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Query: EC:2.7.10.1 (
ERK
)
95,504
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We evaluated whether our previous reports of increased postmenopausal breast cancer risk with higher body mass index (BMI) or of reduced premenopausal and postmenopausal breast cancer risk with higher physical activity levels varied according to the tumor's estrogen receptor (ER) and
progesterone receptor
(PR) status. Participants enrolled in either of two population-based case-control studies in Los Angeles County, California: one of premenopausal women (ages < or = 40 years), and one of postmenopausal women (ages 55-64 years). Case participants were diagnosed for the first time with in situ or invasive breast cancer from 7/1/83 through 12/31/88 (premenopausal women) or from 3/1/87 through 12/31/89 (postmenopausal women). Joint ER/PR status was collected for 424 premenopausal and 760 postmenopausal case participants. The analysis included 714 premenopausal and 1091 postmenopausal age-matched, race-matched (white or Hispanic), parity-matched (premenopausal women only), and residential neighborhood-matched control participants. Among the postmenopausal women, obesity was associated with an increased odds of ER+/PR+ breast cancer (odds ratio, 2.45 for women in the highest versus the lowest body mass index quartile; 95% confidence interval, 1.73-3.47). Body mass index was associated with neither ER-/PR- tumors among the postmenopausal women nor with any ER/PR subgroup among the premenopausal women. For both premenopausal and postmenopausal women, higher recreational physical activity levels (> or = 17.6
MET
-hours/week versus no activity) were associated with a 30-60% reduction in risk of nearly all ER/PR subtypes, although the associations were generally of borderline statistical significance. Examining these potentially modifiable breast cancer risk factors by tumor ER and PR status may provide us with greater insight into breast cancer etiology and the mechanisms underlying the risk factor associations.
...
PMID:Body size, physical activity, and breast cancer hormone receptor status: results from two case-control studies. 1091 38
Small cell carcinoma of the breast is an uncommon neoplasm that has been reported rarely in the literature. The aim of this study was to characterize better the pathologic and immunohistochemical features of this neoplasm. Nine examples of mammary small cell carcinoma were retrieved from the authors' consultation files and reviewed. The patients ranged in age from 43 to 70 years. Two patients had a previous history of cutaneous malignant melanoma and one had prior lobular carcinoma in situ and atypical duct hyperplasia in the same breast as the small cell carcinoma. Eight patients presented with a mass in the breast; one patient had an axillary tumor. Tumor size ranged from 1.3 to 5.0 cm (mean, 2.6 cm). Histologically, the nine tumors had characteristics of small cell carcinoma with high mitotic activity and necrosis. A dimorphic histologic appearance was observed in four tumors. In one instance, this consisted of small cell carcinoma merging with invasive lobular carcinoma. In three cases, small cell carcinoma was present together with invasive, poorly differentiated duct carcinoma; invasive carcinoma with "lobular and gland-forming elements"; and focal squamous differentiation, respectively. Lymphatic tumor emboli were identified in four instances. An in situ component was seen in seven tumors; five were of the small cell type in ducts and two were of the ductal type with high nuclear grade. Immunohistochemical analysis showed consistent staining for cytokeratin markers but variable staining with neuroendocrine markers. Sixty-six percent of the tumors (six of nine) were reactive for chromogranin, synaptophysin, or peptide hormones, including four positive for chromogranin and synaptophysin, one positive for synaptophysin and calcitonin, and one positive for calcitonin alone. One tumor that was reactive for chromogranin and synaptophysin also contained calcitonin immunoreactive cells, whereas gastrin-releasing peptide was present in two other tumors that were also positive for chromogranin. Leu 7 was positive in three cases that were reactive for either chromogranin or synaptophysin. Five tumors were estrogen and
progesterone receptor
-positive. All tumors were positive for bcl-2 and negative for
HER2
/neu. Patients were treated by mastectomy (n = 3) or lumpectomy (n = 6). Eight underwent an axillary dissection that revealed metastatic carcinoma in four patients. Seven patients received adjuvant chemotherapy and four patients received radiation. Two patients also received tamoxifen treatment. Metastases developed in two patients (22%) with a follow-up period of 11 and 32 months. All patients were alive at last follow up 3 to 35 months after treatment. When compared with published reports of mammary small cell carcinoma, our results show that the prognosis in these patients may not be as poor as previously suggested.
...
PMID:Small cell carcinoma of the breast: a clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical study of nine patients. 1139 67
The reported estrogenic action of phenol red and/or its lipophilic contaminants has led to the widespread use of indicator-free culture medium to conduct endocrine studies in vitro. Because we have recently developed methods to measure large-magnitude estrogen effects in the tissue culture medium containing phenol red, we concluded that the indicator issue required further evaluation. To do this, we selected nine estrogen receptor positive (ER+) cell lines representing four target tissues and three species. We investigated phenol red using five different experimental protocols. First, 17beta-estradiol (E2) responsive growth of all nine ER+ cells lines was compared in the medium with and without the indicator. Second, using representative lines we asked if phenol red was mitogenic in the indicator-free medium. The dose-response effects of phenol red were compared directly to those of E2. Third, we asked if tamoxifen-inhibited growth equally in phenol red-containing and indicator-free medium. This study was based on a report indicating that antiestrogen effects should be seen only in phenol red-containing medium. Fourth, we asked if phenol red displaced the binding of 3H-E2 using
ERK
intact human breast cancer cells. Fifth, we compared E2 and phenol red as inducers of the
progesterone receptor
using a human breast cancer cell line. All the experiments presented in this report support the conclusion that the concentration of phenol red contaminants in a standard culture medium available today is not sufficient to cause estrogenic effects. In brief, our studies indicate that the real issue of how to demonstrate estrogenic effects in culture resides elsewhere than phenol red. We have found that the demonstration of sex steroid hormone-mitogenic effects in culture depends upon conditions that maximize the effects of a serum-borne inhibitor(s). When the effects of the inhibitor are optimized, the presence or absence of phenol red makes no everyday difference to the demonstration of estrogen mitogenic effects with several target cell types from diverse species.
...
PMID:Estrogen mitogenic action. III. is phenol red a "red herring"? 1103 95
We have investigated primary ductal carcinomas in situ (DCIS) of the breast and their local recurrences after breast-conserving therapy (BCT) for histological characteristics and marker expression. Patients who were randomized in the EORTC trial 10853 (wide local excision versus excision plus radiotherapy) and who developed a local recurrence were identified. Histology was reviewed for 116 cases; oestrogen and
progesterone receptor
status, and
HER2
/ neu and p53 overexpression were assessed for 71 cases. Comparing the primary DCIS and the invasive or non-invasive recurrence, concordant histology was found in 62%, and identical marker expression in 63%. Although 11% of the recurrences developed at a distance from the primary DCIS, nearly all these showed the same histological and immunohistochemical profile. 5 patients developed well-differentiated DCIS or grade I invasive carcinoma after poorly differentiated DCIS. Although these recurrences occurred in the same quadrant as the primary DCIS, they may be considered as second primary tumours. Only 4 patients developed poorly differentiated DCIS or grade III invasive carcinoma after well differentiated DCIS. We conclude that in most cases the primary DCIS and its local recurrence are related histologically or by marker expression, suggesting that local recurrence usually reflects outgrowth of residual DCIS; progression of well differentiated DCIS towards poorly differentiated DCIS or grade III invasive carcinoma is a non-frequent event.
...
PMID:Histological type and marker expression of the primary tumour compared with its local recurrence after breast-conserving therapy for ductal carcinoma in situ. 1120 51
The gene for the steroid receptor coactivator amplified in breast cancer 1 (AIBI), located on chromosome 20q12, is overexpressed at the mRNA level in up to 60% of primary breast carcinomas; however, only 5% of these tumors show DNA amplification. The transcription factors and signaling pathways relevant to breast cancer, which in the absence of DNA amplification are responsible for and targeted by elevated levels of AIBI mRNA, are unknown. In the present study, in situ hybridization was used to examine AIB1 mRNA expression in 93 breast carcinomas of varying histological grade and immunohistochemical profile. AIB1 mRNA was overexpressed relative to normal breast tissue in 26 of 83 (31%) invasive tumors. This was found to associate with high tumor grade (P = 0.0006), lack of immunohistochemical staining for the steroid receptors estrogen receptor (P = 0.002) and
progesterone receptor
(P = 0.002), and strong protein staining for p53 (P = 0.01) and
HER2
/neu (P = 0.002). These findings suggest that AIB1 overexpression may impact on breast cancer by a mechanism not wholly dependent on steroid receptor coexpression and which may involve other oncogenic events, such as p53 protein stabilization and
HER2
/neu overexpression.
...
PMID:Overexpression of the steroid receptor coactivator AIB1 in breast cancer correlates with the absence of estrogen and progesterone receptors and positivity for p53 and HER2/neu. 1122 79
We report the clinical, morphologic, immunophenotypic, and ploidy findings of seven cases of serous borderline tumor of the paratestis. Mean patient age was 56 years (range, 14-77 years), and the clinical presentation was that of a testicular mass. Tumors ranged in size from 1 to 6 cm (mean, 3.5 cm). Six tumors arose from the tunica albuginea, and two of these tumors were intratesticular. One tumor arose from the tunica vaginalis. Serous borderline tumor of the paratestis is histologically identical to its ovarian counterpart. The tumors were cystic with numerous intracystic blunt papillae lined by stratified epithelial cells with minimal to mild cytologic atypia. Psammoma bodies were present in two cases. In all cases, the neoplastic cells stained strongly and diffusely for cytokeratin 7, estrogen receptor, and CD15, and six of seven cases were positive for
progesterone receptor
and MOC-31. The cells did not stain for cytokeratin 20, carcinoembryonic antigen, calretinin, and
HER2
/neu. Proliferative activity, as assessed by MIB-1 staining, ranged from 1.3% to 10% (mean, 5.5%). Five of six tumors were diploid, and one was tetraploid. Patients were treated by radical orchiectomy and followed up from 4 months to 18 years (mean, 48 months; median, 8.5 months). No recurrences or metastases occurred. Serous borderline tumor of the paratestis is morphologically and immunophenotypically identical to ovarian serous borderline tumor. To date, no serous borderline tumor of the paratestis reported in the literature or in our series has recurred or metastasized after resection.
...
PMID:Serous borderline tumor of the paratestis: a report of seven cases. 1122 8
mdm2 is part of a complex mechanism that regulates the expression of p53 as well as the function of Rb, p19ARF, and other genes. In humans, mdm2 dysregulation is associated with gene amplification. This study was undertaken to characterize altered mdm2 expression in a cohort of 38 invasive breast cancers and 9 normal breast specimens. Reverse-transcription PCR with primers spanning the entire open reading frame of the mdm2 gene in breast tissue RNA samples generated PCR products of full-length mdm2 (1526 bp) as well as smaller products (653, 281, 254, and 219 bp). Sequence analysis demonstrated that the 653-bp product was an alternatively spliced product (defined as splicing at the exon/intron boundary consensus sites), whereas the 281, 254, and 219 bp mdm2 products were aberrantly spliced products (splicing at sites not considered to be exon/intron boundary sites). Reverse-transcription-PCR with normal breast tissue RNA samples yielded only the 1526-bp product in five samples and the 1526-bp product and the 653-bp product in four samples. The 653-bp alternatively spliced product was expressed in 21% of breast cancers, and the smaller, aberrantly spliced mRNA products (281 bp, 254 bp, and/or 219 bp) were expressed in 16% of breast cancers. The protein products predicted by the alternatively spliced mRNAs and the aberrantly spliced mRNAs lacked either the entire binding domain for p53 or the majority of the binding domain for p53. Immunohistochemical analysis of
HER2
/neu (c-erbB2), estrogen receptor,
progesterone receptor
, epidermal growth factor receptor, and p53 protein was performed. p53 sequence alterations were identified by mismatch detection and confirmed by p53 oligonucleotide microarray technology. An association was demonstrated between the expression of aberrantly and/or alternatively spliced mdm2 mRNAs and a lack of
progesterone receptor
. An association was also demonstrated between mdm2 aberrantly and/or alternatively expression products and the presence of p53 tumor suppressor gene mutations. mdm2 is transcribed from two different promoters: one, p53-dependent, and the other, p53-independent. The 5' untranslated region of the transcripts was evaluated to determine the promoter usage in each breast cancer specimen. No correlation was observed between mdm2 splice products and promoter usage. The presence of aberrant expression products of mdm2 in breast cancer specimens was correlated with a shortened overall patient survival. These observations suggest that mdm2 expression is altered in invasive breast cancer and is associated with more aggressive disease.
...
PMID:Alternative and aberrant messenger RNA splicing of the mdm2 oncogene in invasive breast cancer. 1130 11
In order to study the role of the p16INK4A(MTS1/CDKN2a) tumor suppressor in breast cancer, we analyzed p16 protein expression in 60 breast cancer samples which were also analyzed for expression of Rb, Ki67,
HER2
/neu, and estrogen and progesterone receptors (ER, PR). P16 expression was investigated by two methods: western blotting (WB) followed by densitometry, and immunohistochemistry (IHC). The Rb status was studied by western blotting, and expression of Ki67,
HER2
/neu, ER, and PR was analyzed immunohistochemically. P16-negative results were found in 18% of the carcinomas by WB, but in only one case by IHC and were not associated with established prognostic parameters. In contrast, p16 overexpression which was detected by WB and IHC in 15% and 25% of the tumors, respectively, was significantly associated with unfavorable prognostic indicators. High p16 expression as detected by both methods correlated significantly with high grading and a negative estrogen receptor status. In addition, a significant association of p16 staining with inverse
progesterone receptor
status and high Ki67 expression was found with IHC. No correlation of p16 expression with clinical stage,
HER2
/neu immunostaining, Rb expression or Rb phosphorylation was found. Comparison of western blot results and immunohistochemistry suggests that both nuclear and cytoplasmic immunoreactivity in tumor cells is specific and due to p16 expression. We conclude that high p16 reactivity (both nuclear andcytoplasmic) is indicative of a more undifferentiated, malignant phenotype in mammary carcinomas.
...
PMID:Overexpression of the p16 cell cycle inhibitor in breast cancer is associated with a more malignant phenotype. 1151 67
We showed that decidualized stromal cells of luteal phase and pregnant human endometrium express tissue factor (TF), the primary initiator of hemostasis, thereby suggesting a mechanism by which perivascular decidual cells can mitigate the risk of hemorrhage during endovascular trophoblast invasion. Progestins enhanced TF mRNA and protein levels in monolayers of human endometrial stromal cells (HESCs), with estradiol (E2) + progestin, further enhancing TF levels despite a lack of response to E2 alone. This differential ovarian steroid response has been found for several decidualization markers. Further studies with cultured HESCs established that elevated TF levels are mediated by the
progesterone receptor
and are maintained for weeks in response to E2 plus progestin, thus simulating the chronic upregulation of TF levels observed in decidualized HESCs in vivo. Recent studies revealed that elevated TF expression during in vitro decidualization of HESCs involved both the
EGFR
and
progesterone receptor
. Thus, enhancement of TF mRNA and protein levels in the HESCs required co-incubation with a progestin (MPA) and an
EGFR
agonist such as EGF or TGF-alpha. In correspondence with co-elevation of
EGFR
and TF in decidualized HESCs in sections of luteal phase and pregnant endometrium,
EGFR
levels proved to be progestin-enhanced in the cultured HESCs. We established that progestin-enhanced TF expression in HESCs was trancriptionally regulated, then evaluated the relative roles of SP and EGR-1 sites on the TF promoter in regulating this expression. Transient transfections with a series of promoter constructs containing overlapping SP and EGR-1 sites and with constructs in which the EGR-1 and SP sites were systematically inactivated by site-directed mutagenesis established the dominance of SP sites in both basal and progestin-enhanced TF transcriptional activity. Additional experiments involving transient transfections with SPloverexpressing vectors and with a specific blocker of if Sp1 binding to its corresponding GC box specified the importance of the Sp1 transcription factor. These results were further validated by immunostaining, which revealed that the ratio of Sp1 to Sp3 increased during progestin-regulated decidualization of HESCs in vitro and in vivo. The absence of canonical estrogen and progesterone response elements from either the TF or Sp1 gene promoters suggests that the
EGFR
may help to mediate progestin-enhanced TF expression during decidualization of HESCs.
...
PMID:Decidual cell-expressed tissue factor maintains hemostasis in human endometrium. 1159 61
Implantation is a complex spatio-temporal interaction between the genotypically different embryo and the mother. Success of this event requires the synchronization of development and effective biochemical communications from both sides. Chorionic gonadotropin (CG), which is a major embryonic signal in the primate, is a glycoprotein hormone synthesized and secreted by the trophoblast. Various isoforms exist in plasma, urine, and blastocyst culture medium, a result of posttranslational modifications. The exponential secretion of CG and its long circulatory half-life extends the life span of corpus luteum to maintain the supply of progesterone during the first 6-8 weeks of pregnancy. To study the direct effects of CG in the uterus, we used the baboon (Papio anubis) as a non-human primate model. In vivo stimulation with CG during the window of uterine receptivity results in further morphologic and biochemical modifications of the receptive endometrium. These are characterized by the plaque reaction in the luminal epithelium, an increase in glycodelin expression and secretion by the glandular epithelium, and the differentiation of subepithelial stromal fibroblasts characterized by expression of the alpha smooth muscle actin (alpha SMA). Pretreatment with
progesterone receptor
antagonist (PRa) completely or partially inhibits these effects. The signal transduction pathway activated by CG in primate endometrial epithelial cells involves the protein kinase A (PKA)-independent phosphorylation of extracellular signal regulated kinase (
ERK
1/2). This alternate signal transduction pathway may prevent CG Receptor (R) downregulation at the implantation site and enhance epithelial cell proliferation and differentiation. Thus, our results suggest that CG plays an important role in implantation in addition to its luteotrophic role.
...
PMID:The role of chorionic gonadotropin (CG) in blastocyst implantation. 1175 Jul 40
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