Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.7.7.49 (reverse transcriptase)
31,746 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The expression of pS2 (TFF1) has been previously shown to identify patients with improved response to anti-hormonal therapy and more favorable outcome. In the current study, 100 human breast carcinoma samples obtained from the Manitoba Breast Tumor Bank were analyzed for pS2 mRNA using a quantitative, competitive reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (qcRT-PCR) assay. A pS2/beta-actin cut-off criterion of 0.010 was established to classify tumors as either pS2 positive or pS2 negative. pS2 mRNA levels were positively associated with both ER and PR, with the majority of ER+ (59%) and PR+ (60%) tumors also being positive for pS2. In addition, a significant linear correlation was observed between the amount of pS2 mRNA and ER (p < 0.0001) and PR (p < 0.0001) protein. pS2 mRNA levels also exhibited an inverse association with tumor size and histological grade, consistent with the observation that pS2 is primarily expressed in small (T < 2.0 cm), but well differentiated tumors (Grades I and II). No associations were observed with tumor cell type, patient age, or lymph node status. The strong correlation displayed between pS2 and a number of currently used breast cancer prognostic markers supports the clinical use of pS2 to further assess tumor status and patient outcome.
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PMID:pS2 (TFF1) levels in human breast cancer tumor samples: correlation with clinical and histological prognostic markers. 1057 16

ErbB subfamily genes, known as proto-oncogenes, encode receptor tyrosine kinases, and are expressed in relation to tumorigenesis of the mammary gland in humans. In this study, we examined the expression of erbB subfamily mRNAs in two canine normal mammary glands and 12 mammary tumor samples by reverse transcriptase-coupled polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). Each primer set was designed from the nucleotide sequence of the region conserved in erbB subfamily cDNA among other species. No erbB subfamily mRNAs were expressed in the normal mammary gland. In contrast, all of the subfamily mRNAs were expressed in a benign mammary tumor, and more than one type of the subfamily mRNA were observed in 11 malignant mammary tumors. The length of RT-PCR products were 380 bp for erbB1, 500 bp for erbB2, 644 bp for erbB3, and 416 bp for erbB4. These sequences were highly homologous to the cDNA sequences of other species. Therefore, these results suggest that the expression of erbB subfamily mRNAs in canine mammary tumors plays an important role in tumorigenesis of the mammary gland.
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PMID:Expression patterns of the erbB subfamily mRNA in canine benign and malignant mammary tumors. 1164 81

C127, a murine mammary tumor-derived cell line, is capable of lipidating and secreting apolipoprotein B-41 (apoB-41) in the apparent absence of microsomal triglyceride transfer protein (MTP). Using a semiquantitative reverse transcriptase-coupled polymerase chain reaction, mouse MTP mRNA was detected in C127 cells at approximately 10-20% of the relative abundance of human MTP in HepG2 cells. Radiolabeling of C127 cells with [35S]methionine and [35S]- cysteine followed by immunoprecipitation with anti-MTP antibodies identified a band with an electrophoretic mobility identical to that of authentic mouse MTP. Cotransfection of apoB-41 and the MTP 97-kDa subunit in C127 cells enhanced apoB secretion by approximately 5-fold relative to apoB-41 transfection alone, suggesting that MTP is limiting in these cells. To establish that MTP expression is responsible for apoB-containing lipoprotein assembly in C127 cells, the effects of the MTP inhibitor BMS-200150 were examined. Secretion of apoB-41 by C127 cells was inhibited to the same extent observed in COS-1 cells cotransfected with apoB-41 and MTP. These results suggest that low MTP expression, and not the expression or overexpression of another known or novel factor(s), is responsible for apoB assembly and secretion in C127 cells and further supports the essential nature of MTP in the biogenesis of apoB-containing lipoproteins. .
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PMID:Lipoprotein assembly capacity of the mammary tumor-derived cell line C127 is due to the expression of functional microsomal triglyceride transfer protein. 1171 59

Our efforts to express in bacteria the enzymatically active reverse transcriptase (RT) of mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV) have shown that the RT is active only after adding 27 amino acid residues, which are derived from the end of the pro gene, to the amino-terminus of the RT (Biochem, J. (1998) 329, 579-587). In the present study we have tested whether the mature RT found in virions is also fused to protease-derived sequences. To this end, we have analyzed the RT molecules in virions of MMTV by using two antisera directed against peptides, derived from either the carboxyl-terminus of MMTV protease or the middle of MMTV RT. The data suggest that the mature RT, located in virions, contains at its amino-terminus sequences from the carboxyl-terminus of the protease protein. This finding supports previous suggestions that MMTV RT is a transframe protein (derived from both pro and pol reading frames of MMTV) and that amino acid residues located at the carboxyl-terminus of the protease have a dual usage as integral parts of both the protease and the RT enzymes.
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PMID:The mature reverse transcriptase molecules in virions of mouse mammary tumor virus possess protease-derived sequences. 1278 39

The inbred mouse strain RIII has long been known for shedding large amounts of mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV) particles in milk and for the development of hormone-dependent early mammary tumors at a very high incidence (>90%). We have established one RIII subline (RIII/Sa) that shows a pattern of virus expression and tumor incidence similar to that in RIII mice. In the present study, we analyzed the milk and mammary tumors of RIII/Sa mice for virus characterization by reverse transcriptase PCR (RT-PCR) cloning and sequencing of the open reading frame (ORF) of the MMTV long terminal repeats (LTRs). Our results show that these mice express a mixture of at least three different MMTV strains, two of which, designated here as RIII/Sa MMTV-1 and RIII/Sa MMTV-2, are exogenous. The third virus, RIII/Sa MMTV-3, appears to carry the signature of an endogenous provirus, Mtv-17. Similar studies done with the milk and mammary glands of another subline, RIIIS/J, revealed that they do not express MMTV in their milk. The RIII/Sa and RIIIS/J mice also exhibited differences in their endogenous proviral contents. Twelve spontaneously developed mammary tumors of RIII/Sa mice were examined for possible Wnt-1 and/or int-2/Fgf3 mutations that are usually found to occur in most mouse mammary tumors as a consequence of MMTV proviral integration. This work led to the isolation of one MMTV-Wnt-1 junction fragment and one MMTV-int-2/Fgf3 junction fragment from 2 of the 12 tumors. Further analyses showed that both junction fragments contained the RIII/Sa MMTV-2-specific LTR ORF, indicating that this virus was involved in the development of both tumors. Whether RIII/Sa MMTV-1 and/or RIII/Sa MMTV-3 plays any role in mammary tumor development in RIII/Sa mice remains to be established. Overall, the present study demonstrates, to our surprise, that (i) RIII/Sa mice express, unlike other native mouse strains, three strains of MMTVs; and (ii) the virions are completely different from the virus expressed by another subline of RIII mice, the BR6 mice.
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PMID:RIII/Sa mice with a high incidence of mammary tumors express two exogenous strains and one potential endogenous strain of mouse mammary tumor virus. 1469 40

We report on the establishment of one transgenic and two endogenous reporter gene assays to determine androgenic/antiandrogenic activity. A transient transactivation assay was developed in COS-7 African green monkey kidney cells. Three plasmids were co-transfected by electroporation: the human androgen receptor expression vector pSG5AR, the reporter gene vector pMamneoLuc, expressing luciferase under the control of the mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV) promotor containing 4 hormone responsive elements (HREs), and the control plasmid pSVbeta. Transcriptional activation was measured by luciferase-mediated chemoluminescence. In T47D human breast cancer cells two endogenous reporter gene systems were established: one based on the androgen-induced expression of prostate-specific antigen (PSA), the other based on the androgen-repressed expression of testosterone repressed message 2 (TRPM-2). PSA protein was measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), TRPM-2 m-RNA by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). All three test systems were validated using the physiological androgen dihydrotestosterone (DHT) as agonist and the established antiandrogens hydroxyflutamide and p,p'-dichlorodiphenylethene (p,p'-DDE) as antagonists. The PSA assay was the most sensitive test system with an EC50 of 0.7 nM for DHT-induced response. The transient transactivation assay in COS-7 cells was less sensitive with an EC50 of 9.7 nM DHT. In the PSA assay hydroxyflutamide was a more potent antagonist (IC30 = 0.02 microM) than p,p'-DDE (IC30 = 0.9 microM). In the transient transactivation assay in COS-7 cells, both compounds elicited about 30% of the agonistic response induced by 100 nM DHT, thus showing partial agonistic properties. In summary, three highly sensitive and complementary in vitro test systems, together achieving enhanced specificity for detection and assessment of androgenic/antiandrogenic activity have been established and validated.
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PMID:Sensitive in vitro test systems to determine androgenic/antiandrogenic activity. 1549 79

Identifiable risk factors for the development of breast cancer include age, diet, family history, and lifetime estrogen exposure. An infectious agent (mouse mammary tumor virus; MMTV) is known to cause murine breast tumors and may be involved in the pathogenesis of human disease. Multiple studies have detected MMTV-like sequences in 30 to 60% of breast cancer samples and up to 1.8% of samples from normal breast. Using in situ PCR of MMTV-like sequences of formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded breast tissue, viral sequences have been located in cancerous epithelial cells in breast acini of male and female breast tumors, but not in adjacent nonmalignant cells. MMTV-like sequences were also located in the epithelial cells of male gynecomastia samples. Using reverse transcriptase in situ PCR, RNA transcripts from the env gene were also detected within cancerous epithelial cells of 78% of DNA-positive tumors, 80% of gynecomastia samples, and 0% of normal tissues screened. This suggests the virus may be replicating in these cells. The epidemiologic and histopathological data are consistent with the association of an MMTV-like virus with breast cancers in men and women. The association with gynecomastia, a benign, possibly premalignant condition suggests hormonal influences, rather than cancer per se, may be the dominant factor in determining viral presence and replication.
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PMID:Mouse mammary tumor virus-like RNA transcripts and DNA are found in affected cells of human breast cancer. 1553 3

Androgen site-specifically affects human hair growth after puberty through androgen receptors in the dermal papilla, which transactivate target genes acting in conjunction with co-activators. To examine the regulation of androgen sensitivity in hair follicles, we focused on androgen receptor co-activator Hic-5/ARA55. Its interaction with transfected androgen receptor in beard dermal papilla cells was confirmed with mammalian two-hybrid assays. The semiquantitative reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction showed that Hic-5/ARA55 mRNA expression was high in dermal papilla cells from the beard and bald frontal scalp but low in cells from the occipital scalp. To determine whether Hic-5/ARA55 mRNA level correlates with its endogenous activity, we studied the effect of dominant negative Hic-5/ARA55 on transfected androgen receptor transactivation induced by R1881 using mouse mammary tumor virus-luciferase assays. We found that it suppressed the transactivation by 64.5 and 71.4% in dermal papilla cells from the beard and bald frontal scalp, respectively, whereas it showed no significant effect in cells from the occipital scalp. Our findings suggest that Hic-5/ARA55 is a molecular regulator for androgen sensitivity in human hair follicles.
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PMID:Androgen receptor co-activator Hic-5/ARA55 as a molecular regulator of androgen sensitivity in dermal papilla cells of human hair follicles. 1750 20

The association of human breast cancer with sequences similar to the mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV) has been shown, but convincing evidence for the presence of viral particles in breast tumors has been lacking. We have described the complete proviral structure of a retrovirus in human breast cancer. This provirus, designated as human mammary tumor virus (HMTV), was 95% homologous to MMTV and revealed features of a replication-competent virus. We have therefore investigated the production of viral particles in primary cultures of human breast cancer (MSSM). Cells isolated from ascites or pleural effusions of patients with metastatic breast cancer contained viral sequences in their DNA, expressed Env protein, and showed retroviral particles by electron microscopy. Viral particles from culture media exhibited morphologic features of beta-retroviruses sedimenting at buoyant densities of 1.12 to 1.18 g/mL in sucrose gradients and showed reverse transcriptase activity. cDNA sequences from virion RNA were synthesized, amplified, and sequenced and all the virion genes were detected and 70% of the virion RNA was sequenced. The sequence homologies were, respectively, 85% to 95% compared with the MMTV and HMTV proviruses we have previously described. These results clearly show that breast cancer cells in primary cultures produced HMTV viral particles that are similar to the mouse virus and which may play a role in human breast cancer pathogenesis.
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PMID:Characterization of viral particles isolated from primary cultures of human breast cancer cells. 1787 39

Mammary tumors are among the most common neoplastic conditions in dogs, and there is evidence that inflammation plays a role in the development of some tumor types in dogs. The complement system is a major participant in the inflammatory process and the complement activation component, C5a, is a potent inflammatory peptide. This study investigated the mRNA expression of the major receptor for C5a (C5aR; CD88) in histopathological samples of canine mammary tumors by quantitative reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) using canine-specific primers for CD88. A total of seven canine mammary tumors (four malignant carcinomas, two benign mixed mammary tumors, and one myoepithelioma) and eight normal mammary glands were analysed. All the tumor samples expressed low levels of CD88 mRNA, while none of the normal mammary tissues showed any detectable expression. These preliminary results suggest that C5a-CD88 interaction may play a contributory role in the inflammatory response associated with mammary tumor development in dogs. Further studies investigating the mechanisms behind complement activation and C5a receptor expression in canine mammary tumors are warranted.
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PMID:Increased expression of C5a receptor (CD88) mRNA in canine mammary tumors. 2084 29


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