Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5596052 | The American Journal of Pathology | 2017 | 16 Pages |
Abstract
Estrogen receptor α (ERα) regulates gene transcription through two activation functions (ERα-AF1 and ERα-AF2). We recently found that the protection conferred by 17β-estradiol against obesity and insulin resistance requires ERα-AF2 but not ERα-AF1. However, the interplay between the two ERα-AFs is poorly understood in vivo and the metabolic influence of a specific ERα-AF1 action remains to be explored. To this end, wild-type, ERα-deficient, or ERα-AF1-deficient ovariectomized female mice were fed a high-fat diet and concomitantly administered with vehicle or tamoxifen, a selective ER modulator that acts as a ERα-AF1 agonist/ERα-AF2 antagonist. In ovariectomized wild-type mice, tamoxifen significantly reduced food intake and totally prevented adiposity, insulin resistance, and steatosis. These effects were abolished in ERα-deficient and ERα-AF1-deficient mice, revealing the specific role of ERα-AF1 activation. Finally, hepatic gene expression changes elicited by tamoxifen in wild-type mice were abrogated in ERα-AF1-deficient mice. The combination of pharmacologic and transgenic approaches thus indicates that selective ERα-AF1 activation by tamoxifen is sufficient to elicit metabolic protection, contrasting with the specific requirement of ERα-AF2 in the metabolic actions of 17β-estradiol. This redundancy in the ability of the two ERα-AFs to separately mediate metabolic prevention strikingly contrasts with the contribution of both ERα-AFs in breast cancer proliferation, shedding new light on the therapeutic potential of selective ER modulation.
Related Topics
Health Sciences
Medicine and Dentistry
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Authors
Maeva Guillaume, Sandra Handgraaf, Aurélie Fabre, Isabelle Raymond-Letron, Elodie Riant, Alexandra Montagner, Alexia Vinel, Melissa Buscato, Natalia Smirnova, Coralie Fontaine, Hervé Guillou, Jean-François Arnal, Pierre Gourdy,