Breast Cancer Research

official impact factor 5.79

Review

Progesterone receptors - animal models and cell signaling in breast cancer: Expression and transcriptional activity of progesterone receptor A and progesterone receptor B in mammalian cells

J Dinny Graham* and Christine L Clarke

Author Affiliations

Westmead Institute for Cancer Research, University of Sydney Westmead Hospital, Westmead, New South Wales, Australia

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Breast Cancer Res 2002, 4:187-190 doi:10.1186/bcr450

Published: 2 July 2002

Abstract

Progesterone is an essential regulator of normal female reproductive function. Its effects are mediated by two nuclear progesterone receptor (PR) proteins, PRA and PRB, which are identical except for an additional 164 amino acids at the N-terminal end of PRB. Transcriptional analyses of the two receptor forms have assigned strikingly distinct functional signatures to the two PRs, despite their apparent physical similarity. The basis of these differences is yet to be fully understood. Furthermore, these differences are strongly influenced by the cell type and the promoter used. We review the mammalian transcriptional studies of PRA and PRB, and compare them with what is known about their expression and function in target tissues.

Keywords:
progesterone receptor; progestin signaling; transcriptional activation