AI Article Synopsis

  • Low estrogen levels are thought to suppress uterine endometrial carcinoma, yet most cases arise after menopause, prompting a focus on declining androgen levels as a potential factor in its progression.
  • The study examines the role of androgen and its receptor (AR) by analyzing clinical data, culturing cancer cell lines, and using murine models, showing that higher androgen receptor expression and dihydrotestosterone (DHT) levels correlate with lower disease-free survival.
  • DHT reduces cancer cell proliferation and suppresses FOXP4 expression, suggesting that the androgen/AR system can inhibit malignant behavior in endometrial carcinoma, pointing to FOXP4 as a key target for future clinical strategies.

Article Abstract

Although low estrogen is considered to suppress uterine endometrial carcinoma, the most cases occur in the postmenopausal stage. After menopause, the production of androgen level also declines. Therefore, to resolve the above enigma, we hypothesize that the postmenopausal decline of androgen is a trigger of its progression. In the present study, to validate this hypothesis, we examine the pathological roles of androgen/AR by analyzing clinical data, culturing endometrioid cancer cell lines, and using murine models. Clinical data show that androgen receptor (AR) expression and serum dihydrotestosterone (DHT) are associated with lower disease-free survival (DFS). DHT suppresses malignant behaviors in AR-transfected human endometrial cancer cells (ECC). In ovariectomized Pten/PR mice, DHT decreases the proliferation of spontaneously developed murine ECC. In AR-transfected human ECC and Pten/PR mice, DHT suppresses FOXP4 expression. FOXP4-overexpressed human ECC increases, while FOXP4-knocked-down ECC shows decreased malignant behaviors. DHT/AR-mediated ECC suppression is restored by FOXP4 overexpression. The high FOXP4 expression is significantly correlated with low postoperative DFS. These findings indicate that the androgen/AR system suppresses the malignant activity of endometrial carcinoma and that downstream FOXP4 is another target molecule. These findings will also impact developments in clinical approaches to elderly health.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11189448PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s42003-024-06433-wDOI Listing

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