Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:A9QXG9 (bcl-2)
7,497 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Reports of supernumerary ovaries are rare. We describe two such cases, one with fibroma and the other with endometriosis and cystic change. A large fibroma measuring 17.4 x 12.0 x 7.5 cm in size was found in the supernumerary ovary of the omentum in the first case of a 47-year-old married woman with Meig's syndrome. The second case was associated with endometriosis and cystic change, measuring 11 x 5 x 3 cm in size and located in the upper abdominal cavity. It was attached to the uterus of a 28-year-old pregnant woman who had neither fibroma nor Meig's syndrome. Histologically, corpus albicans and a few primordial germ cells were demonstrated, respectively. A fibroma showing a storiform pattern was found in the first case. The second case had endometriosis and a thin-walled cyst with bleeding and necrosis caused by torsion. Immunohistochemically, desmin, alpha-smooth muscle actin, c-kit, CA125, Na+/K+ATPase, overexpression of p53, myc and ras were all negative in the fibroma cells of the first case, and in the endometriosis and cyst wall of the second case. The fibroma cells were positive for vimentin and estrogen receptor, and the proliferating cell nuclear antigen was sporadically demonstrated in their nuclei. The mutation of the p53 gene at exons 5-8 was not detected by sequence analysis. Using RT-PCR, bax, bcl-2 and p16 were not detected either. Clinically, the two cases presented here did not show abnormal hormonal symptoms. They were diagnosed as abdominal tumors or masses. Based on these considerations, one might assume that supernumerary ovaries are probably more frequent than reported at present.
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PMID:Two cases of supernumerary ovary: one with large fibroma with Meig's syndrome and the other with endometriosis and cystic change. 1179 34

The estrogen receptor-alpha (ERalpha) has been known to play a role in the development and progression of breast cancer. Several genetic polymorphisms in the ERalpha gene have been related to breast cancer risk and/or different tumor characteristics. In this study, PCR and direct sequencing based methods were used to examine this issue further in a Korean study population consisting of 155 women, 110 with breast cancer and 45 without cancer. We also assessed the potential role of the ERalpha genotype in ER, PR, p53, c-erbB2, and bcl-2 expression. Only one of the allelic variants of ERalpha gene was found in our study subjects; the (C(975)G) change was present in half of the study subjects. Although this allele had no direct effect in individual breast cancer risk, it was positively associated with tumor PR (P for trend=0.04) and ER expression (P for trend=0.06) and negatively associated with p53 expression (P for trend=0.02).
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PMID:Polymorphisms in the estrogen receptor-alpha gene and breast cancer risk. 1186 2

Meningiomas are generally benign central nervous system neoplasms, which frequently express progesterone receptor (PR) and only rarely express the estrogen receptor (ER). For breast cancer, a relation between steroid hormone receptors and proteins involved in the apoptotic process has been described. For meningiomas, the exact relation between PR and these proteins is not known. In this study, ER, PR, bcl-2 and bcl-2-associated x protein (Bax) expression levels were determined in meningioma cytosols. As a reference for our experimental conditions, we also determined these proteins in breast cancer cytosols. PR and ER were determined with a ligand-binding assay and scatchard-plot analysis. The expression levels of the anti- and pro-apoptotic proteins, bcl-2 and Bax, respectively, were determined by immunoblotting. In 65% of the meningioma, bcl-2 expression was found in variable amounts. In contrast to breast cancer, a significant negative association between PR and bcl-2 was found (P < 0.01). Bax expression appeared constitutive, not related to PR, and 2.6 times higher than breast cancer. As both PR and bcl-2 appear positively associated with prognosis, the negative relationship between bcl-2 and PR found in this study might have some biological and clinical significance.
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PMID:Progesterone receptor, bc1-2 and bax expression in meningiomas. 1194 25

The purpose of this study was to evaluate the distribution and frequency of apoptosis-related proteins and their correlation with estrogen, progesterone, and androgen receptors in endometrial tissues. Immunohistochemical analyses of bcl-2, bax, bcl-x, and steroid receptors were performed in 22 endometrial carcinomas, 26 endometrial hyperplasias, and 19 cases of normal cyclical endometrium. Bcl-2 was expressed in 45.4% of carcinomas and 92.3% of hyperplasias. Bax immunostaining was found in 90.9% of carcinomas and 76.9% of hyperplasias. Bcl-x positivity was similar in carcinomas (68.1%) and endometrial hyperplasias (76.9%). In normal cyclical endometria, bcl-2 staining was intense and diffuse in the proliferative phase, but decreased dramatically in the early and mid-secretory phase to reappear in the late secretory phase. Bax was expressed throughout the menstrual cycle but more strongly in the secretory phase. Bcl-x displayed a similar degree of expression in proliferative and secretory endometria. Nineteen carcinomas (86.3%), 25 hyperplasias (96.1%), and 18 normal cyclical endometria (94.7%) were positive for estrogen receptor (ER). Progesterone receptor (PR) was observed in 20 carcinomas (90.9%), all hyperplasias (100%), and 18 normal cyclical endometria (94.7%). Androgen receptor (AR) positivity was seen in 7 carcinomas (31.8%), 6 hyperplasias (23.0%), and 3 normal cyclical endometria (15.7%). There was a statistically positive correlation between bcl-x and ER and a tendency toward significant correlation between bcl-x and PR and between ER and PR in carcinomas. In hyperplasias, there was a significant positive correlation between bcl-2 and PR and between bcl-2 and bax and a negative correlation between ER and bax. There was a statistically significant difference for bcl-2 (p = 0.001) and bax (p = 0.001) between the hyperplasia and carcinoma groups. There was increased expression of bax, decreased expression of bcl-2, and persistence of bcl-x protein in advanced endometrial carcinomas. Our findings show that ovarian hormones have a regulatory role on bcl-2 protein and that there is a correlation between other members of the bcl-2 family (bcl-x and bax) and steroid hormone receptors. Bax/bcl-x may be the major control mechanisms of apoptosis in advanced carcinomas; other members of the bcl-2 family may also be under hormonal control.
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PMID:Apoptosis-related proteins and steroid hormone receptors in normal, hyperplastic, and neoplastic endometrium. 1235 86

Disruption of apoptosis may allow metastatic cell survival and confer resistance to chemotherapeutic drugs. We have analysed the molecular pathways that activate these survival genes in specific sites of metastasis. Estrogen receptor-negative breast cancer cell line MDA-MB435 and two metastatic sublines derived from lung (435L) and brain (435B) were analysed for the expression of members of the Bcl-2 family of apoptosis regulators. The levels of Bcl-2 were higher in the metastatic sublines than in parental cells, which correlated with the activation of Stat3, but not with the expression and/or activation of known bcl-2 transcription factors (CREB and WT1). In the brain subline, both expression of Bcl-2 and Stat3 activation were induced by epidermal growth factor and abrogated after treatment with kinase inhibitors specific for epidermal growth factor receptor or Jak2. Furthermore, transfection of 435B with a dominant-negative Stat3 markedly reduced the expression of Bcl-2 protein, whereas transient expression of a constitutively active Stat3 increased Bcl-2 in parental 435 cells. In addition, blockade of Stat3 activation by treatment with epidermal growth factor receptor and Jak2 kinase inhibitors or transfection with a dominant negative Stat3, sensitizes 435B cells to chemotherapy-induced apoptosis. Our data suggest that an increased activation of the Stat3-Bcl-2 pathway in estrogen receptor-negative metastatic breast cancer cell lines confer a survival advantage to these cells and contribute to their chemoresistance.
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PMID:Resistance to chemotherapy via Stat3-dependent overexpression of Bcl-2 in metastatic breast cancer cells. 1240 4

The introduction of a concept proposing multiple cellular subgroups in the normal female breast, including cytokeratin 5/6 (Ck 5/6)-positive progenitor cells, offers a new explanation for the existence of highly aggressive breast cancers with and without Ck 5/6 expression. Using the tissue microarray technique, 166 breast cancer cases, all characterized by comparative genomic hybridization, were evaluated by immunohistochemistry, using 15 different antibodies (estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor, p53, Ki-67, c-erbB2, epidermal growth factor receptor, cyclins A, D1, and E, bcl-2, p21, p27, Ck 5/6, Ck 8/18, and smooth muscle actin) and chromogenic in situ hybridization for c-erbB2. Biomathematical cluster analysis was applied to confirm the conventional interpretation of the results by an independent approach. Ck 5/6-positive breast carcinomas were in general negative for estrogen receptor and progesterone receptor, were highly proliferating (as reflected by Ki67 and cyclin A), and were associated with specific protein expression patterns, such as expression of p53 and epithelial growth factor receptor (all related to more aggressive tumor behavior), which could further be demonstrated by biomathematical cluster analysis. In contrast Ck 5/6-negative breast carcinomas revealed a lower tumor proliferation rate, an increased expression of p21, p27, c-erbB2, and bcl-2, and a significantly lower number of genetic alterations, with losses of chromosomal material of 16q as the most common genetic alteration. Our data give the first hints to the hypothesis that different cellular subgroups in the female breast give rise to subgroups of breast carcinomas with differing protein expression and cytogenetic alteration patterns that may be related to clinical behavior.
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PMID:Cytogenetic alterations and cytokeratin expression patterns in breast cancer: integrating a new model of breast differentiation into cytogenetic pathways of breast carcinogenesis. 1242 12

There has been considerable variability in the reported results of immunohistochemical staining for some diagnostically relevant antigens. Our objectives in this study were to (1) use a multitumor tissue microarray with tissue from 351 cases received in our department, representing 16 normal tissues and 47 different tumor types, to compare immunohistochemical staining results in our laboratory with published data, using a panel of 22 antibodies; (2) assess interlaboratory variability of immunohistochemical staining for S-100 using this microarray; and (3) test the ability of hierarchical clustering analysis to group tumors by primary site, based on their immunostaining profile. Tissue microarrays consisting of duplicate 0.6-mm cores from blocks identified in the hospital archives were constructed and stained according to our usual protocols. Antibodies directed against the following antigens were used: B72.3, bcl-2, carcinoembryonic antigen, c-kit, pankeratin, CD 68, CD 99, CK 5/6, CK 7, CK 8/18, CK19, CK 20, CK 22, epithelial membrane antigen, estrogen receptor, melan-A, p53, placental alkaline phosphatase, S-100, synaptophysin, thyroid transcription factor-1, and vimentin. Staining results on the array cases were compared with published results, and hierarchical clustering analysis was performed based on the immunohistochemical staining results. Unstained slides of the multitumor tissue microarray were sent to five other diagnostic immunohistochemistry laboratories and stained for S-100 protein. The staining results from the different laboratories were compared. Staining results using our current methods and samples from our laboratory were compatible with those described in the literature for most antigens. Placental alkaline phosphatase staining was not specific with our protocol, showing staining of a broad spectrum of different tumors; this finding initiated a review of our recent requests for placental alkaline phosphatase immunostaining and revealed two instances in which placental alkaline phosphatase positivity was incorrectly interpreted as evidence of a germ cell tumor. S-100 staining was less sensitive but more specific for the diagnosis of melanoma or neural tumor in our laboratory, compared to some published reports. Assessment of interlaboratory variability of S-100 immunostaining showed that there was more frequent staining of carcinomas in some laboratories, resulting in decreased specificity of S-100 staining in distinguishing melanoma from carcinoma. Hierarchical clustering analysis showed a strong trend for tumors to cluster by tissue of origin, but there were significant exceptions. We conclude that multiple-tumor microarrays are an efficient method for assessing the sensitivity and specificity of staining with any antibody used diagnostically. As a tool for quality assurance, they offer the advantage of taking into account local differences in tissue fixation, processing, and staining. They also allow cost-effective assessment of interlaboratory variability in immunohistochemical staining. Results of hierarchical clustering analysis show the potential for panels of immunohistochemical stains to identify the primary site of metastatic carcinomas but also confirm the limitations of currently available antibodies in giving unequivocal tissue-specific staining patterns.
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PMID:Tissue microarrays are an effective quality assurance tool for diagnostic immunohistochemistry. 1248 Oct 20

Young women with breast cancer have a more unfavorable outcome and advanced disease than older women. This study was initiated to determine the difference in tumor biology between younger and older groups. One hundred fifty-five patients with invasive ductal carcinoma, not otherwise specified, comprised the study group, including 50 women aged less than 35 years, 50 aged 36 to 50 years, and 55 aged more than 50 years. Histopathologic parameters, including tumor size, combined histologic grade, and axillary lymph node status, were studied. Biomarkers, including estrogen receptor status, tumor proliferation rate as determined by Ki-67, and gene expressions of c-erbB-2, p53, bcl-2, and BRCA1, were determined by immunohistochemistry. Comparisons of the distribution of these parameters in three age groups were performed. Breast cancer occurring in women aged less than 35 years had a significantly higher incidence of large tumor, high proliferation rate, and loss of nuclear BRCA1 expression (44.0% versus 22.0% or 23.6%) than in the two older age groups. Breast cancer in women aged less than 35 years also had higher histologic grade and higher frequency of bcl-2-negative tumor than that found in the 36- to 50-year age group. No difference was found in lymph node status and c-erbB-2 and p53 gene expressions between the age groups. Loss of BRCA1 nuclear expression significantly correlated with higher histologic grade and high Ki-67 index (P < 0.05) in group A. These findings suggested that women aged less than 35 years have frequent loss of nuclear BRCA1 expression, which may be responsible for the specific tumor biology different from older women. However, c-erbB-2 and p53 gene expressions seem to have no important role in the adverse tumor behavior of breast cancer in young women.
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PMID:Frequent loss of BRCA1 nuclear expression in young women with breast cancer: an immunohistochemical study from an area of low incidence but early onset. 1260 98

Bcl-2, a member of the apoptosis-regulating family of proteins confers a survival advantage on cells by inhibiting apoptosis. Bcl-2 expression is estrogen-responsive and high in various tumors. Overexpression of Bcl-2 has been associated with the loss of contact inhibition, unregulated growth and foci formation in culture. In this study, we have examined the effects of bcl-2 overexpression and expression on cell-cell adhesion in MCF-7 and MDCK epithelial cell lines respectively. Overexpression of Bcl-2 in estrogen receptor-positive MCF-7 mammary carcinoma cells led to decreased cell surface E-cadherin and the disruption of junctional complexes concurrent with intracellular redistribution of their components. Particularly noticeable, was the partial nuclear localization of the tight junction-associated protein ZO-1 which coincided with upregulation of ErbB2. The expression of this EGF co-receptor is regulated by the ZO-1-associated transcription factor ZONAB. Growth in estrogen-depleted media led to downregulation of Bcl-2 expression and upregulation and membrane localization of all junctional proteins. Similar disruption in junctions, accompanied by decreased transepithelial resistance, was observed when Bcl-2 was expressed in MDCK cells. These results strongly suggest that Bcl-2 expression decreases the level of functional E-cadherin thereby interfering with junction formation. The inhibition of junction formation decreases cell-cell adhesion leading to the loss of contact inhibition, which, in vivo, can lead to unregulated growth and tumorigenesis.
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PMID:Bcl-2 expression decreases cadherin-mediated cell-cell adhesion. 1289 Jul 51

Although many estrogen receptor-positive breast cancers initially respond to antihormones, responses are commonly incomplete with resistance ultimately emerging. Delineation of signaling mechanisms underlying these phenomena would allow development of therapies to improve antihormone response and compromise resistance. This in vitro investigation in MCF-7 breast cancer cells examines whether epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) signaling limits antiproliferative and proapoptotic activity of antihormones and ultimately supports development of resistance. It addresses whether the anti-EGFR agent gefitinib (ZD1839/Iressa; TKI: 1 mum) combined with the antihormones 4-hydroxytamoxifen (TAM: 0.1 mum) or fulvestrant (Faslodex; 0.1 mum) enhances growth inhibition and prevents resistance. TAM significantly suppressed MCF-7 growth over wk 2-5, reducing proliferation detected by immunocytochemistry and fluorescence-activated cell sorter cell cycle analysis. A modest apoptotic increase was observed by fluorescence-activated cell sorter and fluorescence microscopy, with incomplete bcl-2 suppression. EGFR induction occurred during TAM response, as measured by immunocytochemistry and Western blotting, with EGFR-positive, highly proliferative resistant growth subsequently emerging. Although TKI alone was ineffective on growth, TAM plus TKI cotreatment exhibited superior antigrowth activity vs. TAM, with no viable cells by wk 12. Cotreatment was more effective in inhibiting proliferation, promoting apoptosis, and eliminating bcl-2. Cotreatment blocked EGFR induction, markedly depleted ERK1/2 MAPK and protein kinase B phosphorylation, and prevented emergence of EGFR-positive resistance. Faslodex plus TKI cotreatment was also a superior antitumor strategy. Thus, increased EGFR evolves during treatment with antihormones, limiting their efficacy and promoting resistance. Gefitinib addition to antihormonal therapy could prove more effective in treating estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer and may combat development of resistance.
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PMID:The antiepidermal growth factor receptor agent gefitinib (ZD1839/Iressa) improves antihormone response and prevents development of resistance in breast cancer in vitro. 1296 29


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