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Query: UNIPROT:P04155 (
pS2
)
1,234
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We previously established that the trefoil peptides (TFFs)
pS2
,
spasmolytic polypeptide
, and intestinal trefoil factor are involved in cellular scattering and invasion in kidney and colonic cancer cells. Using the chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) assay and the formation of tube-like structures by human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) plated on the Matrigel matrix substratum, we report here that TFFs are proangiogenic factors. Angiogenic activity of TFFs is comparable to that induced by vascular endothelial growth factor, leptin, and transforming growth factor-alpha. Stimulation of angiogenesis by
pS2
in the CAM assay is blocked by pharmacological inhibitors of cyclooxygenase COX-2 (NS-398) and epidermal growth factor receptor (EGF-R) tyrosine kinase (ZD1839), but is independent of KDR/Flk-1 and thromboxane A2 receptors. In contrast, the morphogenic switch induced by
pS2
in HUVEC cells could be inhibited by the specific KDR heptapeptide antagonist ATWLPPR and by inhibitors of COX-2 and EGF-R signaling. These results implicate TFFs in the formation of new blood vessels during normal and pathophysiological processes linked to wound healing, inflammation, and cancer progression in the digestive mucosa and other human solid tumors associated with aberrant expression of TFFs.
...
PMID:Trefoil peptides as proangiogenic factors in vivo and in vitro: implication of cyclooxygenase-2 and EGF receptor signaling. 1252 7
The origin of gastric metaplasia of the duodenum (GMD) remains enigmatic. We studied expression of mucins and trefoil peptides in GMD to gain insight into its phenotype and origin. We examined duodenal tissue of 95 patients (0 to 83 years old, 26 with gastric Helicobacter pylori infection) for the presence of GMD. Expression was examined immunohistochemically of secretory mucins (MUC2, MUC5AC, MUC5B, and MUC6), trefoil peptides (
TFF1
,
TFF2
, and TFF3), and sucrase-isomaltase (SI). GMD, found in 37 patients, correlated positively to gastric H. pylori infection, age, and villus atrophy. MUC2 and TFF3, expressed in normal goblet cells, were absent from 100% and 87% of GMD, respectively. GMD ubiquitously expressed MUC5AC, whereas MUC5AC expression in adjacent goblet cells was closely correlated with the extent of GMD.
TFF1
,
TFF2
, and MUC6 were found in 84%, 92%, and 65% of GMD, respectively. MUC5B was absent from epithelium and GMD. SI, expressed by villus enterocytes, was absent from GMD. Brunner's glands ubiquitously expressed MUC5B, MUC6, and
TFF2
. GMD was characterized by the expression of gastric-type proteins MUC5AC, MUC6,
TFF1
, and
TFF2
and the absence of intestinal markers MUC2, TFF3, and SI. In terms of the location of metaplastic cells, our results suggest that epithelial cells migrating toward villus tips switch to gastric-type secretory cells. Positive correlation with infection suggests an inductive role H. pylori in the development of GMD.
...
PMID:Metaplasia of the duodenum shows a Helicobacter pylori-correlated differentiation into gastric-type protein expression. 1261 84
TFF1
/
pS2
,
TFF2
/SP and TFF3/ITF are soluble peptides with trefoil domain(s) and C-terminal dimerization domain, which are conserved among human, cow, mouse and rat.
TFF1
mRNA is expressed in stomach (mucous cells in fundus and antrum),
TFF2
mRNA in stomach (mucous neck cells in fundus and basal cells in antral and pyloric glands) and duodenum (Brunner's gland), TFF3 mRNA in small intestine and large intestine (goblet cells). Expression of
TFF1
,
TFF2
and TFF3 mRNAs are differentially regulated by FGF2/bFGF, FGF7/KGF, estrogen, aspirin, arachidonic acid, X-ray irradiation, and hydrogen peroxide. Gastric cancer is classified into the intestinal type and the diffuse type. TFF mRNAs are preferentially expressed in diffuse-type gastric cancer cells. Custom-made microarray (TFF mRNAs) and ELISA (TFF proteins) might be applicable for screening methods of peritoneal and bone marrow dissemination from diffuse-type gastric cancer.
TFF1
and
TFF2
mRNAs are frequently down-regulated in intestinal-type gastric cancer.
TFF1
gene, inactivated by deletion, missense mutation and promoter hypermethylation, is a tumor suppressor gene implicated in gastric cancer.
TFF2
is a candidate tumor suppressor gene; however, genetic and epigenetic alterations of
TFF2
gene in human gastric cancer remain unclear.
TFF1
,
TFF2
and TFF3 play key roles in mucosal protection through mucous-barrier formation, and also in mucosal repair through promotion of restitution after injury. Patients with chronic atrophic gastritis and those with ulcerative colitis are at risk of gastric cancer and colorectal cancer, respectively.
TFF1
,
TFF2
and TFF3 proteins might be applicable for chemoprevention of gastrointestinal cancer associated with chronic persistent inflammation.
...
PMID:Trefoil factors and human gastric cancer (review). 1279 1
Down syndrome (DS) is the most frequent genetic disorder with mental retardation and caused by trisomy 21. Although the molecular mechanisms of the various phenotypes of DS could be due to overexpression of gene(s) on chromosome 21, several groups have challenged this gene dosage effect hypothesis. The near completion of the sequencing of human chromosome 21 provides unprecedented opportunities to understand the molecular pathology of DS, however, functional information on gene products is limited so far. We therefore evaluated the levels of six proteins whose genes are encoded on chromosome 21 (
trefoil factor 1
,
trefoil factor 2
, trefoil factor 3, coxsackie virus and adenovirus receptor, carbonyl reductase 1 and interferon- alpha receptor) in fetal cerebral cortex from DS and controls at the early second trimester using Western blot analysis. None of the investigated proteins showed overexpression in DS compared to controls suggesting that these proteins are not involved in abnormal development of fetal DS brain and that DS phenotype can not be simply explained by the gene dosage effect hypothesis. We are systematically quantifying all proteins whose genes are encoded on chromosome 21 and these studies may provide a better understanding of genotype-phenotype correlation in DS.
...
PMID:Protein levels of genes encoded on chromosome 21 in fetal Down syndrome brain: Challenging the gene dosage effect hypothesis (Part IV). 1283 57
Trefoil peptides (TFFs) are now considered as scatter factors, proinvasive and angiogenic agents acting through cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2)- and thromboxane A2 receptor (TXA2-R)-dependent signaling pathways. As expression and activation levels of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) predict the metastatic potential of human colorectal cancers, the purpose of this study was to establish whether the EGF receptor tyrosine kinase (EGFR-TK) contributes to cellular invasion induced by TFFs in kidney and colonic cancer cells. Both the dominant negative form of the EGFR (HER-CD533) and the EGFR-TK inhibitor ZD1839 (Iressa) abrogated cellular invasion induced by
pS2
,
spasmolytic polypeptide
(SP) and the src oncogene, but not by ITF and the TXA2-R. Similarly, EGFR-TK inhibition by ZD1839 reversed the invasive phenotype promoted by the constitutively activated form of the EGFR (EGFRvIII) and the EGFR agonists transforming growth factor alpha (TGFalpha), amphiregulin and EGF. We also provide evidence that TFFs, EGFRvIII, and TGFalpha trigger common proinvasive pathways using the PI3'-kinase and Rho/Rho- kinase cascades. These findings identify the EGFR-TK as a key signaling element for
pS2
- and SP-mediated cellular invasion. It is concluded that although
pS2
, SP and ITF belong to the same family of inflammation- and cancer-associated regulatory peptides, they do not control identical signaling networks.
...
PMID:Selective abrogation of the proinvasive activity of the trefoil peptides pS2 and spasmolytic polypeptide by disruption of the EGF receptor signaling pathways in kidney and colonic cancer cells. 1288 5
Peptides of the trefoil factor family (
TFF1
,
TFF2
and TFF3) are co-secreted with mucus in most organ systems and are believed to interact with mucins to produce high-viscosity, stable gel complexes. We have previously demonstrated that cells in the GI tract possess binding sites to
TFF2
and that injected
TFF2
ends up in the mucus layer. In the present study, tissue binding and metabolism of parenterally administered human
TFF1
and TFF3 in rats were described and compared to the immunohistochemical localization of the TFF peptides. 125I-
TFF1
monomer and 125I-TFF3 mono- and dimer were given intravenously to female Wistar rats. The tissue distribution was assessed by gamma counting of organ samples and by autoradiography of histological sections. The degradation of 125I-TFF3 was studied by means of trichloracetic acid (TCA) precipitation and the saturability of the binding by administration of excess unlabelled peptide. The TFF peptides were localized in histologic sections from the GI tract by immunohistochemistry. Injected TFF3 dimer (12%) was taken up by the GI tract. At autoradiography, grains were localized to the same cells that were immunoreactive to
TFF2
. The binding could be displaced by excess TFF3. Similar binding was observed for the
TFF1
and TFF3 monomers apart from binding in the stomach, where the uptake was only 15% in comparison to the dimer. There was no specific binding outside the GI tract and no binding to
TFF1
or TFF3 immunoreactive cells. In conclusion, the
TFF2
-binding cells in the gastrointestinal tract seem to have basolateral, receptor-like activity to all three TFF peptides. The mucous neck cells of the stomach predominantly take up TFFs with two trefoil domains, indicating a different receptor-like activity in the stomach compared to the rest of the GI tract.
...
PMID:Injected TFF1 and TFF3 bind to TFF2-immunoreactive cells in the gastrointestinal tract in rats. 1297 24
The phenomenon of reduced gastric mucosal injury despite repeated doses of a damaging agent is termed adaptation. Adaptation to nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug-induced injury has been clearly demonstrated in both humans and experimental animals; however, the precise mechanisms remain unclear. We hypothesized that mediators of adaptation might be the regenerating protein (RegI) and the trefoil peptides
TFF1
and
TFF2
, because these proteins play pivotal roles in gastric mucosal protection and repair. The gene expression and the protein levels of these proteins were measured and compared in normal, aspirin-injured, and aspirin-adapted rat stomachs. TFF gene and protein expression levels were similar in all three groups, whereas RegI gene expression and protein levels in adapted stomach were increased. A time course analysis of RegI expression during the onset and offset of adaptation showed that mucosal RegI increased during the development of adaptation, was maintained during subsequent aspirin dosing, and returned to baseline levels once dosing had ceased and adaptation was lost-indicative of a causal role in the adaptation process. Colocalization of increased RegI with gastric epithelial areas showing increased proliferation also suggests that RegI may be an important mediator of the resolution of mucosal injury that is characteristic of gastric adaptation to aspirin.
...
PMID:Insights into the mechanisms of gastric adaptation to aspirin-induced injury: a role for regenerating protein but not trefoil peptides. 1456 43
The trefoil protein TFF3 forms a homodimer (via a disulfide linkage) that is thought to have increased biological activity over the monomer. The solution structure of the TFF3 dimer has been determined by NMR and compared with the structure of the TFF3 monomer and with other trefoil dimer structures (
TFF1
and
TFF2
). The most significant structural differences between the trefoil domain in the monomer and dimer TFF3 are in the orientations of the N-terminal 3(10)-helix (residues 10-12) and in the presence in the dimer of an additional 3(10)-helix (residues 53-55) outside of the core region. The TFF3 dimer forms a more compact structure as compared with the
TFF1
dimer where the two trefoil domains are connected by a flexible region with the monomer units being at variable distances from each other and in many different orientations. Although
TFF2
is also a compact structure, the dispositions of its monomer units are very different from those of TFF3. The structural differences between the dimers result in the two putative receptor/ligand binding sites that remain solvent exposed in the dimeric structures having very different dispositions in the different dimers. Such differences have significant implications for the mechanism of action and functional specificity for the TFF class of proteins.
...
PMID:Solution structure of the disulfide-linked dimer of human intestinal trefoil factor (TFF3): the intermolecular orientation and interactions are markedly different from those of other dimeric trefoil proteins. 1469 Apr 24
Peritoneal wash cytology plays a pivotal role in the decision for gastric cancer treatment because advanced gastric cancer often turns out incurable with peritoneal metastasis. Molecular detection of minimal cancer cells from peritoneal washings may overcome the sensitivity boundary of conventional cytology and contribute to the prediction of the disease outcome. To select marker candidates out of ten thousands of genes, we performed microarray analyses in 12 gastric cell lines and 8 peritoneal washings of early stage cases. With 40 candidates selected by the above expression profiling, RT-PCR in 16 representative peritoneal wash samples was performed to identify genes specific to cytology positive samples. The finally selected five genes, CK20, FABP1, MUC2,
TFF1
, and
TFF2
, were then evaluated for their utility as a marker for minimal residual disease in 99 peritoneal wash samples. Nested RT-PCR using the five genes showed positive results highly specific to incurable cases (91-100%). With a high specificity, the combination of these five genes succeeded in identifying 6 out of 20 (30%) additional patients with all types of early recurrence that could not be predicted by the conventional method. The six newly identified recurrences included four non-peritoneal ones, showing that RT-PCR using the five genes without a real-time quantitative PCR technique contributes to the detection of minimal residual disease.
...
PMID:Highly specific marker genes for detecting minimal gastric cancer cells in cytology negative peritoneal washings. 1470 32
TFF3 is a member of the trefoil factor family (TFF) peptides, which enhance the surface integrity of mucous epithelia, and is typically secreted by intestinal goblet cells together with the mucin MUC2. Reports of the expression of TFF3 within the normal human stomach are contradictory and the precise localisation of TFF3 is unknown. We have mapped the human gastric mucosa by reverse transcription/polymerase chain reaction and Western blot analysis and by immunohistochemistry. Small amounts of TFF3 were detectable in the oxyntic mucosa of the corpus, whereas TFF3 synthesis increased sharply distal to the corpus-antrum transitional zone. TFF3 secretion was demonstrated in the antrum, the pyloric region and the proximal duodenum. High
TFF1
levels were present in all regions of the gastric mucosa including the corpus, whereas the proximal duodenum was nearly devoid of
TFF1
. Immunohistochemistry localised TFF3 to antral and pyloric surface mucous cells. In the antrum, an increasing concentration gradient was found towards cells deeper in the isthmus.
TFF1
was confined to superficial pit cells in the antrum. TFF3 was also present in specific layers of the laminated mucous gel of the antral and pyloric regions and variable concentrations of TFF3 (2-62 nmol/l) were measured in gastric juice. Here, a probably N-terminally shortened variant is present that forms disulphide-linked dimers. Thus, TFF3 is a typical secretory peptide of the normal human antral and pyloric gastric mucosa and has a gastric expression pattern different from that of
TFF1
and
TFF2
. TFF3 might therefore have important physiological functions in the stomach, e.g. as a luminal surveillance peptide maintaining particularly the integrity of the antral and pyloric mucosa.
...
PMID:A gradient of TFF3 (trefoil factor family 3) peptide synthesis within the normal human gastric mucosa. 1496 59
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