| Literature DB >> 12559044 |
Abstract
Telomerase - an enzyme that endows cells with unlimited proliferative potential - is differentially expressed in cancer cells and in normal cells. Although most primary human cells lack telomerase, the enzyme is upregulated in more than 90% of invasive breast cancers. As a result, much of breast cancer development occurs before telomerase is reactivated during a critical transition from a telomerase-negative to a telomerase-positive state. During this transition, the telomere shortening that accompanies cell division may either prevent or facilitate tumorigenesis by activating checkpoints and impairing chromosomal stability. In mature cancers, telomerase probably serves a crucial role in tumor progression and maintenance by stabilizing telomeres and supporting the immortal growth of breast cancer cells.Entities:
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Year: 2002 PMID: 12559044 PMCID: PMC154132 DOI: 10.1186/bcr553
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Breast Cancer Res ISSN: 1465-5411 Impact factor: 6.466
Figure 1Telomere dynamics and chromosomal instability during human breast cancer development. Telomeres shorten during human tumorigenesis (gray line) and then become stabilized at the ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) or invasive stage. Telomerase is expressed at low or undetectable levels in normal cells, but becomes activated in 80–90% of DCIS lesions and remains highly active in invasive and metastatic breast cancers (dotted black line). Comparative genome hybridization analyses have shown that chromosomal imbalances or gene copy number changes begin early in breast cancer, in usual ductal hyperplasia and atypical ductal hyperplasia. Copy number aberrations increase in DCIS and remain similar in number in invasive cancer and metastatic cancer. Chromosomal instability (dashed black line) therefore begins in usual ductal hyperplasia and increases through DCIS development. The rate of accumulation of chromosomal aberrations slows significantly at the DCIS stage and this stabilization of the breast cancer genome coincides temporally with reactivation of telomerase.