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Stimulatory effects of 4-hydroxytamoxifen on proliferation of human endometrial adenocarcinoma cells (Ishikawa line)

Anzai, Y; Holinka, C F; Kuramoto, H; Gurpide, E
The effects of trans-4-hydroxytamoxifen (OHTam) on proliferation of cells of the Ishikawa human endometrial adenocarcinoma line were studied under serum-free, phenol red-free conditions and compared to those of estradiol. The addition of OHTam (1 microM) to basal medium (BM), consisting of equal parts of Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium and Ham's F-12 with additional glutamine and 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineethanesulfonic acid, resulted in significant increases in cell numbers relative to controls. These effects were even greater than those obtained with estradiol (10 nM-1 microM) or 1% charcoal-treated fetal bovine serum (ctFBS). Addition of 1% ctFBS to BM containing 1 microM OHTam further increased cell numbers whereas addition of estradiol (10 nM) did not do so. The stimulation of growth was positively correlated with OHTam concentrations in the range of 10 nM to 1 microM. Dissociation of estradiol and OHTam proliferative effects was observed in a variant of Ishikawa cells in which estradiol did not increase proliferation while OHTam had a strong stimulatory effect. The growth-promoting effects of OHTam were also observed in BM containing 5% or 15% ctFBS. In contrast, in parallel experiments in which BM was replaced by minimal essential medium (Eagle's) with Earle's salts, OHTam (1 microM) did not stimulate proliferation under these conditions and acted as an antiestrogen, inhibiting the proliferative effects of estradiol. These results illustrate marked effects of medium composition on proliferation and antiestrogenic actions of OHTam. Alkaline phosphatase activity was strongly stimulated by estradiol (10 nM) but only very weakly affected by OHTam (1 microM); at these concentrations, OHTam inhibited the effect of estradiol, both in serum-free BM and in minimal essential medium plus 15% ctFBS, demonstrating dissociation in its actions on proliferation and on enzymatic activity. These findings suggest that OHTam may stimulate the proliferation of particular clones of endometrial cancer cells in human tumors. They also suggest that OHTam can exert effects not mediated by the estrogen receptor system, or form OHTam-estrogen receptor agonistic complexes unlike those resulting from estradiol-estrogen receptor interactions. Clearly, Ishikawa cells provide a useful model to investigate mechanisms of action of antiestrogens
PMID: 2706624
ISSN: 0008-5472
CID: 67839

Effects of serine and glycine on proliferation of an Ishikawa cell variant

Watanabe, J; Holinka, C F; Anzai, Y; Kuramoto, H; Gurpide, E
The proliferation of cells on an Ishikawa human endometrial adenocarcinoma line variant (Ishikawa-Var I) is markedly influenced by the medium used to culture them, viz. MEM vs BM (basal medium; DMEM/Ham's F12, 1/1, with additional glutamine and HETES), under serum-free conditions. Components of BM which are not present in MEM were systematically tested in order to identify those that might account for these differences. Cells were cultured for various periods of time, up to 8 days, in serum-free MEM to which the components to be tested were added. Cell population densities were evaluated using a fluorometric DNA assay when the cells were grown in multiwell plates, or by cell counting when the cells were cultured in plastic dishes. It was found that addition to MEM of a mixture of the amino acids that this medium lacks, significantly increased cell density. By testing individual amino acids at the concentrations present in BM, it could be demonstrated that addition of serine alone was sufficient to obtain the densities achieved with BM. Glycine, a metabolic precursor of serine, had a similar but smaller effect. None of the other missing compounds of BM was effective. Effects of serine on DNA synthesis were also estimated by measuring incorporation of [3H]thymidine for 1 h after a 24 h culture period in MEM. The effect of serine was similar and additive to that of 1% charcoal-treated fetal bovine serum. A serine concentration dependence studied either with this method or measuring DNA/well after 8 days in culture showed detectable effects at 0.005 mM concentration and maximal responses at about 0.025 mM. These findings are of potential importance in studies on regulatory mechanisms of cell proliferation. A possibility to be explored, for instance, is that serine added to the medium increases intracellular phosphatidylserine concentrations leading to increases in the activity of protein kinase C, a stimulator of cell proliferation in some systems
PMID: 2516581
ISSN: 0022-4731
CID: 67840