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Featured researches published by Patricia Pazos.


The Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 1999

Progesterone receptor involvement in independent tumor growth in MPA-induced murine mammary adenocarcinomas

Montecchia Mf; Caroline A. Lamb; Alfredo A. Molinolo; Isabel Alicia Luthy; Patricia Pazos; Eduardo H. Charreau; Silvia Vanzulli; Claudia Lanari

We have developed a model of hormonal carcinogenesis in BALB/c female mice, in which MPA induced ductal mammary adenocarcinomas, expressing high levels of estrogen and progesterone receptors (ER and PR). A series of tumor lines, retaining both PR and ER expression, were obtained from selected tumors, which are maintained by syngeneic passages. In this model progesterone behaves as the growth-stimulating hormone (progesterone-dependent or PD tumors), whereas estrogens induce tumor regression. Through selective treatments we were able to derive a series of progesterone-independent (PI) variants. These lines do not require progesterone treatment to grow in ovariectomized female BALB/c mice, but retain, however, the expression of ER and PR. The aim of this paper is to investigate a possible regulatory role of the progesterone receptor (PR) on PI tumor growth. ER and PR were detected by immunocytochemistry in all lines studied. They were also characterized using biochemical assays and Scatchard plots. No differences in Kd of PR or ER were detected in PI variants. AR or GR were not detected in tumor samples using biochemical assays. Estradiol (5 mg silastic pellet) induced complete tumor regression in all tumors tested. We also evaluated the effects of different antiprogestins on tumor growth. Onapristone (10 mg/kg/day) and mifepristone (4.5 mg/kg/day) were able to induce complete tumor regression. The antiandrogen flutamide (5 mg silastic pellet) had no effect on tumor growth in agreement with the lack of androgen receptors. We used an in vitro approach to corroborate that the antiprogestin-induced inhibition was not attributable to an intrinsic effect. Cultures of a selected PI line were treated with PR antisense oligodeoxynucleotides (ASPR) to inhibit in vitro cell proliferation. A significant decrease of 3H-thymidine uptake was observed in cells of a PI line growing in the presence of 2.5% charcoalized fetal calf serum and 0.8-20 microg/ml ASPR. It can be concluded that the PR pathway is an essential path in the growth stimulation of PI tumors.


The Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 1999

Regulation of cell growth of a progestin-dependent murine mammary carcinoma in vitro: progesterone receptor involvement in serum or growth factor-induced cell proliferation

Caroline A. Lamb; Marina Simian; Alfredo A. Molinolo; Patricia Pazos; Claudia Lanari

Primary cultures of the medroxyprogesterone acetate-induced mouse mammary tumor line C4-HD are stimulated by medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA) or progesterone. Serum obtained from ovariectomized, MPA-treated animals (OVX-MPA) exerts a stimulatory effect that is significantly higher than that induced by serum obtained from OVX mice with the exogenous addition of MPA, suggesting the involvement of MPA-induced serum factors potentiating the proliferative effect of MPA. The object of this paper is to further explore the stimulatory effect of mouse serum and to investigate the role of aFGF and bFGF on cell proliferation. The role of PR as possible mediators was tested using two different antiprogestins and antisense oligodeoxynucleotides of PR A isoform. Serum was obtained from OVX untreated or MPA-treated mice and was charcoalized and/or heat-inactivated. The effect of MPA or mifepristone at 10 nM concentrations was tested. Charcoalization and heat inactivation exerted a stimulatory effect (P<0.01) when OVX-serum was used. This effect was potentiated by MPA. Charcoalized OVX-MPA serum induced a significant inhibition of cell proliferation that was restored by the exogenous addition of MPA or by heat inactivation. Mifepristone induced an inhibition of 3H-thymidine uptake when OVX-MPA serum was used. These results suggest that serum factors activated by different manipulations may replace the stimulatory effect of MPA. When charcoalized fetal calf serum (chFCS) was used, a higher proliferative activity was obtained using higher serum concentrations. Mifepristone and onapristone 10 nM also inhibited this effect. aFGF and bFGF 100 ng/ml were both able to stimulate 3H-thymidine uptake. MPA exerted an additive effect. Mifepristone 10 nM inhibited bFGF and MPA+bFGF induced cell proliferation. Antisense oligodeoxynucleotides of PR (ASPR) were used to further confirm the participation of PR in the proliferative pathway of these cells. They inhibited serum and bFGF-induced cell proliferation in a specific dose-dependent manner. Our results suggest that PR play a central role in proliferation and suggest the existence of a cross-talk between steroid and growth factor signaling pathways.


Breast Cancer Research and Treatment | 1991

Mammary carcinogenesis induced by N-methyl-N-nitrosourea (MNU) and medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA) in BALB/c mice

Patricia Pazos; Claudia Lanari; Roberto Meiss; Eduardo H. Charreau; Christiane Dosne Pasqualini

SummaryMPA induces mammary tumors in virgin BALB/c mice with an average latency of 52 weeks. In order to determine whether the simultaneous administration of a chemical carcinogen, N-methyl-N-nitrosourea (MNU), shortened the latency of MPA-induced tumors, a total of 60 virgin female BALB/c mice were treated with either MNU+MPA or MNU or MPA. The experiment lasted 7 months. The incidence and latency of mammary tumors were significantly different between the 3 groups: 15/19 (79%) in MNU+MPA-treated mice with a latency of 154±19 days; 3/20 (15%) in MNU-treated mice with a latency of 179±7 days; 0/20 (tumors only start appearing after 10 months) in MPA-treated mice. Histologically, MNU+MPA-induced tumors were similar to the few tumors observed in MNU-treated mice: most of them were type B adenocarcinomas with a high degree of necrosis and calcification. Only one of the MNU+MPA-induced tumors expressed high levels of ER and PR and proved to be MPA-responsive in further passages. All the other tumors showed low or non-detectable levels of ER and PR together with an independent pattern of tumor growth. In MNU-treated mice the only tumor that was transplanted proved to be hormone independent and had low levels of PR and ER. In both MNU and MNU+MPA treated mice lung adenocarcinomas were detected. Cystic uterine glandular hyperplasias were observed in all animals. It can be concluded that MPA and MNU potentiate their carcinogenic effect in mammary gland.


Breast Cancer Research and Treatment | 1993

Progesterone induction of mammary carcinomas in BALB/c female mice

Edith Kordon; Alfredo A. Molinolo; Christiane Dosne Pasqualini; Eduardo H. Charreau; Patricia Pazos; Graciela Dran; Claudia Lanari

SummaryWe have demonstrated that medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA), when administered in high doses, induces mammary carcinomas in virgin female BALB/c mice. Since one of the possible explanations for this effect was its progestagenic effects, we decided to investigate whether progesterone (Pg) alone could also induce mammary adenocarcinomas in our model and if MPA at doses lower than those used to establish the model was also carcinogenic. A total of 136 mice were subdivided into 3 groups: Group 1, 44 mice were implanted s.c. with 40 mg Pg silastic pellets at the beginning of the experiment, and 6 months later with a 20 mg Pg pellet; Group 2, 45 mice were similarly treated with MPA pellets; Group 3, 47 mice were inoculated s.c. with 40 mg MPA every three months. At the end of 20 months, 9 animals had developed mammary tumors in Group 1, 18 in Group 2 and 34 in Group 3 (actuarial incidence = 28%, 58%, and 98%, respectively); tumor latency was similar in all groups: 46.2 ± 13.1, 51.3 ± 9.9, and 50.1 ± 2.1 weeks, respectively. Seven (Group 1), 14 (Group 2), and 25 (Group 3) tumors were transplanted into syngeneic mice to determine progestin dependence. All tumors, except one from Group 1, were histologically characterized. In Group 1 (Pg 60 mg), 4 tumors (67%) were infiltrating lobular carcinomas and 2 were ductal carcinomas (33%). In Group 2 (MPA 60 mg), 2 tumors (14%) were lobular and 12 were ductal adenocarcinomas (86%) (Group 1 vs Group 2: p < 0.05), whereas in Group 3 (MPA 160 mg), 8 were lobular carcinomas (32%) and 17 were ductal carcinomas (68%). In syngeneic passages all lobular tumors behaved as progestin independent (PI) and ductal tumors as progestin dependent (PD). All ductal tumors, except one, expressed estrogen receptors (ER) and progesterone receptors (PR), whereas receptor expression was variable in lobular carcinomas. It can be concluded that Pg induces mostly lobular, PI mammary tumors in BALB/c female mice. The fact that most MPA-induced tumors are ductal and PD suggests that the two hormones use different carcinogenic pathways.


Cancer Letters | 1998

Involvement of EGF in medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA)-induced mammary gland hyperplasia and its role in MPA-induced mammary tumors in BALB/c mice

Alfredo A. Molinolo; Marina Simian; Silvia Vanzulli; Patricia Pazos; Carolina Lamb; Fernanda Montecchia; Claudia Lanari

In previous papers we have demonstrated that sialoadenectomy inhibited MPA-induced mammary tumorigenesis in BALB/c mice. To further explore the role of EGF in this experimental model, we evaluated its effects on mammary glands of sialoadenectomized (sialox) MPA-treated female mice and on tumor growth. MPA-treated sialox mice were injected s.c. (n = 3) or not (n = 6) with 5 microg EGF every 36 h for 45 days; MPA-treated sham-operated mice were used as controls (n = 6). Mammary glands from sialox MPA-treated mice are considerably less developed as compared with sham-operated animals. The exogenous administration of EGF restores the usual MPA-induced growth pattern of the glands, thus confirming a role for EGF either in mediating or cooperating with MPA in inducing the mammary architectural changes observed in MPA-treated mice. On the other hand, primary cultures of progestin-dependent (PD) ductal mammary adenocarcinoma in vivo tumor lines and of lobular progestin-independent (PI) tumor lines were used to evaluate the effect of EGF on tumor growth. In vitro EGF was found to stimulate cell proliferation of lobular PI tumor cells and of fibroblastic cells from both types of tumors at concentrations higher than 0.1-0.5 ng/ml and in the presence of 1-5% of charcoal-stripped fetal calf serum. Conversely, no proliferative effects were observed in ductal PD cells under the same experimental conditions, regardless of the presence of 10 nM MPA. It can be concluded that although EGF plays an important role in MPA-induced mammary carcinogenesis, it is not necessary in PD tumor growth.


Leukemia Research | 2001

Protective role of medroxyprogesterone acetate on N-methyl-N-nitrosourea-induced lymphomas in BALB/c female mice

Patricia Pazos; Claudia Lanari; Alfredo A. Molinolo

In a previous paper we reported the occurrence of a high incidence of lymphomas in N-methyl-N-nitrosourea (MNU)-treated mice, in the course of an experiment of combined chemical-hormonal carcinogenesis in mammary gland, in which we used medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA) and MNU in different treatment protocols. In this report we have analyzed the action of MPA in the leukemogenic effects of MNU, by specifically selecting for the analysis experimental groups in which only few mammary carcinomas had developed. A high incidence of lymphomas (65%, median latency: 176 days) was registered in MNU-treated mice, and the administration of MPA was associated with a significant reduction in the incidence of lymphomas (P<0.001) in all protocols.


Archive | 1996

Pathogenesis of Ductal and Lobular Progestin-Induced Mammary Carcinomas in BALB/c Mice

Alfredo Molinolo; Patricia Pazos; Fernanda Montecchia; Edith Kordon; Graciela Dran; Fabiana Guerra; Patricia V. Elizalde; Isabel Alicia Luthy; Eduardo H. Charreau; Christiane Dosne Pasqualini; Claudia Lanari

Several years ago, we demonstrated that medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA)- induced mammary adenocarcinomas in female BALB/c mice with an incidence close to 80% and a mean latency of around 13 months (1). These tumors were mostly ductal, progestin-dependent (PD) adenocarcinomas with high levels of estrogen and progesterone receptors (ER and PR) (2). We later found that progesterone (P) also induced mammary carcinomas, but this time the tumors were mostly lobular, progestin-independent (PI) adenocarcinomas with lower levels of ER and PR (3). There was a constant correlation between progestin dependence and morphology, that is, lobular carcinomas were always PI and ductal carcinomas PD (3). To extend this study further, we designed a model of co-carcinogenesis using medroxyprogesterone (MPA) with N-methyl N-nitrosourea (MNU) in BALB/c mice. We obtained a high incidence of mammary adenocarcinomas similar to the hormone-induced lobular tumors, and showed that MPA can act as a potent promoter.


Breast Cancer Research and Treatment | 1993

Progesterone induction of mammary carcinomas in BALB/c female mice : correlation between progestin dependence and morphology

Edith C. Kordon; Alfredo A. Molinolo; Christiane Dosne Pasqualini; Eduardo H. Charreau; Patricia Pazos; Graciela Dran; Claudia Lanari


International Journal of Cancer | 1994

Effect of sialoadenectomy on medroxyprogesterone-acetate-induced mammary carcinogenesis in BALB/c mice. Correlation between histology and epidermal-growth-factor receptor content.

Edith Kordon; Fabiana Guerra; Alfredo A. Molinolo; Patricia V. Elizalde; Eduardo H. Charreau; Christiane Dosne Pasqualini; Fernanda Montecchia; Patricia Pazos; Graciela Dran; Claudia Lanari


Carcinogenesis | 1998

Promoter effect of medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA) in N-methyl-N-nitrosourea (MNU) induced mammary tumors in BALB/c mice

Patricia Pazos; Claudia Lanari; Patricia V. Elizalde; Fernanda Montecchia; Eduardo H. Charreau; Alfredo A. Molinolo

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Claudia Lanari

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Eduardo H. Charreau

Instituto de Biología y Medicina Experimental

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Christiane Dosne Pasqualini

Instituto de Biología y Medicina Experimental

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Caroline A. Lamb

Instituto de Biología y Medicina Experimental

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Fernanda Montecchia

Instituto de Biología y Medicina Experimental

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Graciela Dran

Instituto de Biología y Medicina Experimental

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Marina Simian

Instituto de Biología y Medicina Experimental

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Silvia Vanzulli

Academia Nacional de Medicina

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Edith Kordon

Instituto de Biología y Medicina Experimental

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