Altered microRNA expression patterns during the initiation and promotion stages of neonatal diethylstilbestrol-induced dysplasia/neoplasia in the hamster (Mesocricetus auratus) uterus

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Authors
Padmanabhan, Ramesh
Hendry, Isabel R.
Knapp, Jennifer R.
Shuai, Bin
Hendry, William J. III
Advisors
Issue Date
2017-10
Type
Article
Keywords
Diethylstilbestrol , Endocrine disruption , Female reproductive system , MicroRNA , Neoplasia , Uterus
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Citation
Padmanabhan, R., Hendry, I.R., Knapp, J.R. et al. Cell Biol Toxicol (2017) 33: 483
Abstract

Treatment of Syrian hamsters on the day of birth with the prototypical endocrine disruptor and synthetic estrogen, diethylstilbestrol (DES), leads to 100% occurrence of uterine hyperplasia/dysplasia in adulthood, a large proportion of which progress to neoplasia (endometrial adenocarcinoma). Consistent with our prior gene expression analyses at the mRNA and protein levels, we now report (based on microarray, real-time polymerase chain reaction, and in situ hybridization analyses) that progression of the neonatal DES-induced dysplasia/neoplasia phenomenon in the hamster uterus also includes a spectrum of microRNA expression alterations (at both the whole-organ and cell-specific level) that differ during the initiation (upregulated miR-21, 200a, 200b, 200c, 29a, 29b, 429, 141; downregulated miR-181a) and promotion (downregulated miR-133a) stages of the phenomenon. The biological processes targeted by those differentially expressed miRNAs include pathways in cancer and adherens junction, plus regulation of the cell cycle, apoptosis, and miRNA functions, all of which are consistent with our model system phenotype. These findings underscore the need for continued efforts to identify and assess both the classical genetic and the more recently recognized epigenetic mechanisms that truly drive this and other endocrine disruption phenomena.

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Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Journal
Book Title
Series
Cell Biology and Toxicology;v.33:no.5
PubMed ID
DOI
ISSN
0742-2091
EISSN