levels in tamoxifen-treated breast cancer

Affiliations
  • PMID: 1707153

Decrease of c-erbB-2 and c-myc RNA levels in tamoxifen-treated breast cancer

X Le Roy et al. Oncogene. 1991 Mar.

Abstract

The c-myc, c-erbB-2, hst and int-2 oncogenes are frequently amplified and/or overexpressed in human breast carcinomas. We studied the effect of tamoxifen on RNA levels of these oncogenes in 19 breast cancer patients treated for 3 weeks prior to surgery as compared with 22 control patients. RNA levels were measured by in situ hybridization coupled with computer-aided quantification. c-myc and c-erbB-2 expression was high in the control population (mean values: 23.4 and 29.1 grains/cell respectively) and significantly decreased in the tamoxifen-treated population (mean values: 14.6 and 7.4 grains/cell respectively) (P = 0.018, P = 0.003 respectively); hst and int-2 RNA levels were low (2-6 grains/cell) and not significantly altered by the treatment. There was a correlation between gene amplification and expression for c-erbB-2 (P = 0.0005) and hst (P = 0.02) in the control population. Elevated c-erbB-2 RNA level was correlated with the absence of estrogen (P = 0.02) or progesterone (P = 0.05) receptors. In the ER+ population, the tamoxifen-treated group had significantly lower c-myc expression levels than the control group (P = 0.04) which is in agreement with the estrogen induction of c-myc in ER+ T47D cell line and its inhibition by antiestrogens. Surprisingly, c-erbB-2 expression in the tamoxifen-treated group was significantly diminished in the ER- (P = 0.02) and PR- (P = 0.01) populations. This effect was not observed in the ER- BT474 cell line. These results suggest that in vivo tamoxifen decreases c-myc and c-erbB-2 RNA levels in breast cancer cells via two different mechanisms. To our knowledge this is the first evidence of in vivo down regulation of a gene by tamoxifen in ER- breast cancer cells.

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