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Query: UNIPROT:P00750 (
PLA
)
16,800
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The biological effects of estriol (E3) have been studied in three estrogen targets, namely, the rat uterus in vivo and in vitro, in primary human endometrial cell cultures and in MCF-7 human breast cancer cells in culture. Studies on the temporal relationships between estrogen receptor binding and biological responses in the uterus using estriol and several more long-acting estriol derivatives, namely, 17 alpha-ethynyl estriol, estriol-3-cyclopentyl ether, and 17 alpha-ethynyl estriol-3-cyclopentyl ether, indicate that estriol is a short-acting compound with a brief duration of action. Estriol is a poor stimulator of uterine growth and
plasminogen activator
activity in vivo. Chemical modifications of the estriol molecule produce long-acting derivatives that result in a prolonged input of hormone receptor complexes into the nucleus and a prolonged and marked stimulation of uterine growth. In human endometrial cells in primary tissue culture, E3 has 12% the affinity of estradiol (E2) for cytosol estrogen receptor and it is quite effective yet slightly less potent than estradiol in stimulation of
progesterone receptor
synthesis. Low concentrations of E3 (10(-10) M) stimulate growth of MCF-7 cells in vitro and dose-response curves show E3 to be only slightly less effective than E2. In these endometrial and breast cancer cell systems in vitro, there is no metabolism of E3 while E2 is metabolized to estrone. Hence, estriol is an effective estrogen in vitro. In vivo, it is short-acting, but it can be made a full estrogen agonist when given at a sufficiently high concentration or in a chemically modified form which prolongs its activity by enabling effective concentrations of the compound to be maintained in the blood and in target tissues.
...
PMID:Biology and receptor interactions of estriol and estriol derivatives in vitro and in vivo. 672 48
Plasminogen activator (PA) is a serine protease existing in two forms known as tissue-type (
t-PA
) and urokinase-type (u-PA). To examine whether PA is related to the postoperative clinical course of human breast cancer, total PA activity,
t-PA
activity, u-PA activity, and immunoreactive
t-PA
were determined in tissue extracts from 144 breast cancer specimens. The patients were initially divided into four groups according to the postoperative clinical course: Group I (83 patients who are disease-free), Group II (20 patients whose first metastases were found only in bone), Group III (19 patients whose first metastases were found in both bone and lung), and Group IV (22 patients whose first metastases were found only in lung). Total PA activity was significantly lower in Groups, II, III and IV than in Group I. Both
t-PA
activity and
t-PA
antigen levels were also significantly lower in Groups II, III and IV than in Group I, while no significant difference was found in u-PA activity among these groups, indicating that low activity of total PA in Groups II, III and IV was due to a decrease in
t-PA
but not in u-PA. In the multivariate analyses,
t-PA
activity was found to be an independent prognostic factor for relapse-free survival. When four groups of patients were further analysed in terms of nodal status, both
t-PA
activity and antigen levels were markedly decreased in the node-negative Group II compared with the node-negative Groups III and IV or with the node-positive Groups II, III and IV. Of additional interest, u-PA activity was significantly higher in node-positive patients than in node-negative patients with any group. The clinico-pathologic analyses of the patients in this series showed that node involvement and lymphatic invasion were more frequently positive in Groups III and IV than in Groups I and II. When 144 breast cancers were categorised in terms of combinations of oestrogen receptor (ER) and
progesterone receptor
(PgR) status, breast cancers which were positive for both receptors were found to contain the highest
t-PA
activity and antigen. This study provides provocative evidence suggesting a possible differential significance of
t-PA
and u-PA expression in human breast cancer.
...
PMID:Differential biological significance of tissue-type and urokinase-type plasminogen activator in human breast cancer. 839 31
Plasminogen activator (PA) is a serine protease which exists in two forms: tissue-type (
t-PA
) and urokinase-type (u-PA). The total PA activity was measured in tumour extracts of 235 breast cancer patients who were followed for a median of 8.5 years after surgery. Patients were initially divided into three groups with low (< 60 units mg-1 protein), intermediate (60-300 unit mg-1 protein), or high (> 300 unit mg-1 protein) total PA activity in tumour extracts. The PA activity was not significantly associated with the recognised prognostic factors of age, menstrual status, tumour size, lymph node involvement, histologic type, grade of anaplasia, and/or vessel involvement. A significant association was found between total PA activity and the oestrogen receptor (ER) or
progesterone receptor
(PgR) status. Among receptor-positive tumours, a significantly greater proportion of patients had high PA activity in their tumour extracts. Breast cancer patients with low total PA activity had a significantly shorter disease-free and overall survival rate when compared to those with intermediate or high PA activity. In univariate and multivariate analyses, total PA activity (< 60 unit mg-1 vs > or = 60 unit mg-1 protein) was found to be a significant prognostic factor for disease-free and overall survival of about the same import as lymph node involvement. Furthermore, the combination of total PA activity and nodal status could be even more precise in predicting survival times and probabilities in individual patients. This retrospective study demonstrates the total PA activity is a valuable prognostic factor in determining prognosis in human breast cancer.
...
PMID:Breast cancer prognosis is poor when total plasminogen activator activity is low. 843 69
Urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA) is a key protease in cancer invasion and metastasis. Recent studies demonstrated that u-PA, plasminogen activator inhibitor type-1 (PAI-1), and
tissue-type plasminogen activator
(t-PA) are prognostic factors in breast cancer. However, there have been no prospective studies of node-negative breast cancer on a multicenter basis. On the other hand, some patients, even those with node-negative breast cancer, developed recurrence, and only tumor size is available as a predicting factor in this group. Therefore, it is necessary to find other prognostic factors in node-negative breast cancer to determine suitable adjuvant therapies. Tissue samples in this prospective study were obtained from 130 patients with node-negative invasive breast cancer who underwent radical operation at four hospitals. The median follow-up was 52.6 months. u-PA, PAI-1, and t-PA antigen levels were assayed by ELISA kits using the cytosolic fractions of tumors. Patients with high u-PA, high PAI-1, or low t-PA had significantly higher relapse rates than did those with low u-PA, low PAI-1, or high t-PA, respectively, by the Kaplan-Meier method (P = 0.006, 0.032, and 0.028, respectively). Analyses of the combinations of both u-PA and PAI-1 or both u-PA and t-PA showed that the differences in relapse rate between the high- and low-risk groups were statistically very significant. In the univariate analysis, u-PA, PAI-1, t-PA,
progesterone receptor
, and tumor size (T3 versus T1) were significantly correlated with relapse. However, the multivariate analysis revealed that only u-PA (P = 0.023) was an independent prognostic factor. This study showed that u-PA was a new significant independent prognostic factor in node-negative breast cancer.
...
PMID:Prognostic impact of urokinase-type plasminogen activator (PA), PA inhibitor type-1, and tissue-type PA antigen levels in node-negative breast cancer: a prospective study on multicenter basis. 951 68
BACKGROUND: Prognostic factors for predicting the recurrence of node-negativebreast cancers have been controversial. The present study was performed to elucidate practically useful prognostic factors using formalin-fixed paraffin sections. METHODS: This was a case-controlled multi-institutional study that composed 40 patients with recurrent node-negative breast cancer and 80 patients with node-negative breast cancer but without recurrence after radical surgery. Tumors weresmaller than 3 cm in diameter and were treated surgically between January 1, 1985 and December 31, 1990. The recurrent and non-recurrent cases were matched with regard to their age, adjuvant chemotherapy and the year in which surgery was performed. Fourteen immunohistochemical factors and 8 histological factors of theprimary tumor were studied on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded sections by immunohistochemical and histochemical analyses. RESULTS: According to univariate analysis, factors such as
progesterone receptor
(PgR), MIB-1, CD44v6, CD44v9 and platelet-derived endothelial cell growth factor (PDECGF) were significantly different between the recurrent and non-recurrent groups (p &ly; 0.1; Wilcoxon-Mann-Whitney analysis). Chi-squared test showed significant differences in MIB-1, cdc2 and stromal
plasminogen activator
receptor (suPAR). Histologically, mitotic count was also significantly different between the two groups (p < 0.005). Multivariate analysis revealed that positivity for cdc2 (p=0.01), high mitotic count (p=0.04) and negativity for CD44v9 (p=0.02)were independent prognostic factors among variables selected by univariate analysis, and that positivity for MIB-1 (p=0.03) and cdc2 (p =0.01), and negativity for CD44v9 (p =0.03) were independent prognostic factors among the immunohistochemical markers examined. CONCLUSION: Our results indicated that positivity for MIB-1 and cdc2, high mitotic count and negativity for CD44v9 could serve as independent factors for predicting the recurrence of node-negative breast cancer.
...
PMID:Prognostic Factors for Node-negative Breast Cancers: Results of a Study Program by the Japanese Breast Cancer Society. 1109 54
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
One of the potential therapeutic interventions to hormone-independent breast cancer would be to reactivate the expression of estrogen receptor or
progesterone receptor
(PR) in the tumor cells so as to render the tumor responsive to the hormones. We have reported previously that progesterone markedly inhibited cell growth and induced remarkable focal adhesions in PR-transfected MDA-MB-231 cells. The aim of this study was to determine the effects of progesterone on the invasive properties and in vivo tumor growth of PR-transfected MDA-MB-231 cells. It was found that progesterone has increased cell resistance to trypsin digestion and increased cell attachment to extracellular matrix proteins, especially laminin and fibronectin. In vitro invasion assays using modified Boyden chambers showed that progesterone increased cell migration through matrix protein-coated membranes. However, Northern blotting analysis demonstrated that progesterone strongly down-regulated (up to 60-fold) the gene expression of urokinase plasminogen activator and increased (up to 5-fold) the expression of
tissue-type plasminogen activator
in these cells. This pattern of gene regulation suggested an inhibition of cell invasiveness because numerous clinical studies have indicated that low levels of urokinase plasminogen activator and high levels of
tissue-type plasminogen activator
in breast cancer are associated with favorable prognosis. Furthermore, animal studies showed that progesterone strongly inhibited the tumor formation and growth in Scid mice. After 12 weeks of inoculation, the median weight of tumors in the progesterone-treated group was 25 mg compared with 203 mg in the placebo group (P < 0.001). These results suggest that progesterone may provide effective treatment for estrogen receptor- and PR-negative breast cancer if the PR expression were reactivated. Alternatively, activation of progesterone-mediated molecular pathways in hormone-independent breast cancer may achieve similar therapeutic effects.
...
PMID:Effect of progesterone on the invasive properties and tumor growth of progesterone receptor-transfected breast cancer cells MDA-MB-231. 1155 6
Both urokinase-like
plasminogen activator
(uPA) and its inhibitor plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI-1), as well as uPA-PAI-1 complexes, have been identified as important prognostic factors in breast cancer. We have recently reported that the latter are identifiable inside breast cancer cells by means of immunohistochemistry. Using this technique, we have studied a series of 212 early (pT1) unifocal breast cancers and have correlated the expression of uPA-PAI-1 complexes, together with other clinical and biological features (histologic variety, histologic and nuclear grade, hormone receptors, Ki67 labelling index, c-erb-B2-, p53- and CD44std-expression) with or without the occurrence of axillary node invasion. In a logistic regression model, looking for associations with axillary metastasis, we found a statistically significant interaction between the presence of uPA-PAI-1 complexes and
progesterone receptor
positivity (P=0.04). A final model showed that the presence of uPA-PAI-1 complexes was a determinant factor for axillary metastasis among women carrying tumours expressing progesterone receptors. In these cases, the presence of uPA-PAI-1 complexes carried with it a nearly 14-fold risk of axillary node invasion (P=0.009). These results may indicate that small, hormone-receptor-positive breast cancers (with a theoretical good prognosis) may carry an elevated risk of nodal involvement if accumulation of uPA-PAI-1 complexes is shown inside their tumour cells by means of immunohistochemistry.
...
PMID:Accumulation of uPA-PAI-1 complexes inside the tumour cells is associated with axillary nodal invasion in progesterone-receptor-positive early breast cancer. 1255 66
At the Centre Oscar Lambret, the anticancer centre of the North of France, sentinel lymph node (SLN) procedures are routinely performed for localized (T0-T1, N0, M0) breast carcinoma without any previous treatment, in order to prevent the deleterious effects of axillary lymph node dissection. The present study was undertaken to assess if the expression in the tumor of a panel of 19 genes would allow to predict histological SLN involvement. We looked at cytokeratin 19 (CK19), mucin-1 (MUC1), mammaglobin (MGB1), cyclin D1 (CCND1), the four members of the HER/ErbB growth factor receptor family (EGFR, HER2-4), insulin-like growth factor-1 receptor (IGF-1R), estradiol receptors (ERalpha, ERbeta),
progesterone receptor
(PR), vascular endothelial growth factors (VEGF, VEGF-C), urokinase-like
plasminogen activator
(uPA), matrix metalloproteinases 2 and 9 (MMP2, MMP9), ets-related transcription factor ERM, and E-cadherin (CDH1). Their expression was quantified by real-time RT-PCR in 134 breast cancer samples and the relationships with SLN metastases were analyzed. A slight increase (35-40%) in CK19 and HER3 expression was observed in the tumors of patients with SLN metastases compared to those of patients without metastases, even if neither CK19 expression nor HER3 expression allowed to distinguish patients with micrometastases from patients with macrometastases. We conclude that the tumoral expression of biological parameters involved in cell proliferation or playing a critical role in the metastatic process, including tumor invasion and angiogenesis, is not strongly associated with SLN metastases.
...
PMID:Real-time reverse-transcription PCR to quantify a panel of 19 genes in breast cancer: relationships with sentinel lymph node invasion. 1840 45
To gain further insight into how estrogens modulate cell function, the effects of estrogen on cell proliferation were studied in human breast cancer cells. We examined the effects of estrogen on the proliferation of three human breast cancer cell lines that differed in their estrogen receptor contents. Ten nM estradiol markedly stimulated the proliferation of MCF-7 human breast cancer cells that contained high levels of estrogen receptor (1.15+/-0.03 pmole/mg protein) over that of control. In T47D cells that contained low levels of estrogen receptor (0.23+/-0.05 pmole/mg protein), Ten nM estrogen slightly stimulated the proliferation over that of control. MDA-MB-231 cells, that contained no detectable levels of estrogen receptors, had their growth unaffected by estrogen. These results showed their sensitivity to growth stimulation by estrogen correlated well with their estrogen receptor content. Also we examined the effect of estrogen on cellular
progesterone receptor
level as well as
plasminogen activator
activity in MCF-7 cells. Ten nM estradiol showed maximal stimulation of
progesterone receptor
level as well as
plasminogen activator
activity in MCF-7 cells. It is not clear whether these stimulations of
progesterone receptor
and
plasminogen activator
activity by estrogen are related to the estrogen stimulation of cell proliferation of MCF-7 cells. Studies with estrogen in human breast cancer cells in culture indicate that sensitivity to growth stimulation by estrogen correlates well with estrogen receptor contents.
...
PMID:Estrogen modulation of human breast cancer cell growth. 1898 61
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