Estrogen alone cannot explain the differences in breast cancer (BC) recurrence and incidence rates in pre- and postmenopausal women. In this study, we have tested a hypothesis that, in addition to estrogen, both iron deficiency due to menstruation and iron accumulation as a result of menstrual stop play important roles in menopause-related BC outcomes. We first tested this hypothesis in cell culture models mimicking the high-estrogen and low-iron premenopausal condition or the low-estrogen and high-iron postmenopausal condition. Subsequently, we examined this hypothesis in mice that were fed iron-deficient and iron-overloaded diets. We show that estrogen only slightly up-regulates vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), an angiogenic factor known to be important in BC recurrence. It is, rather, iron deficiency that significantly promotes VEGF by stabilizing hypoxia-inducible factor-1α. Conversely, high iron levels increase oxidative stress and sustain mitogen-activated protein kinase activation, which are mechanisms of known significance in BC development. Taken together, our results suggest, for the first time, that an iron-deficiency-mediated proangiogenic environment could contribute to the high recurrence of BC in young patients, and iron-accumulation-associated pro-oxidant conditions could lead to the high incidence of BC in older women.
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