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Query: UMLS:C0006142 (
breast cancer
)
160,383
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The etiology of cancer is a complex interplay of various factors, including genetic alterations. Multiple studies have been carried out to identify and characterize mutations that frequently occur during tumorigenesis. In human
breast cancer
, amplification of proto-oncogenes (
c-myc
, c-erbB-2/neu) and chromosome 11q13, mutation of p53 and loss of heterozygosity (chromosomes 1, 3p, 6q, 7q, 11p, 13q, 16q, 17, 18q and 22q) represent the major types of genetic abnormalities that have been frequently observed in tumor DNAs. The genetic deletions and mutations could inactivate tumor-suppressor genes. In some studies, specific alterations have been associated with some clinical parameters. Recently, linkage analyses, on large families with a predisposition to
breast cancer
, have been performed to map putative
breast cancer
susceptibility genes. The survey of high risk patients should be organised to make an earlier diagnosis.
...
PMID:[Molecular analysis of breast cancers: recent developments]. 130 32
Anti-
c-myc
monoclonal antibody was used to evaluate the distribution of the c-myc protein in normal and tumor cells of infiltrating ductal carcinoma. A semi-quantitative method for reporting immunohistochemical assay results (
c-myc
score) that enables correlations on a more quantitative basis was used in this study. HL-60 cells demonstrated the strongest nuclear staining when fixed in cold acetone (4 degrees C) for 10 min. All 24 specimens of infiltrating ductal carcinomas of the breast and 7 of 11 samples of normal breast tissues studied revealed the presence of c-myc protein. The level of expression in normal breast tissue was much lower than that in
breast cancer
. Heterogeneity in expression was found within individual tumors and there were substantial differences in the level of expression among different tumors. The subcellular site of staining was predominantly nuclear, occasionally nuclear and cytoplasmic in the same cell, and rarely only cytoplasmic. All four patients with tumor cells located in close proximity to the ductal basement membrane and over-expressing c-myc protein had positive lymph nodes, suggesting that these tumors are more likely to metastasize.
...
PMID:Heterogeneity of c-myc expression in histologically similar infiltrating ductal carcinomas of the breast. 130 31
c-myc
, c-erbB-2, and Ki-67 expression was examined by immunohistochemistry in 11 normal breast tissues and 42 invasive and 14 noninvasive breast carcinomas. The
c-myc
product was detected in all breast carcinoma specimens and in 7 of 11 normal breast tissues. Invasive tumors stained more frequently with the anti-myc monoclonal antibody than did noninvasive tumors, while the level of expression in normal breast tissue was much less than that in
breast cancer
. Membrane staining of the c-erbB-2 protein was demonstrated in 29% (4 of 14) of noninvasive ductal carcinomas and in 45% (19 of 42) of invasive breast carcinomas. None of the 11 normal breast tissue samples was positive. The mean value of Ki-67-positive cells was 0.91 +/- 0.31% for normal breast tissue, 4.57 +/- 1.36% for noninvasive ductal carcinoma, and 12.76 +/- 2.18% for invasive
breast cancer
. In 42 invasive breast carcinomas, the expression of
c-myc
, c-erbB-2, and Ki-67 proliferation marker were compared with lymph node status, estrogen receptor status, progesterone receptor status, and age of patients at diagnosis. c-erbB-2 overexpression and Ki-67 overexpression were identified as the only factors associated with lymph node status. We concluded that they might be additional prognostic factors for breast carcinoma.
...
PMID:c-myc, c-erbB-2, and Ki-67 expression in normal breast tissue and in invasive and noninvasive breast carcinoma. 134 67
The expression of oncogene products related to cell growth (c-erbB-2,
c-myc
, ras p21, EGFR) was investigated in benign (15 cases) and malignant breast lesions (20 cases) by means of immunohistochemistry using the avidin-biotin-peroxidase technique with polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies. The aim of this study was to evaluate the relationship between the staining positivity and various morphological and biological features, such as tumour type, grading, hormone receptor status and cell kinetic parameters. In benign breast lesions, as expected, the kinetic parameters were low, both for Ki-67 and LI. All the specimens showed a diploid condition (the DI being equal to 1) and we found a limited degree of immunoreactivity for all the growth factors and oncogene products. In
breast cancer
we studied the distribution of immunohistochemical positivity for EGFR, c-erbB-2,
c-myc
, ras p21 and Ki-67, which was related to age, nodal status, ER and PgR receptor status, LI, DI and histopathological grading. A significant positive correlation was found both between ras p21 expression and nodal status and ER-ICA positivity. We observed a strong correlation between LI and Ki-67 and an inverse relation between Ki-67 and ER expression. These findings suggest the importance of studying the relationship between prognostic factors which may provide preoperative prediction in the biological behaviour of
breast cancer
, not only on biopsy specimens, but also on fine needle aspirates.
...
PMID:Preliminary study on oncogene product immunohistochemistry (c-erbB-2, c-myc, ras p21, EGFR) in breast pathology. 134 7
The frequency of oncogene amplification described in the literature shows a large fluctuation, which could be attributed to the study of relatively small series of tumours, to selection of subgroups of patients, or, especially in retrospective studies, to selection of tumour material from the tumour-bank. To address this question, we have studied amplification of
c-myc
, HER2/neu and int-2/bcl-1 genes in a series of 1052 collected human breast tumours. The retrospective and prospective subgroups in this collected series of tumours were of equal size.
c-myc
was amplified in 17.1%, HER2/neu in 18.7% and int-2/bcl-1 in 14.1%, of all
breast cancer
specimens studied. In the retrospective subgroup the prevalence of amplification was 18.1% for
c-myc
; 22.6% for HER2/neu and 11.6% for int-2/bcl-1, whereas in the prospective subgroup an incidence of amplification of 16.1%, 15.1% and 16.3% for
c-myc
, HER2/neu and int-2/bcl-1, respectively was observed. HER2/neu amplification was negatively correlated with oestrogen receptor (ER) and progesterone receptor (PR) status (P less than 0.0001; for both),
c-myc
amplification was more prevalent in the PR-negative subpopulation (P less than 0.05) and int-2/bcl-1 amplification was positively correlated with ER status (P less than 0.001).
...
PMID:Prevalence of amplification of the oncogenes c-myc, HER2/neu, and int-2 in one thousand human breast tumours: correlation with steroid receptors. 135 Apr 57
Amplification of oncogenes in primary tumours may have prognostic and/or therapeutic significance for patients with
breast cancer
. We have studied HER2/neu and
c-myc
amplification together with steroid receptors in human primary breast tumours and related the outcome with (relapse-free) survival. A strong inverse correlation was found between HER2/neu amplification and the presence of oestrogen and progesterone receptors. Actuarial 5-years survival showed that
breast cancer
patients with
c-myc
amplification in their primary tumours experience a shorter relapse-free survival, especially in node-negative and in receptor-positive tumours, whereas HER2/neu amplification may be of prognostic value for overall survival in receptor-negative tumours. Overall, in our hands,
c-myc
amplification appeared to be a more potent prognosticator than HER2/neu amplification in human primary
breast cancer
.
...
PMID:Prognostic factors in human primary breast cancer: comparison of c-myc and HER2/neu amplification. 135 12
A new cell line, designated BSMZ, was established from a malignant pleural effusion from a woman with
breast cancer
. This line has a doubling time of 27 h and has now been cultured for over 120 passages. The large, rounded BSMZ cells grow as both a monolayer and as aggregations in suspension. Intracytoplasmic lumen, a finding consistent with results from cells derived from mammary tissue, was detected on ultrastructural analysis. Injection of BSMZ cells into nude mice resulted in the growth of solid tumors 4 weeks after inoculation. The solid tumor was identical to the original BSMZ cells in microscopic and electron microscopic studies. These cells possess an average of 80 chromosomes. Expression of erbB-2 and
c-myc
genes was increased by 10-fold, while there was no detectable overexpression of the N-ras and c-myb genes. Southern analysis has revealed amplification of the erbB-2 and
c-myc
loci. The BSMZ cell line may therefore provide a useful model for the study of human
breast cancer
and overexpression of the erbB-2 gene.
...
PMID:Establishment of the human BSMZ breast cancer cell line, which overexpresses the erbB-2 and c-myc genes. 135 15
In summary, evidence is beginning to accumulate in support of a major role for tyrosine kinase receptors (and their activating growth factors) and steroid hormones and their receptors in normal development and differentiation of the mammary gland. A point of intersection of their mechanisms of action in growth control appears to be the induction of nuclear protooncogenes such as
c-myc
. When
c-myc
is amplified, as it is in many breast cancers, EGF and FGF receptor tyrosine kinase action becomes transforming, not simply mitogenic. A source of the transforming factors could be either stromal or epithelial. This mechanism could function early in the progression of
breast cancer
. c-erbB-2 and EGF receptor overexpression and amplification, when they occur, appear to render tumors even more malignant and of especially poor prognosis. These mechanisms could function late in the progression of
breast cancer
. Transgenic mouse studies have begun to echo these themes. They have established that a growth factor (TGF-alpha) and its receptor (EGF receptor), which appear to be important in normal mouse and human proliferation and gland development, and a protooncogene (
c-myc
), commonly amplified and overexpressed in human and mouse
breast cancer
, can each contribute to mammary carcinogenesis. The mechanisms of the two are likely to be distinct. myc is likely to be acting as a tumor initiator in combination with normal proliferative factors, whereas TGF-alpha is likely to be acting as a hyperproliferative (promotional) factor in combination with a normal background of mutational events. The role of unmutated but amplified erbB-2 in the transgenic mouse is not yet known.
...
PMID:Tyrosine kinase receptor--nuclear protooncogene interactions in breast cancer. 136 Feb 36
Cytogeneticists first proposed that the karyotypic abnormalities identified on chromosomes 1, 3, 6, 11, 13, 16, 17, and 18 supported a genetic basis for
breast cancer
. Such abnormal banding patterns, however, may represent either loss-of-function or gain-of-function molecular events. RFLP analyses have since confirmed that 20-60% of primary and spontaneous human breast tumors exhibit allelic losses on these same chromosomes, although the exact genes involved at these chromosomal sites remain largely unknown. Knowledge gained about the Rb-1 and p53 tumor suppressor genes at 13q14 and 17p13 in breast and other human tumors supports the paradigm that for any chromosomal locus, allelic loss associated with a mutation in the remaining tumor allele signifies an involved tumor suppressor gene. Given this paradigm, there are nearly a dozen putative breast tumor suppressor genes under active investigation, with most investigators now focusing on various chromosome 17 loci. Among the known proto-oncogenes found activated in
breast cancer
, amplification of c-erbB-2 at 17q21 is the most widely studied and clinically significant gain-of-function event uncovered to date, occurring in about 20% of all primary breast tumors. The involvement of this overexpressed membrane receptor has engendered interest in related tyrosine kinase receptors, such as EGFR, IR, and IGF-I-R, as well as their respective ligands, which may be overexpressed in a greater fraction of tumors, contributing to the autocrine and paracrine regulation of
breast cancer
growth and metastasis. New attention is being given to the potentially oncogenic function of structurally altered nuclear transactivating steroid hormone receptors, such as ER, whose overexpression has long been used to determine endocrine therapy and prognosis for individual
breast cancer
patients. While
c-myc
was one of the first known proto-oncogenes to be found amplified and overexpressed in human breast cancers, the actual incidence and clinical significance of its activation remain disputed and in need of further study. Lastly, we can expect greater clarification about the importance of various 11q13 genes found coamplified in nearly 20% of primary breast cancers, and pursuit into the intriguing possibility that a cyclin-encoding gene represents the overexpressed locus of real interest in this amplicon. Virtually all of these important genetic abnormalities identified thus far are associated with but not restricted to human breast cancers. The absence of identifiable molecular defects relating to the tissue specificity of this malignancy must be considered a substantial gap in our basic understanding of breast carcinogenesis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Activated oncogenes and putative tumor suppressor genes involved in human breast cancers. 136 56
Antisense oligonucleotides have been widely used to achieve specific inhibition of targeted gene expression. However, the mechanism of action is not well understood and in many systems sequence-independent effects occur. We have recently shown that chronic administration of an antisense
c-myc
phosphorothioate oligonucleotide can specifically inhibit expression of the c-myc protein and growth in human
breast cancer
cells. We now identify an additional effect of the same oligonucleotide on cell adhesion. Transient delivery through electroporation of 2.5 microM antisense-myc oligonucleotide to MCF-7 cells results in 85% inhibition of adhesion to plastic substratum within 24 h. Both the onset of this effect and the subsequent recovery occur without a change in cell viability, growth, or alteration of adhesion to Matrigel, collagen IV, laminin, or fibronectin. However, no parallel changes in c-myc mRNA or protein expression are detectable, suggesting that in this instance inhibition of adhesion caused by antisense-myc oligonucleotide may involve a mechanism independent of the target sequence.
...
PMID:Inhibition of cell adhesion to plastic substratum by phosphorothioate oligonucleotide. 139 92
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