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Chemico-Biological Interactions 2005-Apr

Effects of analogs of indole-3-carbinol cyclic trimerization product in human breast cancer cells.

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Ling Xue
Charlene M Schaldach
Tomasz Janosik
Jan Bergman
Leonard F Bjeldanes

Keywords

Abstract

5,6,11,12,17,18-Hexahydrocyclonona[1,2-b:4,5-b*:7,8-b**]triindole (CTr) is a major digestive product of indole-3-carbinol (I3C) from Brassica vegetables and exhibits strong estrogenic activities. CTr increases proliferation of estrogen-dependent breast tumor cells, binds with strong affinity for the estrogen receptor-alpha (ERalpha), and activates expression of estrogen (E(2))-dependent genes. To begin to examine the structural features that determine the biological activity of CTr, we prepared and studied the effects of two analogs, 9,18-dihydro-12H-[1,2,5]trithionino[3,4-b:6,7-b*:9,8-b**]triindole (S(3)CTr) and 5,6,11,12,17,18-hexahydro-5,11,17-trimethylcyclonona[1,2-b:4,5-b*:7,8-b**]triindole (Me(3)CTr). N-Methylation of CTr completely ablated the estrogenic activities of CTr. In the dose range in which CTr was clearly estrogenic, Me(3)CTr exhibited no detectable effect on cell growth, ERalpha binding to E(2), or ERalpha-responsive gene expression. S(3)CTr showed mixed ERalpha agonist activities. It bound to the ERalpha and activated receptor binding with DNA, weakly activated expression of transfected E(2)-responsive reporter gene constructs, and strongly inhibited the E(2)-induced activation of these reporter constructs. S(3)CTr activated aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR)-mediated pathways, consistent with the moderately strong binding affinity of S(3)CTr for the AhR. Comparisons of the conformational characteristics among CTr and its two analogs indicated that the estrogenic effects of CTr are highly sensitive to apparently minor structural modifications, and further supported the hypothesis for a central role of hydrogen bonding around the nitrogen atom in CTr binding to the ligand binding site of ERalpha.

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