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. 2008 Jan;24(1):24-9.
doi: 10.1080/09513590701668882.

Increase of doxorubicin-induced apoptosis after knock-down of gonadotropin-releasing hormone receptor expression in human endometrial, ovarian and breast cancer cells

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Increase of doxorubicin-induced apoptosis after knock-down of gonadotropin-releasing hormone receptor expression in human endometrial, ovarian and breast cancer cells

Stefanie Fister et al. Gynecol Endocrinol. 2008 Jan.
Free article

Abstract

The majority of human endometrial, ovarian and breast cancers express receptors for gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH). Their proliferation is time- and dose-dependently reduced by GnRH and its agonistic analogs. GnRH agonists inhibit the mitogenic signal transduction of growth factor receptors via activation of a phosphotyrosine phosphatase, resulting in downregulation of cancer cell proliferation. Induction of apoptosis is not involved. Recently we showed that the GnRH agonist triptorelin induces activation of nuclear factor-kappaB (NFkappaB) and thus reduces the apoptosis induced by the cytotoxic agent doxorubicin in human endometrial and ovarian cancer cells. The triptorelin-induced reduction of doxorubicin-induced apoptosis was blocked by inhibition of NFkappaB translocation into the nucleus. The present study was conducted to investigate whether knock-down of GnRH receptor expression reduces GnRH agonist-induced anti-apoptotic action. We show that knock-down of GnRH receptor expression results in an increase of doxorubicin-induced apoptosis in human endometrial and ovarian cancers and in the human breast cancer cell line MCF-7. These data further demonstrate that GnRH agonists suppress chemotherapeutic drug-induced apoptosis via activation of the GnRH receptor in these cancers. The situation is different with T-47-D breast cancer cells. After knock-down of GnRH receptor expression doxorubicin-induced apoptosis was decreased, indicating that GnRH agonists do not suppress chemotherapeutic drug-induced apoptosis in T-47-D breast cancer cells.

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