| Literature DB >> 12817998 |
Sidney W Fu1, Arnold Schwartz, Holly Stevenson, Joseph J Pinzone, Gregory J Davenport, Jan M Orenstein, Peter Gutierrez, Samuel J Simmens, Jessy Abraham, Indira Poola, Dietrich A Stephan, Patricia E Berg.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: BP1 is a novel homeobox gene cloned in our laboratory. Our previous studies in leukemia demonstrated that BP1 has oncogenic properties, including as a modulator of cell survival. Here BP1 expression was examined in breast cancer, and the relationship between BP1 expression and clinicopathological data was determined.Entities:
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Year: 2003 PMID: 12817998 PMCID: PMC165014 DOI: 10.1186/bcr602
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Breast Cancer Res ISSN: 1465-5411 Impact factor: 6.466
Figure 1Expression of BP1 in breast cancer cell lines. Reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction was performed to analyze relative BP1 mRNA expression in cell lines and in one normal breast tissue. The loading control was β-actin.
BP1 expression in breast cancer cell lines
| Cell line | ER | PR | Malignancy | Tumorigenic* | BP1 |
| Hs578T | - | - | Ductal carcinoma | No | +/- |
| MCF7 | + | + | Adenocarcinoma | † | ++ |
| MCF7ADR‡ | ADR-resistant | Yes | +++ | ||
| MDA-MB-231 | - | - | Adenocarcinoma | Yes | ++ |
| MDA-MB-435S | - | - | Ductal carcinoma | No | +/- |
| MDA-MB-468 | - | - | Adenocarcinoma | Yes | +++ |
| T-47D | + | + | Ductal carcinoma | † | +++ |
| MCF10A | + | + | Normal | No | +/- |
*Data from the American Type Culture Collection, except for T-47D [22,23]. †Not tumorigenic without the addition of estradiol. ‡Non-responsive to estradiol. ADR, adriamycin; ER, estrogen receptor; PR, progesterone receptor.
Figure 2Expression of BP1 in breast tumors. Relative levels of BP1 mRNA were determined by analysis of breast ductal tumors (T) or normal controls (N) by reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction. The loading control was β-actin.
Association between BP1 mRNA expression and clinicopathological data
| BP1 mRNA | |||
| Factors | Negative | Positive | |
| Age | 1.00 | ||
| Premenopausal | 2 (17%) | 10 (83%) | |
| (<50 years) | |||
| Postmenopausal | 7 (21%) | 26 (79%) | |
| (≥ 50 years) | |||
| Tumor size | 1.00 | ||
| <2.0 cm | 1 (17%) | 5 (83%) | |
| ≥ 2.0 cm | 7 (19%) | 30 (81%) | |
| Lymph node metastasis | 1.00 | ||
| Negative | 4 (20%) | 16 (80%) | |
| Positive | 4 (18%) | 18 (82%) | |
| Histologic grade | 0.29 | ||
| I | 1 (20%) | 4 (80%) | |
| II | 4 (27%) | 11 (73%) | |
| III | 2 (9%) | 20 (91%) | |
| ER status | 0.03 | ||
| Negative | 0 (0%) | 18 (100%) | |
| Positive | 7 (27%) | 19 (73%) | |
| PR status | 0.02 | ||
| Negative | 1 (4.0%) | 24 (96%) | |
| Positive | 6 (33%) | 12 (67%) | |
| Race | 0.04 | ||
| Caucasian | 6 (43%) | 8 (57%) | |
| African American | 3 (11%) | 25 (89%) | |
ER, estrogen receptor; PR, progesterone receptor. Data were unavailable or indeterminate for parameters as follows: age (one tumor), tumor size (three tumors), lymph node metastasis (four tumors), histologic grade (four tumors), ER status (two tumors), PR status (three tumors), and race (four tumors).