Chia-Hung Sun and Paulus S. Wang
Taipei City Hospital, Taipei
National Yang-Ming University, Taipei
China Medical University Hospital, Taiwan
Posters & Accepted Abstracts: J Cancer Sci Ther
Statement of the Problem: Lung cancer is one of the major causes of cancer death in the world. In addition to smoking,
estrogen is considered to play an important role in the lung cancer development because there are still many non-smokers
suffer from lung cancer, especially women. In the environment, some metabolites and waste that similar to human estrogen
structurally and functionally are called xenoestrogens. 17α-Ethynylestradiol (EE2) is used as an oral contraceptive and then
released into wastewater after being utilized. Moreover, 4-nonylphenol (NP) which is found in the petrochemical products and
air pollutants also reveals estrogenic activity.
Methodology & Theoretical Orientation: In our experiment, 17β-estradiol (E2), EE2, and NP are administered to stimulate
the male (A549) and female lung adenocarcinoma cells (H1435).
Findings: The results demonstrate that EE2 and NP stimulate A549 and H1435 cell proliferation in a dose- and time-dependent
manner. Both estrogen receptors α and β are simultaneously activated and up-regulated by epidermal growth factor receptor
and extracellular signal-regulated kinase.
Conclusion & Significance: This is the first study to report that EE2 and NP exert an ecotoxic effect to stimulate the proliferation
of both male and female lung cancer cells. The new challenges of environmental estrogens to lung cancer deserve further
investigation in the future.
Chia-Hung Sun is a chest medicine doctor and also a Ph.D. student in the Department and Graduate Institute of Physiology, National Yang-Ming University. His investigation is based on clinical and basic medical studies. Lung cancer is the major research object in his Ph.D. program.
E-mail: jack1256a@yahoo.com.tw
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