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Query: EC:3.4.23.5 (
cathepsin D
)
4,130
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The BRCA1 gene was previously found to inhibit the transcriptional activity of the
estrogen receptor
[ER-alpha] in human breast and prostate cancer cell lines. In this study, we found that breast cancer-associated mutations of BRCA1 abolish or reduce its ability to inhibit ER-alpha activity and that domains within the amino- and carboxyl-termini of the BRCA1 protein are required for the inhibition. BRCA1 inhibition of ER-alpha activity was demonstrated under conditions in which a BRCA1 transgene was transiently or stably over-expressed in cell lines with endogenous wild-type BRCA1 and in a breast cancer cell line that lacks endogenous functional BRCA1 (HCC1937). In addition, BRCA1 blocked the expression of two endogenous estrogen-regulated gene products in human breast cancer cells: pS2 and
cathepsin D
. The BRCA1 protein was found to associate with ER-alpha in vivo and to bind to ER-alpha in vitro, by an estrogen-independent interaction that mapped to the amino-terminal region of BRCA1 (ca. amino acid 1-300) and the conserved carboxyl-terminal activation function [AF-2] domain of ER-alpha. Furthermore, several truncated BRCA1 proteins containing the amino-terminal ER-alpha binding region blocked the ability of the full-length BRCA1 protein to inhibit ER-alpha activity. Our findings suggest that the amino-terminus of BRCA1 interacts with ER-alpha, while the carboxyl-terminus of BRCA1 may function as a transcriptional repression domain. Oncogene (2001) 20, 77 - 87.
...
PMID:Role of direct interaction in BRCA1 inhibition of estrogen receptor activity. 1124 6
In order to study the association of histological grade (HG) with specific clinical and biological parameters which may influence the clinical behavior of infiltrating ductal carcinomas of the breast (IDC), we analyzed in 229 tissue samples the cytosolic concentrations of
estrogen receptor
(ER), progesterone receptor (PR), pS2,
cathepsin D
, hyaluronic acid (HA) and tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA), as well as those of the erbB2 oncoprotein, epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), HA, CD44v5 and CD44v6 in the cell membrane fraction. Likewise, we considered size, ploidy, S-phase fraction and axillary node involvement as variables of the study. The transition from HG1 to HG2 and from HG2 to HG3 was accompanied by a number of common features: global increase in size, greater number of tumors >2.0 cm, decrease in membrane hyaluronic acid concentrations, increased cell proliferation (S-phase >7%) and greater aneuploidy. Other events observed during the transition from HG2 to HG3 were a decrease in ER, PR, t-PA and cytosolic hyaluronic acid. These results led us to consider that HG is associated with certain clinical-biological changes that may help explain its value as a prognostic factor in breast carcinomas.
...
PMID:Histological grade in breast cancer: association with clinical and biological features in a series of 229 patients. 1128 57
Breast cancer screening is important for the early detection of breast cancer. Tumors that become symptomatic in the screening interval are known as interval cancers but the reasons for their rapid progression are unknown. Estrogen receptor expression is lower in interval cancers suggesting that they may have reduced hormonal responsiveness. To investigate this hypothesis we have measured the expression of the
estrogen receptor
and three estrogen-responsive genes (
cathepsin D
, progesterone receptor, and TFF1) in screen-detected and interval breast cancers. The expression of the protease
cathepsin D
was not associated with
estrogen receptor
in either group of tumor. Progesterone receptor expression was highly correlated with that of the
estrogen receptor
in both groups of tumors but it was not expressed at significantly different levels in the two groups of tumors. Expression of TFF1, a cellular motogen, was correlated with
estrogen receptor
in screen-detected but not interval cancers and was expressed at markedly higher levels in interval breast tumors, the group that expresses lower levels of
estrogen receptor
. Interval cancers are characterized by high levels of expression of TFF1 and/or Ki67 suggesting that cell migration and cell division play important roles in the rapid progression of interval cancers. The observation that TFF1 expression in interval cancers tends to be estrogen-independent and that interval cancers have reduced
estrogen receptor
expression suggests they may have a reduced response to hormone therapy.
...
PMID:High expression of the trefoil protein TFF1 in interval breast cancers. 1143 68
We have investigated the effect of testosterone on the amplification of androgen receptor (AR) gene in the brain cortex of aging female mice. For this purpose, high molecular weight (HMW) DNA purified from the brain cortex of intact, gonadectomized, testosterone- and estradiol-treated adult and old female mice was digested with different restriction enzymes and used for Southern hybridization with 32P-labeled AR cDNA fragments representing different domains of AR. The results reveal that only exons 4 and 5 corresponding to amino-terminal part of the hormone binding domain of AR are amplified in testosterone-treated old female but not in adult mice. Densitometric analysis further shows that testosterone increases the copy number of exons 4 and 5 of mouse AR gene by four-fold. Reprobing of slot blots with
estrogen receptor
and
cathepsin D
cDNA as probes supports the observation that amplification occurs only in AR gene. The tissue specificity is also confirmed when the slot blot hybridization of mouse liver HMW DNA with AR cDNA fails to show similar amplification. As the restriction map analysis of Southern blots does not show restriction fragment length polymorphism, the possibility of structural rearrangement leading to amplification of AR gene is ruled out. Thus our results suggest that the in vivo induction of mouse AR gene amplification by testosterone is tissue- and age-specific, and might contribute to the progress of genetic instability in the brain of aged female mice.
...
PMID:Amplification of exons 4 and 5 of androgen receptor gene by testosterone in aged female mouse brain cortex. 1170 14
Inflammatory breast carcinoma (IBC) is a rare but aggressive form of breast cancer. In this first-ever study, we investigated the role of nine prognostic markers' expression (
estrogen receptor
[ER], progesterone receptor [PR], p53, C-erbB-2, epidermal growth factor receptor [EGFR],
cathepsin D
[CD], proliferating cell nuclear antigen [PCNA], DNA ploidy, and S-phase fraction [SPF]) and disease outcome in IBC cases compared with the control group. A case control study of IBC was conducted on 40 test cases with two controls per case matching age, grade, and number of axillary lymph nodes sampled. During 7 years of this study, 10% of all patients with breast cancer had IBC. In this study, 84% of IBC cases showed positive axillary lymph nodes compared with 63% in control group. The expression of nine prognostic markers, that is, ER, PR, p53, C-erbB-2, EGFR, CD, PCNA, SPF, and DNA ploidy, was studied by immunohistochemistry and flow cytometry. Hormone receptor status showed an inverse correlation (p < 0.05). Among p53, C-erbB-2, EGFR, and CD in the IBC group, only p53 showed a significant correlation, with 70% positivity in IBC versus 48% positivity in the control group (p < 0.05). Much higher SPF and PCNA positivity was seen in the IBC group compared with the control group (p < 0.05). DNA ploidy also showed a significant correlation compared with the control group (p < 0.05). After a median follow up of 18 months, median overall survival in the IBC group was 1.8 years (range 0.6-5.8 years) compared with 3.0 years (range 2.5-7.0 years), with a p value of 0.0001.
...
PMID:Case control study of prognostic markers and disease outcome in inflammatory carcinoma breast: a unique clinical experience. 1184 51
In addition to inducing transcription of a battery of target genes encoding drug-metabolizing enzymes, the environmental pollutant 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) is known to induce antiestrogenic responses. However, the mechanisms underlying such complex biologic responses affecting growth and differentiation remain unclear. In the present study we have investigated biological effects of a constitutively active mutant of the aryl hydrocarbon (Ah) receptor (CA-AhR), in particular whether it modulates
estrogen receptor
function in human MCF-7 breast cancer cells. To this end, the CA-AhR protein was conditionally expressed using the tet repressor. Expression of CA-AhR resulted in constitutive formation of a DNA-binding AhR-aryl hydrocarbon receptor nuclear translocator heterodimeric complex and enhanced expression of the Ah receptor target gene CYP1A1 in the absence of TCDD. Moreover, expression of CA-AhR inhibited estrogen-dependent
cathepsin D
expression and growth of these cells. Thus, the present model system conditionally expressing the CA-AhR protein provides a novel tool for the investigation of AhR-mediated signaling pathways.
...
PMID:Conditional expression of a constitutively active aryl hydrocarbon receptor in MCF-7 human breast cancer cells. 1205 61
We showed previously that prolonged treatment of a MCF-7-derived cell line with hydroxytamoxifen (OHT) induces the irreversible silencing of some estrogen-responsive genes, whereas OHT-resistant cell growth appears simultaneously (E. Badia et al., Cancer Res., 60: 4130-4138, 2000). Based on the hypothesis that particular gene silencings could be involved in triggering the resistance phenomenon, we focused our study on the mechanism of OHT-induced silencing. More precisely, we wished to determine to what extent the recruited histone deacetylase (HDAC) activity, which is known to be involved in the repressive effect induced by antagonist ligands of nuclear receptors, could participate in various aspects of OHT effects, particularly in gene silencing. A fusion protein (HDAC-EG) of human HDAC1 fused with the
estrogen receptor
DNA-binding domain and the glucocorticoid receptor ligand-binding domain allowed targeting of chimeric HDAC1 activity on estrogen-responsive elements (EREs) in the presence of glucocorticoid ligands. When HDAC-EG was transiently expressed in HeLa cells together with
estrogen receptor
, an antiestrogen-like effect was obtained on an ERE-controlled luciferase reporter gene in the presence of agonist or antagonist glucocorticoids. In MCF-7-derived cells stably expressing HDAC-EG and an estrogen-regulated luciferase, liganded HDAC-EG again produced an antiestrogenic effect on expression of natural estrogen-regulated genes such as pS2, progesterone receptor, and
cathepsin D
and cell growth together with chimeric luciferase gene expression. However, a prolonged HDAC-EG-mediated antiestrogen effect did not lead to irreversible luciferase gene silencing, as OHT does. It nevertheless accelerated the OHT-driven phenomenon. The antiestrogen effect of OHT thus differs from that of an ERE-targeted HDAC1 activity that might participate in irreversible silencing but is not sufficient to trigger it.
...
PMID:An estrogen-responsive element-targeted histone deacetylase enzyme has an antiestrogen activity that differs from that of hydroxytamoxifen. 1243 46
Breast cancer incidence increases with age but this relationship has not been fully explored with regard to expression of
estrogen receptor
(ER) and ER-inducible genes (PR, pS2, Bcl2,
cathepsin D
), or the age-dependence of oxidant stress markers that also affect ER-inducible gene expression. In this three-part study, we first correlated age at diagnosis with expression of breast cancer markers ER, PR, pS2, Bcl2, and
cathepsin D
, quantitated by enzyme immunoassays from a European collective of approximately 3000 cryobanked primary breast cancers and approximately 300 adjacent non-malignant breast tissues. Results were then compared with ER and PR data reported to the SEER registry for 83,541 US cancers diagnosed during 1992-1997. Lastly, a homogeneous subset of 70 ER-positive tumors preselected from the European collective was blindly analyzed for age-specific changes in the DNA-binding content of redox-sensitive transcriprtion factors, AP1 and Sp1, and the oxidant stress-activated protein kinase, phosphorylated(P)-Erk5. Increases in breast tumor ER from patients aged <30 to >80 years mirrored 10-fold lower increases in non-malignant breast tissue ER content up to age 60, rising faster thereafter and reaching a near 25-fold differential between malignant and non-malignant breast tissue by age 80. ER-inducible markers PR, pS2, Bcl2, and
cathepsin D
were overexpressed in tumors relative to non-malignant breast tissue but, unlike ER, did not increase with patient age. While SEER data demonstrated that the increase in US breast cancer incidence rates after age 50 is confined to ER-positive tumors in patients of all ethnic subsets, these patients also showed a striking increase in the proportion of higher-risk ER-positive/PR-negative breast cancers arising after age 50. Mechanistically essential for ER-inducible PR expression, Sp1 DNA-binding function (but not Sp1 content) was lost with age in ER-positive tumors; and this functional defect correlated with increased tumor content of the oxidant stress marker, P-Erk5. Altogether these findings support two hypotheses: (i) dysregulated ER expression underlies the age-specific increase in breast cancer incidence after age 50; and (ii) oxidative stress and loss of Sp1 DNA-binding may contribute to an increasing incidence in higher-risk ER-positive/PR-negative breast cancers with aging.
...
PMID:Age-dependent changes in breast cancer hormone receptors and oxidant stress markers. 1246 83
Tumor cell invasion requires expression of degradative enzymes such as plasminogen activator, collagenase, and cathepsins. Cathepsin D, a lysosomal aspartic protease produced constitutively in human breast cancer cell lines, also has mitogenic activity in breast cancer cells. Additionally, high
cathepsin D
expression is associated with increased risk of metastasis in patients with node-negative breast cancer. Recently, a novel aspartic protease gene, ALP56 (aspartic-like protease 56kDa), has been identified. To examine possible interrelationships we quantitated ALP56 mRNA and
cathepsin D
mRNA in breast cancers using reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction. ALP56 mRNA expression was greater in cancers than in noncancerous tissues (p < 0.0001), as was expression of
cathepsin D
mRNA. ALP56 gene expression was dose-dependently down-regulated in T-47D breast cancer cells treated with estradiol, while
cathepsin D
was up-regulated. Expression of ALP56 mRNA in
estrogen receptor
(ER)-positive breast cancers was less than that in ER-negative cancers, and mRNA expression for ALP56 and
cathepsin D
did not correlate with one another. Thus ALP56 as well as
cathepsin D
may be a useful target molecule in breast cancer treatment.
...
PMID:A novel aspartic protease gene, ALP56, is up-regulated in human breast cancer independently from the cathepsin D gene. 1261 55
The aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) is a ligand-activated transcription factor that forms a functional heterodimeric complex with the AhR nuclear translocator (Arnt) protein. The environmental toxin, 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD), is a high affinity ligand for the AhR and has been extensively used to investigate AhR-mediated biochemical and toxic responses. TCDD modulates several endocrine pathways including inhibition of 17beta-estradiol-induced responses in the immature and ovariectomized rodent uterus and mammary gland and in human breast cancer cell lines. TCDD inhibits formation and growth of mammary tumors in carcinogen-induced rodent models and relatively nontoxic selective AhR modulators (SAhRMs) are being developed for treatment of breast cancer. The mechanisms of inhibitory AhR-
estrogen receptor
(ER) crosstalk have been investigated in MCF-7 breast cancer cells by analysis of promoter regions of genes induced by E2 and inhibited by TCDD. AhR-mediated inhibition of E2-induced
cathepsin D
, pS2, c-fos, and heat shock protein 27 gene expression involves direct interaction of the AhR complex with inhibitory pentanucleotide (GCGTG) dioxin responsive elements (iDREs) resulting in disruption of interactions between proteins binding DNA elements required for ER action and the basal transcription machinery. Mechanisms of inhibitory AhR-ER crosstalk indicate that functional iDREs are required for inhibition of some genes; however, results indicate that other interaction pathways are important including AhR-mediated proteasome-dependent degradation of the ER.
...
PMID:Mechanisms of inhibitory aryl hydrocarbon receptor-estrogen receptor crosstalk in human breast cancer cells. 1497 92
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