Obesity-Senescence-Breast Cancer: Clinical Presentation of a Common Unfortunate Cycle.

Adv Exp Med Biol

Faculty of Medicine, Department of General Surgery, Gazi University, Besevler, Ankara, Turkey.

Published: September 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • There is limited research on how obesity, cell aging, and telomere shortening are interrelated, but it is established that telomere shortening contributes significantly to aging and age-related illnesses.* -
  • Telomerase activity, which helps maintain telomere length, is absent in normal breast tissue but is crucial for the survival and growth of breast cancer cells, particularly in obese patients with hormone-dependent cancers.* -
  • The review discusses how elevated leptin levels in obesity can enhance breast cancer cell growth by affecting telomerase activity and explores potential drug therapies targeting telomerase to treat ERα+ postmenopausal breast cancers.*

Article Abstract

There are few convincing studies establishing the relationship between endogenous factors that cause obesity, cellular aging, and telomere shortening. Without a functional telomerase, a cell undergoing cell division has progressive telomere shortening. While obesity influences health and longevity as well as telomere dynamics, cellular senescence is one of the major drivers of the aging process and of age-related disorders. Oxidative stress induces telomere shortening, while decreasing telomerase activity. When progressive shortening of telomere length reaches a critical point, it triggers cell cycle arrest leading to senescence or apoptotic cell death. Telomerase activity cannot be detected in normal breast tissue. By contrast, maintenance of telomere length as a function of human telomerase is crucial for the survival of breast cancer cells and invasion. Approximately three-quarters of breast cancers in the general population are hormone-dependent and overexpression of estrogen receptors is crucial for their continued growth. In obesity, increasing leptin levels enhance aromatase messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) expression, aromatase content, and its enzymatic activity on breast cancer cells, simultaneously activating telomerase in a dose-dependent manner. Meanwhile, applied anti-estrogen therapy increases serum leptin levels and thus enhances leptin resistance in obese postmenopausal breast cancer patients. Many studies revealed that shorter telomeres of postmenopausal breast cancer have higher local recurrence rates and higher tumor grade. In this review, interlinked molecular mechanisms are looked over between the telomere length, lipotoxicity/glycolipotoxicity, and cellular senescence in the context of estrogen receptor alpha-positive (ERα+) postmenopausal breast cancers in obese women. Furthermore, the effect of the potential drugs, which are used for direct inhibition of telomerase and the inhibition of human telomerase reverse transcriptase (hTERT) or human telomerase RNA promoters as well as approved adjuvant endocrine therapies, the selective estrogen receptor modulator and selective estrogen receptor down-regulators are discussed.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-63657-8_27DOI Listing

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