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Query: UNIPROT:P10415 (
Bcl-2
)
33,771
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The profiles of functional (proliferative rate and cell distribution in the cell cycle) and phenotypic (nuclear DNA content and
hormone receptor
status) biological markers and the expression of P53 and
Bcl-2
proteins were prospectively evaluated in breast cancers before and after different regimens of primary chemotherapy. Overall, changes induced on the 2 proliferation indices (3H-thymidine labelling index, 3H-dT LI, and flow-cytometric S-phase fraction, FCM-S) mainly consisted of a decrease for rapidly proliferating tumours and an increase or no change for slowly proliferating tumours. However, when considered as a function of treatment type, changes of 3H-dT LI and FCM-S were superimposable in rapidly proliferating tumours, regardless of the type of treatment, and in slowly proliferating tumours only after anthracycline-including regimens. Conversely, following CMF, FCM-S was increased in 90% of the cases and 3H-dT LI in only 50%. Our data imply that the 2 proliferation indices could reflect different phenomena: an actual variation of proliferative activity by 3H-dT LI and an accumulation of cells in the S-phase by FCM-S. In addition, a higher accumulation of cells in G2-M phases could be detected by FCM after anthracycline-including regimens than after CMF. The fraction of P53-positive cells was reduced by primary chemotherapy in about 50% of P53-positive tumours, whereas
Bcl-2
expression was only marginally affected. DNA ploidy and
hormone receptor
status did not change in about 75% of cases, regardless of the chemotherapeutic regimen.
...
PMID:Changes in biological markers after primary chemotherapy for breast cancers. 772 38
The protein encoded by the
Bcl-2
proto-oncogene has been shown to inhibit programmed cell death and has been primarily studied in hematolymphoid malignancies. Recent work ahs elucidated
Bcl-2
expression in nonhematolymphoid malignancies of the lung, prostate, and nasopharynx. Studies of
Bcl-2
expression in prostate carcinoma have suggested that its expression may be related to hormonal control. To determine its presence and possible significance in breast carcinoma, a malignancy in which therapy is influenced by
hormone receptor
status, we used a monoclonal antibody directed against the
Bcl-2
gene product to examine
Bcl-2
immunoreactivity in a series of paraffin-embedded primary breast tumors. Benign breast tissue showed
Bcl-2
positivity in the basal layer and in superficial cells. Twenty-four of 41 (58%) carcinomas were
Bcl-2
positive. Staining for
Bcl-2
was equivocal in two cases. We identified a strong correlation between
Bcl-2
expression and
hormone receptor
positivity as 23 of 24 (96%) cases that were
Bcl-2
positive were estrogen receptor (ER) positive (P = 0.0001) and 21 of 24 (87.5%) were positive for progesterone receptor PR (P = 0.0001). Of 15
Bcl-2
-negative cases, 14 (93%) were ER negative and all were PR negative. One case of mucinous carcinoma was ER positive and
Bcl-2
negative. Grade 1 and 2 tumors (Scarff-Bloom-Richardson scale) were almost three times as likely to be
Bcl-2
positive (90%) as grade 3 tumors (33%) (P = 0.0057).
Bcl-2
reactivity appears to be more prevalent in well-differentiated tumors, suggesting that its presence may diminish with loss of differentiation, a hypothesis that is further supported by a subset of cases that were ER negative,
Bcl-2
negative, and of poor histological grade. These may be tumors that do not require
Bcl-2
inhibition of apoptosis and respond to hormonally independent proliferation factors. Our findings support the hypothesis that
Bcl-2
expression may be related to hormonal regulation in breast carcinoma.
...
PMID:Bcl-2 immunoreactivity in breast carcinoma correlates with hormone receptor positivity. 808 38
The expression of p53 and bcl-2 was immunohistochemically investigated in 61 formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded invasive breast carcinomas. The study was aimed to elucidate the relationship between both markers and the correlation of p53 and bcl-2, respectively, to clinicopathological variables, to
hormone receptor
status and to DNA-ploidy. Twenty tumors showed a positive reaction with the monoclonal antibody DO-1 against p53 protein. Its immunohistochemical demonstration was significantly correlated with a tumor size larger than 2 cm, a low estrogen receptor status and DNA-aneuploidy.
Bcl-2
was demonstrated in 51 breast cancers.
Bcl-2
was preferably seen in low grade and
hormone receptor
positive tumors. We found a negative correlation between the immunoreactive scores of p53 and bcl-2, but in 17 carcinomas a coexpression of both proteins was seen. Cases with this coexpression did not differ significantly from the other tumors in clinicopathological parameters. In eight of these cases more than 10% of the cells were found to be positive for both markers. In four cases we could show many cells to exhibit both markers as it was assessed by an immunofluorescence double labeling technique.
...
PMID:Expression of p53 and bcl-2 in correlation to clinicopathological parameters, hormone receptor status and DNA ploidy in breast cancers. 882 13
The expression of
Bcl-2
, a suppressor of apoptotic cell death, was investigated in 52 invasive carcinomas of the breast using reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction and immunohistochemical methods. After consideration of both sets of results, 42 tumors (80.8%) were confirmed to be positive (
Bcl-2
(+)) and 10 (19.2%) were judged negative (
Bcl-2
(-)) for
Bcl-2
expression. Related factors (p53 protein accumulation,
hormone receptor
status and apoptotic cell index) were also examined using immunohistochemical and in situ end-labeling methods to elucidate their correlations with
Bcl-2
expression.
Bcl-2
expression correlated significantly with the
hormone receptor
status, whereas it showed significant inverse correlations with p53 accumulation and the apoptotic index. It was concluded that estrogen and mutant p53 are related to the regulation of
Bcl-2
expression and that the ability to prevent tumor cell death due to
Bcl-2
can be developed by breast cancers.
...
PMID:Expression of Bcl-2 in human breast cancer: correlation between hormone receptor status, p53 protein accumulation and DNA strand breaks associated with apoptosis. 941 34
The current study was performed on 38 cases of T1 breast cancers ( 2 cm in greatest diameter) to identify the factors related to recognition of axillary lymph node (AxLN) metastasis. Ten patients (26.3%) had lymph node metastases. Comparing the AxLN positive (+) group with the AxLN negative (-) group revealed that tumor size and
hormone receptor
status as well as age of the patients were not significantly different. However, the Ki-67 labeling index (22.2 +/- 5. 9% vs. 12.5 +/- 2.8%), the microvessel count (43.8 +/- 12.4/0.785 mm2 vs. 27.0 +/- 8.4/0.785 mm2) and bcl-2+ cases (70% vs. 29%) were significantly higher in the AxLN+ cases. These results suggest that the Ki-67 labeling index, microvessel count and
Bcl-2
expression, especially when combined, are useful predictors of AxLN metastases in T1 breast cancers.
...
PMID:Factors related to axillary lymph node metastasis in T1 breast carcinoma. 946 79
Previously, a
Bcl-2
-interacting protein, BAG-1, was cloned from mouse cells and was shown to interact with several other proteins and to be important for inhibition of apoptosis. Human BAG-1 (hBAG-1) cDNA, recently isolated by us and two other groups, has been shown to be identical to a
hormone receptor
-binding protein, RAP46. However, different molecular masses of hBAG-1 protein products were noted by these three groups. Here we demonstrated that hBAG-1 protein was expressed as four isoforms, designated p50, p46, p33 and p29, with apparent molecular masses of 50 kDa, 46 kDa, 33 kDa and 29 kDa, respectively. Deletion, site-directed mutagenesis and in vitro transcription/translation analysis showed that the four protein products of hBAG-1 were expressed by alternative initiation from four different start codons through a leaky scanning mechanism. Furthermore, we demonstrated that the distinct forms of hBAG-1 have different subcellular localizations, suggesting that they may have distinct functions in the cells. Characterization of hBAG-1 RNA and protein also showed that hBAG-1 was overexpressed in human cervical, breast and lung cancer cell lines. Taken together, these data clarify the conflicting observations reported in the literature and suggest that hBAG-1 is expressed as four forms of protein products, which may play a differential role in apoptosis and oncogenesis of human cells.
...
PMID:Human BAG-1/RAP46 protein is generated as four isoforms by alternative translation initiation and overexpressed in cancer cells. 974 77
We have analysed the expression of bcl-2 protein retrospectively in 34 primary male breast carcinomas (MBC), using the monoclonal antibody bcl-2 in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissues.
Bcl-2
expression was compared with tumour clinicopathological features, sex steroid hormone receptors, DNA content, p53 immunoreactivity and cell proliferative activity assessed by counts of the argyrophilic nucleolar organizer regions (AgNORs), the monoclonal antibody PC10 against proliferating cell nuclear antigen and the monoclonal antibody MIB-1. Most (28, or 82.3%) of the 34 cases of MBC were bcl-2 positive. No association was found with clinicopathological features of the tumours, although bcl-2 tended to be more frequently expressed in small tumours (P=0.09) and in cases without necrotic areas (P=0.1). Nor was any association found with
hormone receptor
status, p53 immunoreactivity, DNA content, cell proliferative activity or patient survival. In multivariate analysis, only proliferative activity (expressed by AgNOR counts) and p53 immunoreactivity had independent prognostic significance. Our results indicate that MBC differs from FBC in that in MBC bcl-2 protein is not related to an oestrogen-dependent transcription pathway and bcl-2 alone is not sufficient to induce increased proliferation. These characteristics, together with the high prognostic value of cell proliferation and the lack of prognostic significance for
hormone receptor
status, support the hypothesis that MBC is biologically different from FBC.
...
PMID:Bcl-2 expression in male breast carcinoma. 976 26
The immunohistochemical expression of bcl-2 protein, and its correlations with clinicopathological features and prognosis were studied in patients with invasive breast carcinoma.
Bcl-2
positive expression significantly correlated with
hormone receptor
positivity and histological tumor differentiation, and inversely correlated with p53 overaccumulation. No correlation was observed between bcl-2 expression and patient age, menopausal status, tumor size, and lymph node metastasis. Survivals of stage I to III patients who had not received adjuvant hormonal therapy showed no difference between bcl-2-positive and -negative tumors, even if patients were divided as with or without adjuvant chemotherapy, or with or without nodal involvement. In consequence, immunohistochemical bcl-2-positivity correlates with positive hormone receptors and well differentiated phenotypes in invasive breast carcinoma, however, it might not predict response to adjuvant chemotherapy and not be a favorable predictive value in patients treated without adjuvant hormonal therapy.
...
PMID:Clinical significance of immunohistochemical Bcl-2 expression in invasive breast carcinoma. 1020 94
The extent of apoptosis and the expression of
Bcl-2
was investigated in tumor samples from 165 women who underwent surgery for primary breast carcinoma between 1989 and 1990 in South-East Sweden. Apoptosis was assessed by a DNA fragmentation assay for flow cytometry.
Bcl-2
protein expression was analyzed with immunocytochemistry.
Bcl-2
immunoreactivity correlated with estrogen receptor (ER) and progesterone receptor (PgR) positivity and was inversely correlated with p53 accumulation. Apoptosis increased with patient age and a high degree of apoptosis was negatively associated with
Bcl-2
immunostaining. Apoptosis showed no significant correlation with any of the other variables studied, including prognosis. The group with
Bcl-2
-positive tumors tended to have a lower risk of distant recurrence than others, but the association of
Bcl-2
with recurrence was different in groups divided by ER and PgR status. Whereas
Bcl-2
positivity indicated a low recurrence rate among PgR-negative patients, in the PgR-positive group, those with
Bcl-2
-positive tumors showed a non significantly higher recurrence rate than
Bcl-2
-negative cases. In the PgR-positive group,
Bcl-2
-positive tumors also appeared more frequently to be lymph node positive and DNA aneuploid. The results suggest that
hormone receptor
status is of importance for the prognostic role of
Bcl-2
. Likewise, patient age merits consideration when apoptosis is studied in human cancer.
...
PMID:Apoptosis and Bcl-2 expression in relation to age, tumor characteristics and prognosis in breast cancer. South-East Sweden Breast Cancer Group. 1039 27
The survival benefit of adjuvant chemotherapy in node-positive patients with breast cancer compared with surgery alone has been established. The survival benefit differs considerably between
hormone receptor
-positive and -negative patients, and it is believed that the effectiveness of adjuvant chemotherapy can be increased by hormonal therapy with tamoxifen. In the present review, we discuss the rationale behind the effectiveness of combination treatment with anticancer drugs and tamoxifen in terms of the paradoxical role of
Bcl-2
in apoptosis in breast cancer. The survival benefit between receptor-positive and -negative patients was assessed using previous reports of randomized controlled studies for postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy in node-positive breast cancer. Tamoxifen induces the anti-apoptotic gene,
Bcl-2
, by its effect on estradiol (E2), via an E2-response element in the promotor region of
Bcl-2
. The efficicacy of chemoendocrine therapy was assessed in terms of the influence of tamoxifen on the effect of anticancer drugs. Adjuvant chemotherapy, including anthracycline and non-anthracycline based regimens, has an overall survival benefit in node-positive breast cancer, with a 23.5% reduction in the annual odds of recurrence and a 15% reduction in mortality (P<0.00001). A comparison of the reduction of the relative risk indicates that the survival benefit in receptor-negative patients is superior to that in receptor-positive patients by approximately 3-fold. Further, in contrast to receptor-negative patients, there is no additional benefit from paclitaxel over doxorubicin and cyclophosphamide (AC) in receptor-positive patients. The possible reasons that the chemotherapy benefit in receptor-positive patients is small and marginal are the following: i) concurrent treatment or pretreatment with tamoxifen can increase plasma E2 levels in premenopausal patients, thereby inducing
Bcl-2
in residual cancer cells, which might decrease drug-sensitivity in combination with chemotherapy; ii) induction of
Bcl-2
might be involved predominantly in the resistance to taxanes, the cytotoxic action of which targets
Bcl-2
. Co-treatment or pretreatment with tamoxifen for adjuvant therapy might decrease the efficacy of anticancer drugs, an effect that is mediated by induction of
Bcl-2
, especially in premenopausal patients with node-positive breast cancer. Treatment with anticancer drugs should be followed by treatment with tamoxifen to produce a survival benefit from combination therapy in receptor-positive patients.
...
PMID:A pitfall in the survival benefit of adjuvant chemotherapy for node- and hormone receptor-positive patients with breast cancer: the paradoxical role of Bcl-2 oncoprotein (review). 1160 12
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