Enhanced levels of several mitochondrial mRNA transcripts and mitochondrial superoxide production during ethinyl estradiol-induced hepatocarcinogenesis and after estrogen treatment of HepG2 cells

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Abstract

Ethinyl estradiol (EE) is a strong hepatic promoter and weak complete hepatocarcinogen. Among the effects on rat liver caused by chronic exposure to non-hepatotoxic doses of EE is an initial, transient increase in hepatocyte growth followed by a subsequent inhibition (mitosuppression) of basal and/or induced liver growth. To investigate the mechanism of EE-induced mitosuppression, we performed a differential display and identified 10 genes whose expression was increased 2- to 4-fold in EE-induced, mitosuppressed livers. We found that one of these clones was homologous to nuclear genome-encoded mitochondrial ATP synthase subunit E. Here, we describe the identification of two additional cDNAs representing transcripts whose levels were elevated during EE-induced mitosuppression as mitochondrial DNA-encoded cytochrome c oxidase subunit III and ATP synthase 6. In addition, we found that EE, estradiol and the estradiol catechol metabolites, 4-OH-estradiol and 2-OH-estradiol, increased the levels of these and other mitochondrial genome-encoded transcripts in human hepatoma HepG2 cells. We also observed that this increase can be blocked by inhibition of cytochrome P450-mediated estrogen metabolism, and that this increase is accompanied by increased mitochondrial superoxide production, which reflects increased respiratory chain activity.

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Chen, J., Gokhale, M., Li, Y., Trush, M. A., & Yager, J. D. (1998). Enhanced levels of several mitochondrial mRNA transcripts and mitochondrial superoxide production during ethinyl estradiol-induced hepatocarcinogenesis and after estrogen treatment of HepG2 cells. Carcinogenesis, 19(12), 2187–2193. https://doi.org/10.1093/carcin/19.12.2187

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