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SAT020 Is Testosterone The Male Sex Hormone Responsible For Increased Male Mortality In Melanoma? In-vitro Studies On Two Human Melanoma (BLM, 1205Lu) Cell Models

Disclosure: P. Ramaraj: None. Epidemiological data pointed to increased male mortality in melanoma and clinical studies pointed to better protection of menstruating females in melanoma than post-menopausal women and men of any age. Our in-vitro studies with progesterone (P) on human melanoma (BLM an...

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Autor principal: Ramaraj, Pandurangan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10555011/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvad114.1758
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author Ramaraj, Pandurangan
author_facet Ramaraj, Pandurangan
author_sort Ramaraj, Pandurangan
collection PubMed
description Disclosure: P. Ramaraj: None. Epidemiological data pointed to increased male mortality in melanoma and clinical studies pointed to better protection of menstruating females in melanoma than post-menopausal women and men of any age. Our in-vitro studies with progesterone (P) on human melanoma (BLM and 1205Lu) cell lines showed a significant decrease in cell growth along with a decrease in the secretion of proinflammatory cytokine IL-8 by these cells. These in-vitro studies correlated with the hormonal data which showed that progesterone levels in menstruating females ranged between 1000 - 1500 ng/dl, compared to post-menopausal women 20 - 100 ng/dl and men 27-90 ng/dl, suggesting low progesterone levels meant no protection in melanoma. This observation prompted us to hypothesize that lack of progesterone in males could be a cause for increased male mortality. This hypothesis also raised the question of the role of male sex hormones (AD-androstenedione and T-testosterone) in increased male mortality. In order to address these questions in-vitro experiments were planned. First, to indirectly induce endogenous IL-8 by pretreating the cells with endothelin and then adding steroid hormones (AD, T, P). Secondly, to add IL-8 directly to the cells and then add steroid hormones. Finally, to suppress endogenous IL-8 with curcumin and then add T to one set of cells and IL-8 + T to another set of cells. For the first experiment, the result was a marginal increase in cell growth (67%) in cells pretreated with endothelin followed by T-treatment compared to straight T-treated cells (60% cell growth) without endothelin pretreatment. For the second experiment, there was a slight increase in cell growth in IL-8-added cells, but it was not statistically significant. For the final experiment, the cells treated with IL-8 + T after curcumin pretreatment showed a partial restoration of cell growth (49%) compared to cells (40% cell growth) treated with plain T after curcumin treatment, suggesting T was not able to control or regulate IL-8 action like progesterone. These in-vitro experiments suggested that in males 2 reasons 1) a deficiency of progesterone and 2) inefficiency of T to control endogenous IL-8 could possibly result in increased IL-8 levels. This increased IL-8 level in males could lead to increased cell growth and metastasis in melanoma leading to death. So, a situation arising out of male reproductive endocrine physiology could probably be responsible for increased male mortality in melanoma. Presentation: Saturday, June 17, 2023
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spelling pubmed-105550112023-10-06 SAT020 Is Testosterone The Male Sex Hormone Responsible For Increased Male Mortality In Melanoma? In-vitro Studies On Two Human Melanoma (BLM, 1205Lu) Cell Models Ramaraj, Pandurangan J Endocr Soc Steroid Hormones, Nuclear Receptors And Coregulators Disclosure: P. Ramaraj: None. Epidemiological data pointed to increased male mortality in melanoma and clinical studies pointed to better protection of menstruating females in melanoma than post-menopausal women and men of any age. Our in-vitro studies with progesterone (P) on human melanoma (BLM and 1205Lu) cell lines showed a significant decrease in cell growth along with a decrease in the secretion of proinflammatory cytokine IL-8 by these cells. These in-vitro studies correlated with the hormonal data which showed that progesterone levels in menstruating females ranged between 1000 - 1500 ng/dl, compared to post-menopausal women 20 - 100 ng/dl and men 27-90 ng/dl, suggesting low progesterone levels meant no protection in melanoma. This observation prompted us to hypothesize that lack of progesterone in males could be a cause for increased male mortality. This hypothesis also raised the question of the role of male sex hormones (AD-androstenedione and T-testosterone) in increased male mortality. In order to address these questions in-vitro experiments were planned. First, to indirectly induce endogenous IL-8 by pretreating the cells with endothelin and then adding steroid hormones (AD, T, P). Secondly, to add IL-8 directly to the cells and then add steroid hormones. Finally, to suppress endogenous IL-8 with curcumin and then add T to one set of cells and IL-8 + T to another set of cells. For the first experiment, the result was a marginal increase in cell growth (67%) in cells pretreated with endothelin followed by T-treatment compared to straight T-treated cells (60% cell growth) without endothelin pretreatment. For the second experiment, there was a slight increase in cell growth in IL-8-added cells, but it was not statistically significant. For the final experiment, the cells treated with IL-8 + T after curcumin pretreatment showed a partial restoration of cell growth (49%) compared to cells (40% cell growth) treated with plain T after curcumin treatment, suggesting T was not able to control or regulate IL-8 action like progesterone. These in-vitro experiments suggested that in males 2 reasons 1) a deficiency of progesterone and 2) inefficiency of T to control endogenous IL-8 could possibly result in increased IL-8 levels. This increased IL-8 level in males could lead to increased cell growth and metastasis in melanoma leading to death. So, a situation arising out of male reproductive endocrine physiology could probably be responsible for increased male mortality in melanoma. Presentation: Saturday, June 17, 2023 Oxford University Press 2023-10-05 /pmc/articles/PMC10555011/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvad114.1758 Text en © The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Endocrine Society. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Steroid Hormones, Nuclear Receptors And Coregulators
Ramaraj, Pandurangan
SAT020 Is Testosterone The Male Sex Hormone Responsible For Increased Male Mortality In Melanoma? In-vitro Studies On Two Human Melanoma (BLM, 1205Lu) Cell Models
title SAT020 Is Testosterone The Male Sex Hormone Responsible For Increased Male Mortality In Melanoma? In-vitro Studies On Two Human Melanoma (BLM, 1205Lu) Cell Models
title_full SAT020 Is Testosterone The Male Sex Hormone Responsible For Increased Male Mortality In Melanoma? In-vitro Studies On Two Human Melanoma (BLM, 1205Lu) Cell Models
title_fullStr SAT020 Is Testosterone The Male Sex Hormone Responsible For Increased Male Mortality In Melanoma? In-vitro Studies On Two Human Melanoma (BLM, 1205Lu) Cell Models
title_full_unstemmed SAT020 Is Testosterone The Male Sex Hormone Responsible For Increased Male Mortality In Melanoma? In-vitro Studies On Two Human Melanoma (BLM, 1205Lu) Cell Models
title_short SAT020 Is Testosterone The Male Sex Hormone Responsible For Increased Male Mortality In Melanoma? In-vitro Studies On Two Human Melanoma (BLM, 1205Lu) Cell Models
title_sort sat020 is testosterone the male sex hormone responsible for increased male mortality in melanoma? in-vitro studies on two human melanoma (blm, 1205lu) cell models
topic Steroid Hormones, Nuclear Receptors And Coregulators
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10555011/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvad114.1758
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