2 resultados para mammary glands

em AMS Tesi di Dottorato - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna


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High serum levels of Interleukin-6 (IL-6) correlate with poor outcome in breast cancer patients. However no data are available on the relationship between IL-6 and stem/progenitor cells which may fuel the genesis of breast cancer in vivo. Herein, we address this issue in mammospheres (MS), multi-cellular structures enriched in stem/progenitor cells of the mammary gland, and also in MCF-7 breast cancer cells. We show that MS from node invasive breast carcinoma tissues express IL-6 mRNA at higher levels than MS from matched non-neoplastic mammary glands. We find that IL-6 mRNA is detectable only in basal-like breast carcinoma tissues, an aggressive variant showing stem cell features. Our results reveal that IL-6 triggers a Notch-3-dependent up-regulation of the Notch ligand Jagged-1, whose interaction with Notch-3 promotes the growth of MS and MCF-7 derived spheroids. Moreover, IL-6 induces a Notch-3-dependent up-regulation of the carbonic anhydrase IX gene, which promotes a hypoxia-resistant/invasive phenotype in MCF-7 cells and MS. Finally, an autocrine IL-6 loop relies upon Notch-3 activity to sustain the aggressive features of MCF-7-derived hypoxia-selected cells. In conclusion, our data support the hypothesis that IL-6 induces malignant features in Notch-3 expressing, stem/progenitor cells from human ductal breast carcinoma and normal mammary gland.

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In veterinary medicine, the ability to classify mammary tumours based on the molecular profile and also determine whether the immunophenotype of the regional lymph node and/or systemic metastases is equal to that of the primary tumor may be predictive on the estimation of the effectiveness of various cancer treatments that can be scheduled. Therefore, aims, developed as projects, of the past three years have been (1) to define the molecular phenotype of feline mammary carcinomas and their lymph node metastases according to a previous modified algorithm and to demonstrate the concordance or discordance of the molecular profile between the primary tumour and lymph node metastasis, (2) to analyze, in female dogs, the relationship between the primary mammary tumor and its lymph node metastasis based on immunohistochemical molecular characterization in order to develop the most specific prognostic-predictive models and targeted therapeutic options, and (3) to evaluate the molecular trend of cancer from its primary location to systemic metastases in three cats and two dogs with mammary tumors. The studies on mammary tumours, particularly in dogs, have drawn gradually increasing attention not exclusively to the epithelial component, but also to the myoepithelial cells. The lack of complete information on a valid panel of markers for the identification of these cells in the normal and neoplastic mammary gland and lack of investigation of immunohistochemical changes from an epithelial to a mesenchymal phenotype, was the aim of a parallel research. While investigating mammary tumours, it was noticed that only few studies had focused on the expression of CD117. Therefore, it was decided to further deepen the knowledge in order to characterize the immunohistochemical staining of CD117 in normal and neoplastic mammary tissue of the dog, and to correlate CD117 immunohistochemical results with mammary histotype, histological stage (invasiveness), Ki67 index and patient survival time.