44 resultados para Benign Ovarian Tumours
Resumo:
Prostate-specific antigen (PSA) is important in tumour detection, monitoring disease progression and tumour recurrence. however, PSA is not a cancerspecific marker as levels can also be elevated in benign prostatic disease. A number of different mRNA transcripts of PSA have also been identified in prostatic tissue, but have not been fully characterized (PSA 424, PSA 525, Schulz transcript). Tissue specimens from transurethral resection of the prostate (TURP) or radical prostatectomy were obtained from 17 men with BPH and 15 men with prostate cancer. Total RNA was extracted, and reverse-transcriptionpolymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and Southern analysis carried out using transcript-specific primers and probes to determine which mRNA PSA transcripts were expressed. Real-time PCR was performed to determine transcript levels between the two groups using transcript-specific primers and SYBR green fluorescence. Values obtained were normalized to a standard housekeeping gene, B2-microglobulin. Transcripts amplified by RT-PCR and real-time PCR were confirmed by DNA sequencing. Our results show that the transcripts were present in some, but not all, BPH and cancer samples indicating that they are not specific to either BPH or cancer. Analysis of real-time PCR normalized values using a Student’s t -test, shows that there is a significant difference between the two groups for PSA 424, but not wild-type PSA, PSA 525 or the Schulz transcript. Although a larger cohort of samples is needed to further confirm these results, these findings suggest that mRNA levels of PSA 424 may have some utility as a diagnostic or prognostic marker in prostate cancer detection.
Resumo:
We identified a transcript named 11M2 on the basis of its strong male-specific expression pattern in the developing mouse gonad. 11M2 was found to be expressed by gonad primordial germ cells (PGCs) of both sexes and down-regulated in female PGCs as they enter prophase I of the first meiotic division, similar to the expression of Oct4. Mouse EST analysis revealed expression only in early-stage embryos, embryonic stem cells and pre-meiotic germ cells. 11M2 corresponds to a recently reported gene variously known as PGC7, stella or Dppa3. We have identified the human orthologue of Dppa3 and find by human EST analysis that it is expressed in human testicular germ cell tumours but not in normal human somatic tissues. The expression patterns of mouse and human DPPA3, in undifferentiated embryonic cells, embryonic germ cells and adult germ cell tumours, together suggest a role for this gene in maintaining cell pluripotentiality.