920 resultados para Spindle-cell-carcinoma
Resumo:
A rapid increase of the ultraviolet radiation (UVR)-related skin cancer incidence has attracted more and more public attention during the last few decades. Prevention and treatment of UVR-related skin cancer has become an important public health issue in the United States. Recent studies indicate that mutations in ras and/or p53 genes may be involved in UVR-induced skin tumor development but the precise molecular mechanism remains unclear. In this study, alterations of H-ras and p53 genes were investigated in different stages of carcinogenesis in a chronic UVR (solar simulator) exposure-induced Sencar mouse skin carcinogenesis model in order to clarify the role of the alterations of these genes during the skin carcinogenesis process and to further understand the mechanisms by which UVR causes skin cancer.^ Positive ras-p21 staining in cell membranes and cytosol were detected in 18/33 (55%) of squamous cell carcinomas (SCCs), but were not detected in UV-exposed skin, papillomas, or spindle cell tumors (SCTs). Positive staining of the malignant progression marker K13 was found in 17/33 (52%) of SCCs only. A significant positive correlation was observed between the K13 and the ras-p21 expression. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based single strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) analysis and gene sequencing analysis revealed three point mutations, one (codon 56) in UV-exposed non-tumor bearing skin and the other two (codons 21 and 13) in SCCs. No UV-specific mutation patterns were found.^ Positive p53 nuclear staining was found in 10/37 (27%) of SCCs and 12/24 (50%) of SCTs, but was not detected in normal skin or papillomas. PCR-based SSCP and sequencing analysis revealed eight point mutations in exons 5 and 6 (four in SCTs, two in SCCs, and two in UV-exposed skin) including six C-T or C-A transitions. Four of the mutations occurred at a dipyrimidine (CC) sequence. The pattern of the mutations indicated that the mutagenic lesions were induced by UVR.^ These results indicate that overexpression of ras-p21 in conjunction with aberrant expression of K13 occurred frequently in UVR-induced SCCs in Sencar mouse skin. The point mutation in the H-ras gene appeared to be a rare event in UVR skin carcinogenesis and may not be responsible for overexpression of ras-p21. UVR-induced P53 gene alteration is a frequent event in UVR-induced SCCs and later stage SCT tumors in Sencar mice skin, suggesting the p53 gene mutation plays an important role in skin tumor malignant progression. ^
Resumo:
Wilms tumor (WT) or nephroblastoma is a genetically heterogeneous pediatric renal tumor that accounts for 6–7% of all childhood cancers in the U.S. WT1, located at 11p13, is the sole WT gene cloned to date. Additional genomic regions containing genes that play a role in the development of Wilms tumor include 11p15, 7p, 16q, 1p, 17q and 19q. This heterogeneity has made it extremely difficult to develop an understanding of the pathways involved in the development of WT, even in the 5–20% of tumors that show mutations at the WT1 locus. My research addresses this gap in our current comprehension of the development of WT. ^ I have used two complementary approaches to extend the current understanding of molecular changes involved in the development of WT. In order to minimize complexities due to genetic heterogeneity, I confined my analysis to the WT1 pathway by assessing those genetically defined tumors that carry WT1 mutations. WT1 encodes a zinc finger transcription factor, and in vitro studies have identified many genes that are potentially regulated in vivo by WT1. However, there is very little in vivo data that suggests that they are transcriptionally regulated endogenously by WT1. In one approach I assessed the role of WT1 in the in vivo regulation of PDGFA and IGF2, two genes that are strong contenders for endogenous regulation by WT1. Using primary tissue samples, I found no correlation between the level of RNA expression of WT1 with either PDGFA or IGF2, suggesting that WT1 does not play a critical role in their expression in either normal kidney or WT. ^ In a parallel strategy, using differential display analysis I compared global gene expression in a subset of tumors with known homozygous inactivating WT1 mutations (WT1-tumors) to the gene expression in a panel of appropriate control tissues (fetal kidney, normal kidney, rhabdoid tumor and pediatric renal cell carcinoma). Transcripts that are aberrantly expressed in this subset of Wilms tumors are candidates for endogenous transcriptional regulation by WT1 as well as for potentially functioning in the development of WT. By this approach I identified several differentially expressed transcripts. I further characterized two of these transcripts, identifying a candidate WT gene in the process. I then performed a detailed analysis of this WT candidate gene, which maps to 7p. Future studies will shed more light on the role of these differentially expressed genes in WT. ^
Resumo:
Los inmunomoduladores tópicos han demostrado utilidad en las enfermedades orales inflamatorias resistentes a corticoesteroides tópicos, en enfermedades sistémicas con mucosa oral primeramente comprometida y en lesiones severas que involucren la mucosa oral. La queilitis actínica es una lesión potencialmente maligna, con riesgo de progresar a Carcinoma espinocelular, por ello es necesario su tratamiento temprano.
Resumo:
Como contribución del estudio de medios heterogéneos, esta tesis recoge el trabajo llevado a cabo sobre modelado teórico y simulación del estudio de las propiedades ópticas de la piel y del agua del mar, como ejemplos paradigmáticos de medios heterogéneos. Se ha tomado como punto de partida el estudio de la propagación de la radiación óptica, más concretamente de la radiación láser, en un tejido biológico. La importancia de la caracterización óptica de un tejido es fundamental para manejar la interacción radiación-tejido que permite tanto el diagnóstico como la terapéutica de enfermedades y/o de disfunciones en las Ciencias de la Salud. Sin olvidar el objetivo de ofrecer una metodología de estudio, con un «enfoque ingenieril», de las propiedades ópticas en un medio heterogéneo, que no tiene por qué ser exclusivamente el tejido biológico. Como consecuencia de lo anterior y de la importancia que tiene el agua dentro de los tejidos biológicos se decide estudiar en otro capítulo las propiedades ópticas del agua dentro de un entorno heterogéneo como es el agua del mar. La selección del agua del mar, como objeto de estudio adicional, es motivada, principalmente, porque se trata de un sistema heterogéneo fácilmente descriptible en cada uno de sus elementos y permite evaluar una amplia bibliografía. Además se considera que los avances que han tenido lugar en los últimos años en las tecnologías fotónicas van a permitir su uso en los métodos experimentales de análisis de las aguas. El conocimiento de sus propiedades ópticas permite caracterizar los diferentes tipos de aguas de acuerdo con sus compuestos, así como poder identificar su presencia. Todo ello abre un amplio abanico de aplicaciones. En esta tesis doctoral, se ha conseguido de manera general: • Realizar un estudio del estado del arte del conocimiento de las propiedades ópticas de la piel y la identificación de sus elementos dispersores de la luz. • Establecer una metodología de estudio que nos permita obtener datos sobre posibles efectos de la radiación en los tejidos biológicos. •Usar distintas herramientas informáticas para simular el transporte de la radiación laser en tejidos biológicos. • Realizar experimentos mediante simulación de láser, tejidos biológicos y detectores. • Comparar los resultados conocidos experimentalmente con los simulados. • Estudiar los instrumentos de medida de la respuesta a la propagación de radiación laser en tejidos anisotrópicos. • Obtener resultados originales para el diagnóstico y tratamiento de pieles, considerando diferente razas y como alteración posible en la piel, se ha estudiado la presencia del basalioma. • Aplicación de la metodología de estudio realizada en la piel a la simulación de agua de mar. • Obtener resultados originales de simulación y análisis de cantidad de fitoplancton en agua; con el objetivo de facilitar la caracterización de diferentes tipos de aguas. La tesis doctoral se articula en 6 capítulos y 3 anexos perfectamente diferenciados con su propia bibliografía en cada uno de ellos. El primer capítulo está centrado en la problemática del difícil estudio y caracterización de los medios heterogéneos debidos a su comportamiento no homogéneo y anisotrópico ante las radiaciones ópticas. Así pues, presentaremos una breve introducción al comportamiento tanto de los tejidos como del océano ante radiaciones ópticas y definiremos sus principales propiedades: la absorción, el scattering, la anisotropía y los coeficientes de reflexión. Como continuación, un segundo capítulo trata de acercarnos a la resolución del problema de cómo caracterizar las propiedades ópticas descritas en el primer capítulo. Para ello, primero se introducen los modelos teóricos, en segundo lugar los métodos de simulación más empleados y, por último, enumerar las principales técnicas de medida de la propagación de la luz en los tejidos vivos. El tercer capítulo, centrado en la piel y sus propiedades, intenta realizar una síntesis de lo que se conoce sobre el comportamiento de la piel frente a la propagación de las radiaciones ópticas. Se estudian sus elementos constituyentes y los distintos tipos de pieles. Por último se describe un ejemplo de aplicación más inmediata que se beneficia de este conocimiento. Sabemos que el porcentaje de agua en el cuerpo humano es muy elevado, en concreto en la piel se considera de aproximadamente un 70%. Es obvio, por tanto, que conocer cómo afecta el agua en la propagación de una radiación óptica facilitaría el disponer de patrones de referencia; para ello, se realiza el estudio del agua del mar. En el cuarto capítulo se estudian las propiedades del agua del mar como medio heterogéneo de partículas. En este capítulo presentamos una síntesis de los elementos más significativos de dispersores en el océano, un estudio de su comportamiento individual frente a radiaciones ópticas y su contribución al océano en su conjunto. Finalmente, en el quinto capítulo se describen los resultados obtenidos en los distintos tipos de simulaciones realizadas. Las herramientas de simulación empleadas han sido las mismas tanto para el caso del estudio de la piel como para el agua del mar, por ello ambos resultados son expuestos en el mismo capítulo. En el primer caso se analizan diferentes tipos de agua oceánica, mediante la variación de las concentraciones de fitoplancton. El método empleado permite comprobar las diferencias que pueden encontrarse en la caracterización y diagnóstico de aguas. El segundo caso analizado es el de la piel; donde se estudia el comportamiento de distintos tipos de piel, se analizan para validar el método y se comprueba cómo el resultado es compatible con aplicaciones, actualmente comerciales, como la de la depilación con láser. Como resultado significativo se muestra la posible metodología a aplicar para el diagnóstico del cáncer de piel conocido como basalioma. Finalmente presentamos un capítulo dedicado a los trabajos futuros basados en experimentación real y el coste asociado que implicaría el llevarlo a cabo. Los anexos que concluyen la tesis doctoral versan por un lado sobre el funcionamiento del vector común de toda la tesis: el láser, sus aplicaciones y su control en la seguridad y por otro presentamos los coeficientes de absorción y scattering que hemos utilizado en nuestras simulaciones. El primero condensa las principales características de una radiación láser desde el punto de vista de su generación, el segundo presenta la seguridad en su uso y el tercero son tablas propias, cuyos parámetros son los utilizados en el apartado de experimentación. Aunque por el tipo de tesis que defiendo no se ajusta a los modelos canónicos de tesis doctoral, el lector podrá encontrar en esta tesis de forma imbricada, el modelo común a todas las tesis o proyectos de investigación con una sección dedicada al estado del arte con ejemplos pedagógicos para facilitar la compresión y se plantean unos objetivos (capítulos 1-4), y un capítulo que se subdivide en materiales y métodos y resultados y discusiones (capítulo 5 con sus subsecciones), para finalizar con una vista al futuro y los trabajos futuros que se desprenden de la tesis (capítulo 6). ABSTRACT As contribution to the study of heterogeneous media, this thesis covers the work carried out on theoretical modelling and simulation study of the optical properties of the skin and seawater, as paradigmatic examples of heterogeneous media. It is taken as a starting point the study of the propagation of optical radiation, in particular laser radiation in a biological tissue. The importance of optical characterization of a tissue is critical for managing the interaction between radiation and tissues that allows both diagnosis and therapy of diseases and / or dysfunctions in Health Sciences. Without forgetting the aim of providing a methodology of study, with "engineering approach" of the optical properties in a heterogeneous environment, which does not have to be exclusively biological tissue. As a result of this and the importance of water in biological tissues, we have decided to study the optical properties of water in a heterogeneous environment such as seawater in another chapter. The selection of sea water as an object of further study is motivated mainly because it is considered that the advances that have taken place in recent years in photonic technologies will allow its use in experimental methods of water analysis. Knowledge of the optical properties to characterize the different types of waters according to their compounds, as well as to identify its presence. All of this opens a wide range of applications. In this thesis, it has been generally achieved: • Conduct a study of the state of the art knowledge of the optical properties of the skin and identifying its light scattering elements. • Establish a study methodology that allows us to obtain data on possible effects of radiation on biological tissues. • Use different computer tools to simulate the transport of laser radiation in biological tissues. • Conduct experiments by simulating: laser, detectors, and biological tissues. • Compare the known results with our experimentally simulation. • Study the measuring instruments and its response to the propagation of laser radiation in anisotropic tissues. • Get innovative results for diagnosis and treatment of skin, considering different races and a possible alteration in the skin that we studied: the presence of basal cell carcinoma. • Application of the methodology of the study conducted in the skin to simulate seawater. • Get innovative results of simulation and analysis of amount of phytoplankton in water; in order to facilitate the characterization of different types of water. The dissertation is divided into six chapters and three annexes clearly distinguished by their own literature in each of them. The first chapter is focused on the problem of difficult study and characterization of heterogeneous media due to their inhomogeneous and anisotropic behaviour of optical radiation. So we present a brief introduction to the behaviour of both tissues at the cellular level as the ocean, to optical radiation and define the main optical properties: absorption, scattering, anisotropy and reflection coefficients. Following from this, a second chapter is an approach to solving the problem of how to characterize the optical properties described in the first chapter. For this, first the theoretical models are introduced, secondly simulation methods more used and, finally, the main techniques for measuring the propagation of light in living tissue. The third chapter is focused on the skin and its properties, tries to make a synthesis of what is known about the behaviour of the skin and its constituents tackle the spread of optical radiation. Different skin types are studied and an example of immediate application of this knowledge benefits described. We know that the percentage of water in the human body is very high, particularly in the skin is considered about 70%. It is obvious, therefore, that knowing how the water is affected by the propagation of an optical radiation facilitate to get reference patterns; For this, the study of seawater is performed. In the fourth chapter the properties of seawater as a heterogeneous component particles are studied. This chapter presents a summary of the scattering elements in the ocean, its individual response to optical radiation and its contribution to the ocean as a whole. In the fifth chapter the results of the different types of simulations are described. Simulation tools used were the same for the study of skin and seawater, so both results are presented in the chapter. In the first case different types of ocean water is analysed by varying the concentrations of phytoplankton. The method allows to check the differences that can be found in the characterization and diagnosis of water. The second case analysed is the skin; where the behaviour of different skin types are studied and checked how the result is compatible with applications currently trade, such as laser hair removal. As a significant result of the possible methodology to be applied for the diagnosis of skin cancer known as basal cell carcinoma is shown. Finally we present a chapter on future work based on actual experimentation and the associated cost which it would involve carrying out. The annexes conclude the thesis deal with one hand on the functioning of the common vector of the whole thesis: laser, control applications and safety and secondly we present the absorption and scattering coefficients we used in our simulations. The first condenses the main characteristics of laser radiation from the point of view of their generation, the second presents the safety in use and the third are own tables, whose parameters are used in the experimental section. Although the kind of view which I advocate does not meet the standard models doctoral thesis, the reader will find in this thesis so interwoven, the common model to all theses or research projects with a section on the state of the art pedagogical examples to facilitate the understanding and objectives (Chapters 1-4), and a chapter is divided into materials and methods and results and discussions (Chapter 5 subsections) arise, finishing with a view to the future and work future arising from the thesis (Chapter 6).
Resumo:
Inheritance of an inactivated form of the VHL tumor suppressor gene predisposes patients to develop von Hippel–Lindau disease, and somatic VHL inactivation is an early genetic event leading to the development of sporadic renal cell carcinoma. The VHL gene was disrupted by targeted homologous recombination in murine embryonic stem cells, and a mouse line containing an inactivated VHL allele was generated. While heterozygous VHL (+/−) mice appeared phenotypically normal, VHL −/− mice died in utero at 10.5 to 12.5 days of gestation (E10.5 to E12.5). Homozygous VHL −/− embryos appeared to develop normally until E9.5 to E10.5, when placental dysgenesis developed. Embryonic vasculogenesis of the placenta failed to occur in VHL −/− mice, and hemorrhagic lesions developed in the placenta. Subsequent hemorrhage in VHL −/− embryos caused necrosis and death. These results indicate that VHL expression is critical for normal extraembryonic vascular development.
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Recent evidence suggests a potential role for thrombospondin-2 (TSP-2), a matricellular glycoprotein, in the regulation of primary angiogenesis. To directly examine the biological effect of TSP-2 expression on tumor growth and angiogenesis, human A431 squamous cell carcinoma cells, which do not express TSP-2, were stably transfected with a murine TSP-2 expression vector or with vector alone. A431 cells expressing TSP-2 did not show an altered growth rate, colony-forming ability, or susceptibility to induction of apoptosis in vitro. However, injection of TSP-2-transfected clones into the dermis of nude mice resulted in pronounced inhibition of tumor growth that was significantly stronger than the inhibition observed in A431 clones stably transfected with a thrombospondin-1 (TSP-1) expression vector, and combined overexpression of TSP-1 and TSP-2 completely prevented tumor formation. Extensive areas of necrosis were observed in TSP-2-expressing tumors, and both the density and the size of tumor vessels were significantly reduced, although tumor cell expression of the major tumor angiogenesis factor, vascular endothelial growth factor, was maintained at high levels. These findings establish TSP-2 as a potent endogenous inhibitor of tumor growth and angiogenesis.
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Genetic inactivation of the transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β) signaling pathway can accelerate tumor progression in the mouse epidermal model of multistage carcinogenesis. By using an in vitro model of keratinocyte transformation that parallels in vivo malignant conversion to squamous cell carcinoma, we show that v-rasHa transduced primary TGF-β1−/− keratinocytes and keratinocytes expressing a TGF-β type II dominant-negative receptor transgene have significantly higher frequencies of spontaneous transformation than control genotypes. Malignant transformation in the TGF-β1−/− keratinocytes is preceded by aneuploidy and accumulation of chromosomal aberrations. Similarly, transient inactivation of TGF-β signaling with a type II dominant-negative receptor adenovirus causes rapid changes in ploidy. Exogenous TGF-β1 can suppress aneuploidy, chromosome breaks, and malignant transformation of the TGF-β1−/− keratinocytes at concentrations that do not significantly arrest cell proliferation. These results point to genomic instability as a mechanism by which defects in TGF-β signaling could accelerate tumor progression in mouse multistage carcinogenesis.
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The high-molecular-weight serine proteinase inhibitors (serpins) are restricted, generally, to inhibiting proteinases of the serine mechanistic class. However, the viral serpin, cytokine response modifier A, and the human serpins, antichymotrypsin and squamous cell carcinoma antigen 1 (SCCA1), inhibit different members of the cysteine proteinase class. Although serpins employ a mobile reactive site loop (RSL) to bait and trap their target serine proteinases, the mechanism by which they inactivate cysteine proteinases is unknown. Our previous studies suggest that SCCA1 inhibits papain-like cysteine proteinases in a manner similar to that observed for serpin–serine proteinase interactions. However, we could not preclude the possibility of an inhibitory mechanism that did not require the serpin RSL. To test this possibility, we employed site-directed mutagenesis to alter the different residues within the RSL. Mutations to either the hinge or the variable region of the RSL abolished inhibitory activity. Moreover, RSL swaps between SCCA1 and the nearly identical serpin, SCCA2 (an inhibitor of chymotrypsin-like serine proteinases), reversed their target specificities. Thus, there were no unique motifs within the framework of SCCA1 that independently accounted for cysteine proteinase inhibitory activity. Collectively, these data suggested that the sequence and mobility of the RSL of SCCA1 are essential for cysteine proteinase inhibition and that serpins are likely to utilize a common RSL-dependent mechanism to inhibit both serine and cysteine proteinases.
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The commitment of cells to replicate and divide correlates with the activation of cyclin-dependent kinases and the inactivation of Rb, the product of the retinoblastoma tumor suppressor gene. Rb is a target of the cyclin-dependent kinases and, when phosphorylated, is inactivated. Biochemical studies exploring the nature of the relationship between cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors and Rb have supported the hypothesis that these proteins are on a linear pathway regulating commitment. We have been able to study this relationship by genetic means by examining the phenotype of Rb+/−p27−/− mice. Tumors arise from the intermediate lobe cells of the pituitary gland in p27−/− mice, as well as in Rb+/− mice after loss of the remaining wild-type allele of Rb. Using these mouse models, we examined the genetic interaction between Rb and p27. We found that the development of pituitary tumors in Rb+/− mice correlated with a reduction in p27 mRNA and protein expression. To determine whether the loss of p27 was an indirect consequence of tumor formation or a contributing factor to the development of this tumor, we analyzed the phenotype of Rb+/−p27−/− mice. We found that these mice developed pituitary adenocarcinoma with loss of the remaining wild-type allele of Rb and a high-grade thyroid C cell carcinoma that was more aggressive than the disease in either Rb+/− or p27−/− mice. Importantly, we detected both pituitary and thyroid tumors earlier in the Rb+/−p27−/− mice. We therefore propose that Rb and p27 cooperate to suppress tumor development by integrating different regulatory signals.
Resumo:
Inactivation of the von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) tumor suppressor gene causes the familial cancer syndrome, VHL disease, characterized by a predisposition to renal cell carcinoma and other tumor types. Loss of VHL gene function also is found in a majority of sporadic renal carcinomas. A preponderance of the tumor-disposing inherited missense mutations detected in VHL disease are within the elongin-binding domain of VHL. This region mediates the formation of a multiprotein VHL complex containing elongin B, elongin C, cul-2, and Rbx1. This VHL complex is thought to function as an E3 ubiquitin ligase. Here, we report that VHL proteins harboring mutations which disrupt elongin binding are unstable and rapidly degraded by the proteasome. In contrast, wild-type VHL proteins are directly stabilized by associating with both elongins B and C. In addition, elongins B and C are stabilized through their interactions with each other and VHL. Thus, the entire VHL/elongin complex is resistant to proteasomal degradation. Because the elongin-binding domain of VHL is frequently mutated in cancers, these results suggest that loss of elongin binding causes tumorigenesis by compromising VHL protein stability and/or potential VHL ubiquitination functions.
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Fourier-transform IR (FT-IR) spectra of pelleted exfoliated cervical cells from patients with cervical cancer or dysplasia differ from those from normal women. To study the origin of these spectral changes, we obtained the FT-IR spectra of individual cervical cells from normal, dysplastic, and malignant cervical samples. Ninety five percent of normal superficial and intermediate cells displayed two distinct spectral patterns designated A and B, and 5% displayed an intermediate pattern, suggesting extensive structural heterogeneity among these cells. Parabasal and endocervical cells showed pattern B spectra. The spectra of malignant, dysplastic, and other abnormal cells also were characterized. Analysis of FT-IR spectra of over 2,000 individual cells from 10 normal females, 7 females with dysplasia, and 5 females with squamous cell carcinoma revealed that the spectra of normal-appearing intermediate and superficial cells of the cervix from women with either dysplasia or cancer differed from those of normal women. Chemometric and classical spectroscopic analysis showed a continuum of changes paralleling the transition from normalcy to malignancy. These findings suggest that (i) the structural changes underlying the spectroscopic changes are involved in or are a product of cervical carcinogenesis and (ii) the neoplastic process may be more extensive than currently recognized with morphological criteria. This approach may be useful for the structural study of neoplasia and also may be of help in the diagnosis or classification of cervical disorders.
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A human p53 homologue, p63 (p40/p51/p73L/CUSP) that maps to the chromosomal region 3q27–29 was found to produce a variety of transcripts that encode DNA-binding proteins with and without a trans-activation domain (TA- or ΔN-, respectively). The p63 gene locus was found to be amplified in squamous cell carcinoma, and overexpression of ΔNp63 (p40) led to increased growth of transformed cells in vitro and in vivo. Moreover, p63-null mice displayed abnormal epithelial development and germ-line human mutations were found to cause ectodermal dysplasia. We now demonstrate that certain p63 isotypes form complexes with p53. p53 mutations R175H or R248W abolish the association of p53 with p63, whereas V143A or R273H has no effect. Deletion studies suggest that the DNA-binding domains of both p53 and p63 mediate the association. Overexpression of wild type but not mutant (R175H) p53 results in the caspase-dependent degradation of certain ΔNp63 proteins (p40 and ΔNp63α). The association between p53 and ΔNp63 supports a previously unrecognized role for p53 in regulation of ΔNp63 stability. The ability of p53 to mediate ΔNp63 degradation may balance the capacity of ΔNp63 to accelerate tumorigenesis or to induce epithelial proliferation.
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Skp2 is a member of the F-box family of substrate-recognition subunits of SCF ubiquitin–protein ligase complexes that has been implicated in the ubiquitin-mediated degradation of several key regulators of mammalian G1 progression, including the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p27, a dosage-dependent tumor suppressor protein. In this study, we examined Skp2 and p27 protein expression by immunohistochemistry in normal oral epithelium and in different stages of malignant oral cancer progression, including dysplasia and oral squamous cell carcinoma. We found that increased levels of Skp2 protein are associated with reduced p27 in a subset of oral epithelial dysplasias and carcinomas compared with normal epithelial controls. Tumors with high Skp2 (>20% positive cells) expression invariably showed reduced or absent p27 and tumors with high p27 (>20% positive cells) expression rarely showed Skp2 positivity. Increased Skp2 protein levels were not always correlated with increased cell proliferation (assayed by Ki-67 staining), suggesting that alterations of Skp2 may contribute to the malignant phenotype without affecting proliferation. Skp2 protein overexpression may lead to accelerated p27 proteolysis and contribute to malignant progression from dysplasia to oral epithelial carcinoma. Moreover, we also demonstrate that Skp2 has oncogenic potential by showing that Skp2 cooperates with H-RasG12V to malignantly transform primary rodent fibroblasts as scored by colony formation in soft agar and tumor formation in nude mice. The observations that Skp2 can mediate transformation and is up-regulated during oral epithelial carcinogenesis support a role for Skp2 as a protooncogene in human tumors.
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The human squamous cell carcinoma cell line SCC83-01-82 (SCC) contains mutations in both the H-ras and p53 genes, but it exhibits a nontumorigenic phenotype in nude mice. This cell line can be converted into a cell line with a tumorigenic phenotype, SCC83-01-82CA (CA), by treatment with the mutagen methyl methanesulfonate (MMS). This indicates that additional genetic events leading to expression of a cooperating tumor susceptibility gene(s) may be required for tumorigenicity. To identify the cooperating gene(s), an expression cDNA library was made from tumorigenic Ca cells. The library DNA was transfected into nontumorigenic SCC cells and the transfected SCC cells were then injected into nude mice for the selection of a tumorigenic phenotype. Tumors developed in 3 of the 18 mice after injection. Several new cell lines were established from these transfected cell-induced tumors and designated as CATR cells. Tumor histology and karyotype analysis of these cells indicated that they were of human epithelial cell origin. All the CATR cells have the library vector sequence integrated in their genome. Cell line CATR1 expressed a single message from the integrated library representing a 1.3-kb cDNA insert that was absent from untransfected SCC cells or MMS-converted CA cells. This 1.3-kb cDNA insert was cloned by PCR amplification of reverse-transcribed CATR1 total RNA and was designated CATR1.3. The nucleotide sequence of CATR1.3 encodes a peptide of 79 amino acids, has a long 3' untranslated region, and represents an unknown gene product that was associated with the tumorigenic conversion due to the transfected expression library.
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O diabetes mellitus (DM) está associado com alguns tipos de câncer. No entanto, estudos realizados sobre a associação entre DM e câncer de cabeça e pescoço (CCP) apresentaram resultados controversos. Na avaliação da associação entre DM e câncer, destaque deve ser dado à metformina, medicamento utilizado no DM tipo 2, que se mostra inversamente associado a alguns tumores. O objetivo deste estudo foi avaliar a associação entre DM e CCP, bem como o impacto do uso de metformina no risco de CCP. Este estudo caso-controle incluiu 1021 casos de CCP com confirmação histológica de carcinoma espino celular selecionados em cinco hospitais de grande porte no estado de São Paulo entre 2011 e 2014. Os 1063 controles foram recrutados nos mesmos hospitais, pareados por frequência com os casos por sexo e idade (em grupos de 5 anos). Para avaliar o risco de CCP associado ao DM, odds ratios (OR) e intervalos com 95 por cento de confiança (IC 95 por cento ) foram estimados por meio de regressão logística não condicional. Os participantes diabéticos tiveram associação inversa com o CCP (OR = 0,68; IC 95 por cento : 0,49-0,95), e a proteção foi maior entre diabéticos usuários metformina (OR = 0,54; IC 95 por cento : 0,29-0,99). Diabéticos usuários de metformina que eram fumantes (OR = 0,13; IC 95 por cento : 0,04-0,44), ou consumidores de álcool acima de 40 g/ dia (OR = 0,31; IC 95 por cento : 0,11-0,88) apresentaram proteção ainda maior com relação ao CCP, comparado aos não diabéticos. Em conclusão, os indivíduos diabéticos apresentaram risco inverso de CCP e o uso de metformina pode explicar, ao menos parcialmente, esta associação.