Progesterone suppresses the invasion and migration of breast cancer cells irrespective of their progesterone receptor status - a short report

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Abstract

Purpose: Pre-operative progesterone treatment of breast cancer has been shown to confer survival benefits to patients independent of their progesterone receptor (PR) status. The underlying mechanism and the question whether such an effect can also be observed in PR negative breast cancer cells remain to be resolved. Methods: We performed proteome profiling of PR-positive and PR-negative breast cancer cells in response to progesterone using a phospho-kinase array platform. Western blotting was used to validate the results. Cell-based phenotypic assays were conducted using PR-positive and PR-negative breast cancer cells to assess the effect of progesterone. Results: We found that progesterone induces de-phosphorylation of 12 out of 43 kinases tested, which are mostly involved in cellular invasion and migration regulation. Consistent with this observation, we found through cell-based phenotypic assays that progesterone inhibits the invasion and migration of breast cancer cells independent of their PR status. Conclusion: Our results indicate that progesterone can inhibit breast cancer cell invasion and migration mediated by the de-phosphorylation of kinases. This inhibition appears to be independent of the PR status of the breast cancer cells. In a broader context, our study may provide a basis for an association between progesterone treatment and recurrence reduction in breast cancer patients, thereby providing a lead for modelling a randomized in vitro study.

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Godbole, M., Tiwary, K., Badwe, R., Gupta, S., & Dutt, A. (2017). Progesterone suppresses the invasion and migration of breast cancer cells irrespective of their progesterone receptor status - a short report. Cellular Oncology, 40(4), 411–417. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13402-017-0330-z

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