INVESTIGADORES
RABINOVICH Gabriel Adrian
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
. How does progesterone influence the host immune system during breast cancer?
Autor/es:
SALATINO M; CROCI D; DALOTTO T; SUNDBLAD V;; ILARREGUI JM; TOSCANO M; RABINOVICH GA.
Lugar:
Viña del Mar Chile
Reunión:
Congreso; ALAI 2009- Latinoamerican Congress of Immunology,; 2009
Institución organizadora:
Soc Latinoamericana de Inmunología
Resumen:
Based on the tolerogenic properties of progesterone, and its promoting role in breast cancer, we investigated whether progesterone may create an immune privileged microenvironment in breast cancer, either by regulating galectin-1 expression or controlling regulatory T cell differentiation (Tregs= CD4+-CD25+-Foxp3+). The  progesterone analogue medroxiprogesterone acetate (MPA) was capable of inducing galectin-1 expression in two hormone-dependent human breast cancer cell lines and in a murine mammary adenocarcinoma at both protein and mRNA levels. This effect was abrogated by pre-treatment with the antiprogestin RU486 indicating that the progesterone receptor was involved in this effect. Interestingly, in vitro MPA-treatment of mouse splenocytes or human PBMC induced a significant increase in the frequency of Tregs and skewed the balance toward a Th2-type cytokine profile (P< …). In vivo MPA-treatment increased the frequency of Tregs in tumor-draining lymph nodes and within the tumor microenvironment (P< ). Progesterone-induced increase of Tregs was associated with an effect of MPA on SMAD4 expression, a signalling pathway commonly associated to TGF-â signaling, On the other hand, progesterone favored the homing of Tregs to the tumor milieu through the induction of tumor-derived CCL22. Our results demonstrate that progesterone fosters an immunosuppressive or tolerogenic tumor stroma by regulating galectin-1 expression and augmenting the frequency of Tregs in breast cancer.