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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)
A number of growth factors have been implicated in the control of the proliferation of breast cancer cells and some have been reported to mediate the proliferative effects of oestradiol. MCF-7 cells were treated with growth factors in the presence and absence of oestradiol. Oestradiol increased the response of cells to the proliferative effects of epidermal growth factor (EGF), transforming growth factor alpha (TGF-alpha) and basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF). Platelet derived growth factor (PDGF) and
cathepsin D
had no effect in the presence or absence of oestradiol while
TGF-beta
slightly reduced the stimulation by oestradiol. In the absence of oestradiol, there was little effect of combinations of growth factors although the effects of bFGF and IGF-I were additive. In the presence of oestradiol, the effects of bFGF and TGF-alpha were additive whereas bFGF acted as an IGF-I antagonist. Overall, bFGF had the greatest effect on cell proliferation although this was less marked than the previously described effect of the IGFs and insulin. The effects of oestradiol on the sensitivity of cells to the proliferative effects of bFGF did not appear to result from regulation of bFGF receptor expression.
...
PMID:Modulation of the proliferative response of breast cancer cells to growth factors by oestrogen. 141
It has been shown that some types of tumour cells produce activated transforming growth factor beta-1 (
TGF-beta
1). However, the mechanism for the activation of
TGF-beta
1 derived from tumour cells has not been fully elucidated. The present study was undertaken to characterise an activator of latent
TGF-beta
1 secreted from a human gastric cancer cell line, KATO-III. Western blot analyses using antibodies for
TGF-beta
1, latency associated peptide (LAP) and latent
TGF-beta
1-binding protein (LTBP) revealed that, in the cell lysate of KATO-III,
TGF-beta 1 protein
was expressed as a small latent complex of
TGF-beta
1 and LAP. This was also confirmed by a gel chromatographic analysis of the cell lysate obtained from KATO-III. A 2.5 kb transcript of
TGF-beta
1 mRNA was detected in KATO-III cells by Northern blot analysis. A gel chromatographic analysis of the conditioned medium from KATO-III cells revealed, in addition to the active form of
TGF-beta
1, a factor which activated latent
TGF-beta
1 from NRK-49F cells at fractions near a molecular size of 65,000. This factor was inactivated by heat (100 degrees C), acidification, trypsin and serine protease inhibitors.
TGF-beta
1 activity in KATO-III cell lysate was not detected in the untreated state, but potent
TGF-beta
1 activity was detected after acid treatment. These results suggest that KATO-III releases not only a latent
TGF-beta
1 complex but also a type of serine protease, different from plasmin, plasminogen activator,
cathepsin D
, endoglycosidase F or sialidase, which activates the latent
TGF-beta
1 complex as effectively as acid treatment.
...
PMID:Identification of a transforming growth factor beta-1 activator derived from a human gastric cancer cell line. 766 80
The molecular mechanisms of the exaggerated growth of vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMC) in hypertension are reviewed based on our previous experimental data. Spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR)-derived VSMC increasingly express angiotensinogen,
cathepsin D
and angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) mRNAs, compared to cells from normotensive Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rats, indicating the presence of an Ang II generating system in a homogeneous culture of VSMC from SHR. The produced Ang II then induces
TGF-beta
. SHR-derived VSMC show the distinct expression and abnormal regulation by Ang II of
TGF-beta
receptors when compared with cells from WKY rats, which express TGF-beta type II receptor predominantly to induce PDGF A-chain stimulation of VSMC growth. These findings imply that the increased growth of VSMC in hypertension is a primary event independent of high blood pressure, and is associated with endogenous Ang II-related growth factors.
...
PMID:Molecular mechanisms of the exaggerated growth of vascular smooth muscle cells in hypertension. 963 16
The mammary gland seems to be the only organ that is not fully developed at birth. Estrogens stimulate breast tissue via estrogen receptors (ERs). In the mammary gland, ER-mediated mechanisms have been shown to regulate: various growth factors, such as TGF-alpha and
TGF-beta
; enzymes, such as
cathepsin D
and plasminogen-activator; proto-oncogenes, such as c-fos, c-myc and HER-2/neu; cyclines and other regulatory substances that provide signaling systems for cell division and differentiation; other steroid receptors and epidermal growth factor receptors. Estrogen target genes contain estrogen-responsive elements. In these genes, transcription will be activated through interaction with the estrogen/ER protein complex. Subsequent activation of proto-oncogenes provides an explanation for the stimulating effect of estrogens on the glandular breast. Progesterone may be the key in influencing the risk of breast cancer with the peak of mitotic activity in the breast during the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle. On the other hand, in human breast cancer cell lines, both proliferation and inhibition have been observed with various progestational agents. Relevant biological and clinical issues are pregnancy and exposure to exogenous hormones. The intense hormonal stimulation of pregnancy (both estrogen and progesterone) has no adverse impact on the course of breast cancer. Pregnancy, with its mammogenetic differentiation, results in the protection of this organ from carcinogenesis. Characterization of specific lobular morphology serves as an indicator of the level of differentiation achieved by the organ, and thus provides means to assess the risk of the gland undergoing neoplastic transformation when exposed to given agents. Sufficient evidence exists to indicate the possibility of a slightly increased risk of breast cancer after approximately one decade of postmenopausal estrogen use. A review of the epidemiologic studies of postmenopausal hormone replacement and the risk of breast cancer fails to provide definitive evidence. Recent information derives from observations of cellular proliferation, plasma and tissue estradiol and progesterone receptor levels, and the percentage of apoptotic epithelial cells in human breast tissue. Several studies suggest that short-term, continuous combined HRT does not increase breast cancer recurrence or mortality. The participation of sexual hormones in the mammogenetic process during pregnancy might serve as an intermediate end point in assessing the effectiveness of hormones as chemopreventive agents. Investigations based on history, and breast morphology, should enable us to select estrogens and progestogens for HRT, and adopt optimal therapeutic regimens.
...
PMID:Potential benefits of estrogens and progestogens on breast cancer. 992 May 36
We investigated facilitation of invasion by growth factors and chemotactic factors in tumor cell lines, particularly hepatocellular carcinoma. Hepatoma cells (PLC/PRF/5 and Hep G2) showed strong chemotaxis toward their respective conditioned media while metastatic pancreatic cancer cells (SU.86.86) and colon cancer cells (LS 174T) did not migrate toward their respective conditioned media. Based on immunoblotting, PLC/PRF/5 cells secrete fibronectin (an extracellular matrix constituent), transforming growth factor-beta (
TGFbeta
; a growth factor), and
cathepsin D
(a protease). Fibronectin induced a migratory response in PLC/PRF/5 cells, and anti-fibronectin antibody abolished the migratory response of these cells to their conditioned medium. Anti-integrin-beta(1) antibody also impeded migration of these cells toward conditioned medium. Polyclonal anti-
TGFbeta
antibody and protease inhibitors (alpha(2)-macroglobulin and leupeptin) added to culture media-modulated secretion of fibronectin by PLC/PRF/5 cells. Although exogenous
TGFbeta
suppressed SU.86.86 cells, it enhanced PLC/PRF/5 cell adhesion to substrate, increasing viable cell numbers. These actions indicate that hepatocellular carcinoma may possess a forceful autocrine mechanism enabling cells to survive and proliferate under cirrhotic conditions.
...
PMID:Secretion of extracellular matrix (fibronectin), growth factor (transforming growth factor beta) and protease (cathepsin D) by hepatoma cells. 1076 30
Differential techniques have revealed several novel genes and peptides involved in trophoblast development including PL74/gdf15/MIC-1, a
TGFbeta
family cytokine that controls apoptosis and differentiation, PL48, a new serine-threonine protein kinase, serum and glucocorticoid-induced kinase, PBK-1, a tunicamycin-responsive gene, a
cathepsin D
-like gene (DAP-1) and hypoxia- regulated genes HRF-1,2,6,8 and HIF-1alpha, HIF-1beta, and hEPAS-1. Syncytin, a cell fusion- inducing gene, has been cloned from placenta where it regulates cell fusion. ERV-3 has also been demonstrated to promote cell fusion. These two genes represent the first demonstrated functions of endogenous retroviral sequences in human tissues. Endoglin, PlGF, TGFbeta3, IGF-II, IGFBP-1, and a placental IGFBP protease have found new roles in regulating cytotrophoblast proliferation and invasiveness. A specific placental p105 rasGAP protein has been identified. The homeobox genes DLX4, HB24, MSX2 and MOX2 also likely play a role in development at the epithelial-mesenchymal boundary. Transcription factors such as TEF-5, Hand1, HEB, HASH-2 and two genes represented by ESTs may have regulatory roles in placental development. Evidence suggests that the placenta has an unusual two-cell system for apoptosis regulation in which the cytotrophoblast may direct later apoptotic events in the syncytium, and with syncytialization possibly triggered by the "phosphatidylserine flip". Thus, the placenta is both a rich source of new growth-regulatory substances, and a model system for originating new paradigms of developmental biology.
...
PMID:Life and death in the placenta: new peptides and genes regulating human syncytiotrophoblast and extravillous cytotrophoblast lineage formation and renewal. 1236 35
Cancer-associated or reactive stromal cells are composed of endothelial and inflammatory cells as well as of spindle cells such as fibroblasts and myofibroblasts. In addition to participating to the tumor tissue frame, these cells contribute actively to tumor nutrition and progression through neo-angiogenesis and production of a variety of molecules including numerous proteases, of which a number (MMP14, MMP11, FAP and uPA) are almost exclusively produced by reactive stromal cells. Cancer cells interact with reactive stromal cells which involves a large number of proteases. Several molecules (
TGFbeta
, PDGF, EMMPRIN) produced by cancer cells induce the production of stromal proteases which in turn stimulate cancer cells through binding to a receptor (for example, MMP-2 and integrin alpha v beta 3). Our experience shows that protease overexpression by reactive stromal cells (
cathepsin D
, MMP-11, MMP-14) leads to an adverse clinical course in breast cancer. Phenotypic and genotypic differences were found between reactive stromal cells and fibroblasts of normal tissue and our research team found that reactive stromal cells also respond differently to similar stimulations in different individuals. These results support the hypothesis that the biologic behaviour of cancer is not only dependent on tumour characteristics but also on those of patients'stromal cells and that comparable tumours in two individuals may follow different clinical courses. These studies and our experience underscores the importance of characterising cancer-associated reactive stromal cells because of the therapeutic potential of this approach. Furthermore, reactive stromal cells should be genetically more stable that cancer cells and, in theory, should less likely develop mutations and treatment resistance.
...
PMID:[Proteases by reactive stromal cells in cancer: an attractive therapeutic target]. 1698 Feb 37
Multivariable DIGE/MS was used to investigate proteins altered in expression and/or post-translational modification in response to activation of transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta receptors in MCF10A mammary epithelial cells overexpressing the HER2/Neu (ErbB2) oncogene. Proteome changes were monitored in response to exogenous
TGF-beta
over time (0, 8, 24, and 40 h), and proteins were resolved using medium range (pH 4-7) and narrow range (pH 5.3-6.5) isoelectric focusing combined with up to 2 mg of protein to allow inspection of lower abundance proteins. Triplicate samples were prepared independently and analyzed together across multiple DIGE gels using a pooled sample internal standard to quantify expression changes with statistical confidence. Unsupervised principle component analysis and hierarchical clustering of the individual DIGE proteome expression maps provided independent confirmation of distinct expression patterns from the individual experiments and demonstrated high reproducibility between replicate samples. Fifty-nine proteins (including some isoforms) that exhibited significant kinetic expression changes were identified using mass spectrometry and database interrogation and were mapped to existing biological networks involved in
TGF-beta
signaling. Several proteins with a potential role in breast cancer, such as maspin and
cathepsin D
, were identified as novel molecules associated with
TGF-beta
signaling.
...
PMID:Multivariable difference gel electrophoresis and mass spectrometry: a case study on transforming growth factor-beta and ERBB2 signaling. 1702 91