Literature DB >> 18630503

Mammaglobin and lipophilin B expression in breast tumors and their lack of effect on breast cancer cell proliferation.

Anna Sjödin1, Ingrid Ljuslinder, Roger Henriksson, Håkan Hedman.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Mammaglobin (SCGB2A2) and lipophilin B (SCGB1D2) are members of the secretoglobin polypeptide family. Mammaglobin has been shown to be overexpressed in breast tumor tissue, indicating that mammaglobin might confer a growth advantage to mammaglobin-expressing tumor cells.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: The mammaglobin and lipophilin B mRNA expression levels were investigated in seven breast tumors and matched nonneoplastic tissues from the same patients using quantitative real-time RT-PCR. The effect of mammaglobin and lipophilin B expression on breast cancer cell proliferation rates was investigated by analyzing retrovirally transduced Hs578T cell clones. Cell proliferation rates were determined during the exponential growth phase by analyzing the change in lactate dehydrogenase activity over time.
RESULTS: All analyzed breast cancer tumors had lower expression levels of mammaglobin and lipophilin B than the respective mean level of the nonneoplastic breast tissues; no prominent overexpression was evident. There was high variability in the expression of mammaglobin and lipophilin B among the non-neoplastic samples, showing that caution should be taken when evaluating their over- and underexpression in tumors. The expression levels of mammaglobin and lipophilin B correlated with each other in the analyzed samples (p = 0.001). Ectopic overexpression of mammaglobin and lipophilin B did not affect the cell proliferation rate of Hs578T breast carcinoma cells in vitro.
CONCLUSION: Our findings suggest that the overexpression of mammaglobin observed in certain breast tumors is an epiphenomenon not causally involved in breast carcinogenesis.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18630503

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Anticancer Res        ISSN: 0250-7005            Impact factor:   2.480


  5 in total

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Journal:  Hum Genomics       Date:  2011-10       Impact factor: 4.639

Review 2.  Human mammaglobin in breast cancer: a brief review of its clinical utility.

Authors:  Fawwaz Shakir Al Joudi
Journal:  Indian J Med Res       Date:  2014-05       Impact factor: 2.375

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5.  Secretoglobin expression in ovarian carcinoma: lipophilin B gene upregulation as an independent marker of better prognosis.

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  5 in total

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