Publications by authors named "Jacqueline F Schmitt"

The growth plate has a limited self-healing capacity. Fractures sustained to the growth plate of young children could cause growth disturbances like angular deformity or growth arrest. Established therapies for injured physis only address related complications.

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Chondrocytes of the epiphyseal growth plate (physis) differentiate and mature in defined linear zones. The current study examines the differentiation of human bone marrow derived mesenchymal stem cells (hBMSCs) into zonal physeal cartilage. hBMSCs were embedded in an agarose scaffold with only the surface of the scaffold in direct contact with the culture medium.

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Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are multipotent cells that have the potential to differentiate into various mesenchymal lineages in vitro and in vivo. Due to their availability from tissues such as bone marrow, synovium, fat, and muscle, and their highly proliferative capacity, MSCs have evoked interest as a potential cell source for repair and regeneration of various types of tissues. Characterization by the expression of a panel of surface markers and the ability of MSCs to undergo multilineage differentiation is the benchmark for identifying this stem cell population.

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Tissue-specific aromatase production is significant in breast cancer and osteoporosis. Prostatic aromatase expression has been equivocal, and any local actions of estrogens are considered secondary to centrally mediated androgen suppression. We examine local aromatase expression and estrogen biosynthesis in the human prostate.

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Activins are formed by dimerization of beta-subunits and, as members of the TGF-beta superfamily, have diverse roles as potent growth and differentiation factors. As the biological function of the activin C homodimer (betaC-betaC) is unknown, we sought to compare activin A (betaA-betaA), B (betaB-betaB), and C homodimer bioactivities and to investigate the consequences of activin betaC-subunit overexpression in prostate tumor cells. Exogenous activin A and B homodimers inhibited cell growth and activated activin-responsive promoters.

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Prostatic carcinoma affects 1 in 11 men and targets bone with sclerotic metastases. The study of prostate carcinoma growth in bone has been hampered by the lack of suitable animal models. We have developed an in vivo model of prostate carcinoma growth in bone by inoculating three human prostate carcinoma cell lines (PC-3, DU-145, and LNCaP) into the tibia of congenitally athymic mice.

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Article Synopsis
  • Inhibin consists of an alpha- and beta-subunit, with the alpha-subunit playing a tumor-suppressive role, particularly down-regulated in human prostate cancer.
  • This study focused on the inhibin alpha-subunit gene promoter to investigate if promoter hypermethylation or loss of heterozygosity (LOH) occurred in prostate cancer DNA.
  • Significant hypermethylation was found in the gene promoter of advanced prostate cancers, and LOH at a specific chromosomal region was present in 42% of the carcinomas, marking a link between inhibin alpha-subunit gene alterations and prostate cancer.
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