Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P04155 (pS2)
1,234 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

To study the mechanism of regression of human mammary cancer following estrogen ablation, estrogen-responsive MCF-7 human mammary adenocarcinoma cells were inoculated into ovariectomized female nude mice supplemented with exogenous 17 beta-estradiol (E2) via an E2 implant. Implants were then removed when MCF-7 tumors were 400 mm3 in size. Removal of the E2 implants resulted in a 50% tumor regression by 2 weeks following E2 ablation. Associated with this regression is a rapid (i.e., within 1 day following E2 ablation) enhanced expression of the transforming growth factor beta 1 and TRPM-2-genes, two genes the expression of which has been previously demonstrated to be enhanced in a variety of cell types induced to undergo programmed cell death (i.e., apoptosis). The enhanced expression of transforming growth factor beta 1 and TRPM-2 is not a nonspecific response since the expression of other genes, like c-fos, c-H-ras, and pS2, decrease following E2 ablation. Fragmentation of tumor DNA into nucleosomal oligomers and histological appearance of apoptotic bodies are characteristic early events that precede the dramatic reduction in tumor volume following E2 ablation. These results demonstrate that the regression of MCF-7 human mammary cancers in nude mice following estrogen ablation is due to a sequence of biochemical and morphological changes that result in both the cessation of cell proliferation and activation of programmed death or apoptosis of these MCF-7 cancer cells. Clarification of the biochemical pathway involved in the activation of this programmed cell death should identify new targets of therapy for even estrogen-independent human mammary cancer cells.
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PMID:Programmed cell death during regression of the MCF-7 human breast cancer following estrogen ablation. 189 37

The phorbol ester, 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) (10 nM) produce a marked reduction in the growth, measured by thymidine uptake, of MCF-7 cells in full growth medium, but had only a small effect on MDA-MB-231 and T47D cells. Bryostatin alone also inhibited growth but to a lesser extent than seen with TPA. The effect of TPA on MCF-7 cells was partially reversed by bryostatin, added simultaneously or after TPA, suggesting bryostatin does not simply mimic TPA in this system. Even though both are believed to act via effects on protein kinase C, bryostatin appears to act as antagonist to the effect of TPA as well as a partial agonist on its own. When the oestrogen receptor positive MCF-7 and T47D cells were maintained in charcoal stripped serum, the increase in DNA synthesis on stimulation with oestradiol was inhibited with 50 nM TPA in MCF-7 cells but not in T47D cells. The effects of these treatments on the expression of two well characterised oestrogen responsive genes pNR2(pS2) and pNR100 (Cathepsin-D) were examined. Rather than preventing transcription of these oestrogen responsive genes, TPA alone increased pNR2 and pNR100 levels in MCF-7 cells and the combined effect of oestradiol and TPA had a marked synergistic effect in increasing the transcript levels of these genes. In T47D cells pNR2 transcripts were not detected and the increase in pNR100 mRNA levels were not affected by TPA. We conclude that the inhibitory effects of TPA on the growth stimulation of MCF-7 cells by oestradiol was not due to a general inhibition of the expression of oestrogen responsive genes. An alternative possibility examined was that the growth inhibitory effect of TPA on MCF-7 cells might be due to stimulation of TGF-beta 1, acting as an autocrine inhibitory growth factor. Oestradiol treatment of MCF-7 cells reduced the levels of TGF-beta 1 mRNA whereas TPA produced a marked increase. The combined effect of TPA and oestradiol further increased TGF-beta 1 mRNA above the levels seen with TPA alone. Bryostatin had little effect on TGF-beta 1 expression either alone or in combination with oestradiol. These observations are consistent with the hypothesis that the inhibitory effect of TPA on MCF-7 cells may be partly due to autocrine inhibition by TGF-beta 1.
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PMID:Phorbol ester and bryostatin effects on growth and the expression of oestrogen responsive and TGF-beta 1 genes in breast tumour cells. 191 Dec 15

The pNR-2/pS2 protein is regulated by oestrogens in breast cancer cell lines. This report describes a systematic survey of pNR-2/pS2 expression in a number of common epithelial tumours. Expression was evaluated immunohistochemically in an archival series using antisera raised against the C-terminus of the pNR-2/pS2 protein. Expression of pNR-2/pS2 by malignant epithelial tumours was widespread. Intense immunohistochemical staining was found in tumour cells in a proportion of pancreatic (6/8), large intestinal (7/12), gastric (9/16) and endometrial (4/12) carcinomas. Positive staining for the pNR-2/pS2 protein was also found in both benign and malignant ovarian epithelial tumours and was very significantly associated with mucinous differentiation (P less than 0.00001). Small numbers of carcinomas of bladder (2/10) and prostate (2/7) showed less intense staining and single examples of cervical carcinoma (1/7) and lung carcinoma (1/19) stained positively. None of the renal carcinomas (0/16) examined stained positively. Positive staining showed no correlation with gender. Although there are reports of oestrogen receptor expression in most of the tumour types considered, the possibility of other regulatory influences must also be considered. The pNR-2/pS2 protein may well have a more general role in human epithelial neoplasia than hitherto realised.
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PMID:Expression of the pNR-2/pS2 protein in diverse human epithelial tumours. 191 Dec 16

The binding affinity and relative estrogenic potency of 2-bromo-, 4-bromo-, 2-methyl- and 4-methylestradiol was evaluated in MCF-7 breast cancer cells. The relative binding affinities compared to estradiol were 47% for 2-methyl-, 25% for 4-methyl-, 37% for 4-bromo- and 17% for 2-bromoestradiol. However, both 2- and 4-methyl- as well as 2- and 4-bromoestradiol were able (a) to translocate the cytosolic estrogen receptor into the nucleus and (b) to induce the progesterone receptor in a concentration dependent manner. Finally, all ring-A substituted estrogens used in this study induced the pS2 mRNA as demonstrated by Northern-blotting. From these findings we conclude that 2-bromo-, 4-bromo-, 2-methyl- and 4-methylestradiol are agonistic ligands for the estrogen receptor in MCF-7 breast cancer cells.
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PMID:Methyl and bromo derivatives of estradiol are agonistic ligands for the estrogen receptor of MCF-7 breast cancer cells. 191 26

We studied the ELSA-pS2 immunoradiometric kit (CIS Bio International) for pS2 protein assay in breast cancer cytosols according to classic validation methods. In addition, we studied correlations between pS2, steroid receptors, and cathepsin-D assays. Repeatability (CV = 1.5% to 4.8%) and reproducibility (CV = 1.6% to 4.9%) were good. The results were linearly related to pS2 concentrations between 205 and 2200 ng/L; the detection limit was 40 ng/L. The accuracy of the assay was measured by assessing recovery; analytical recoveries were near 100% throughout the standard curve. The use of different compounds for cytosol preparation (Tris 10 mmol/L or phosphate 25 mmol/L, KCl 0.4 mol/L, bovine serum albumin 1 g/L) had no effect on pS2 results. pS2 was assayed in breast tumor cytosols from 197 postmenopausal and 92 premenopausal patients. The mean value was 24 micrograms/g of protein; the median and 25th and 75th percentiles were 6, 1, and 23 micrograms/g protein, respectively. We observed a relation between concentrations of pS2 and those of estrogen and progesterone receptors, but there was no relationship between the concentrations of pS2 and cathepsin-D.
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PMID:Immunoradiometric assay of pS2 protein in breast cancer cytosols. 191 81

Expression of pS2 (an estrogen-induced gene isolated from breast carcinoma MCF7 cells) and of the human spasmolytic peptide (hSP) gene was analyzed in 21 human biliary tract and gallbladder carcinomas and 16 non-neoplastic gallbladders at the protein level (immunochemistry) and, in a series of these cases, at the RNA level (Northern blots). Eighteen carcinomas and 14 non-neoplastic mucosae with inflammatory alterations showed pS2 activity by immunostaining or Northern blotting. In addition, in samples with pS2 expression, hSP RNA was demonstrated. In the corresponding non-neoplastic and healthy mucosae, pS2 was negative, as judged by immunostaining. Northern blots showed weak (basal) level of activity for pS2 and hSP. The genes' increased expression in correlation to inflammatory and neoplastic processes, by now observed in several carcinomas and idiopathic inflammatory bowel disease, hints to their essential role in such diseases.
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PMID:Breast cancer-associated protein pS2 expression in tumors of the biliary tract. 192 43

Two different precursors for secretory polypeptides from the stomach of Xenopus laevis have been characterized by cDNA cloning. Both mature polypeptides are potential candidates for gastrointestinal growth factors. One, xP1, is the X. laevis homologue of the pS2 gene product consisting only of a single P-domain, whereas the second, xP4, is a novel polypeptide formed by four P-domains arranged in tandem. Northern analysis detected both transcripts in the stomach but not in the skin or the brain. In situ hybridizations localized the expression of both precursors in surface mucous cells of the gastric mucosa. With an antibody generated against the deduced C-terminal end of xP4, the mature polypeptide was investigated by Western analysis revealing N-glycosylation of xP4.
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PMID:xP1 and xP4. P-domain peptides expressed in Xenopus laevis stomach mucosa. 193 67

The recently discovered pS2 protein is expressed under estrogen control in a subset of estrogen receptor-positive breast cancers and in an estrogen-independent manner in normal stomach mucosa. The pS2 gene belongs to a family of genes encoding peptides that contain a conserved 5-cysteine domain, the P domains. Although the function of the pS2 protein is unknown, it has been suggested that it may have cell growth stimulatory activity. We report here that expression of the pS2 gene in the digestive tract, which is normally restricted to the stomach, is strongly induced by mucosal ulcerations elsewhere in the tract, most notably in Crohn's disease. pS2 gene expression is restricted to the mucosal layers adjacent to the ulcerations, in a region where a novel epidermal growth factor-secreting cell lineage was shown to be induced by mucosal ulceration. The human hSP gene, which contains a tandem duplication of the pS2 gene P domain and is coexpressed with the pS2 gene in normal stomach mucosa but not in breast cancers, is also expressed in Crohn's disease. We suggest that pS2 gene expression may provide a useful marker for mucosal ulcerations of the digestive tract.
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PMID:Induction of pS2 and hSP genes as markers of mucosal ulceration of the digestive tract. 198 35

Seventy-two patients with advanced breast carcinoma (42% bone, 25% visceral, 5.5% soft tissue, and 27.5% multiple site metastases) were evaluated to determine the relationship between tumor expression of the estrogen-regulated protein pS2, estrogen receptor (ER) or progesterone receptor (PgR) content, and response to hormonal therapy. Twenty-nine % of tumors were pS2 positive, 64% were ER positive, and 29% were PgR positive. Of the ER-positive patients (n = 43), 15 (35%) had greater than 10% of the invasive carcinoma which immunostained for pS2 (these were considered pS2 positive). Only 3 of 24 ER-negative tumors were pS2 positive. A weak association between pS2 expression and ER content (P = 0.08) but not PgR content was observed. Of pS2-positive patients, 52% had a partial or complete response to hormonal therapy. In 24% of pS2-positive patients the disease stabilized with treatment. In contrast, 27% of pS2-negative patients had a partial or complete response. In 10% of these patients the disease stabilized. Similar associations between therapeutic response and ER or PgR were not observed. The odds of having a clinical response to hormonal therapy was greater for pS2-positive than for ER- or PgR-positive tumors. pS2 expression may define a subset of ER-positive tumors that are more likely to respond to hormonal treatment.
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PMID:pS2 expression and response to hormonal therapy in patients with advanced breast cancer. 198 78

Expression of an estrogen-regulated protein known as the 27,000-d heat-shock or stress-response protein (srp-27) was evaluated in human breast carcinomas and established breast cancer cell lines. Results obtained by Northern and Western blot analyses and immunohistochemical methods were concordant. Immunohistochemical assessment of srp-27 expression in 300 breast carcinomas (with median patient follow-up of 8 years) was performed. Twenty-six percent of lymph node-negative and 45% of lymph node-positive tumors were overexpressors. Univariate analysis demonstrated significant correlations between srp-27 overexpression and estrogen receptor (ER) content, pS2 protein expression, nodal metastases, advanced T stage, lymphatic/vascular invasion, and a shorter disease-free survival period (but not a shorter overall survival) for the study population as a whole. Regression tree analysis showed that srp-27 expression was an independent prognostic indicator for disease-free survival only in patients with one to three positive lymph nodes. The Cox proportional hazards model confirmed the independent prognostic significance of nodal involvement, T stage, and ER content but failed to recognize srp-27 overexpression as a significant independent parameter predictive of patient outcome in the patient population as a whole. The observed associations between srp-27 overexpression and more aggressive tumors suggest a biologic role for srp-27 in human breast carcinomas.
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PMID:Stress response protein (srp-27) determination in primary human breast carcinomas: clinical, histologic, and prognostic correlations. 198 96


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