The translation of basic research into improved therapies for breast cancer patients requires relevant preclinical models that incorporate spontaneous metastasis. We have completed a functional and molecular characterisation of a new isogenic C57BL/6 mouse model of breast cancer metastasis, comparing and contrasting it with the established BALB/c 4T1 model. Metastatic EO771.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStanniocalcin-1 (STC1) is a secreted glycoprotein implicated in several pathologies including retinal degeneration, cerebral ischemia, angiogenesis and inflammation. Aberrant STC1 expression has been reported in breast cancer but the significance of this is not clear. High levels of STC1 expression were found in the aggressive 4T1 murine mammary tumor cells and in the MDA-MB-231 human breast cancer line.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTreatment options are limited for patients with breast cancer presenting with metastatic disease. Targeting of tumor-associated macrophages through the inhibition of colony-stimulating factor-1 receptor (CSF-1R), a key macrophage signaling pathway, has been reported to reduce tumor growth and metastasis, and these treatments are now in clinical trials. Here, we report that, surprisingly, treatment with neutralizing anti-CSF-1R and anti-CSF-1 antibodies, or with two different small-molecule inhibitors of CSF-1R, could actually increase spontaneous metastasis without altering primary tumor growth in mice bearing two independently derived mammary tumors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCaveolae and caveolin-1 (CAV1) have been linked to several cellular functions. However, a model explaining their roles in mammalian tissues in vivo is lacking. Unbiased expression profiling in several tissues and cell types identified lipid metabolism as the main target affected by CAV1 deficiency.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGene expression profiling using microarrays and xenograft transplants of human cancer cell lines are both popular tools to investigate human cancer. However, the undefined degree of cross hybridization between the mouse and human genomes hinders the use of microarrays to characterize gene expression of both the host and the cancer cell within the xenograft. Since an increasingly recognized aspect of cancer is the host response (or cancer-stroma interaction), we describe here a bioinformatic manipulation of the Affymetrix profiling that allows interrogation of the gene expression of both the mouse host and the human tumour.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMultiple-choice question (MCQ) examinations are increasingly used as the assessment method of theoretical knowledge in large class-size modules in many life science degrees. MCQ-tests can be used to objectively measure factual knowledge, ability and high-level learning outcomes, but may also introduce gender bias in performance dependent on topic, instruction, scoring and difficulty. The 'Single Answer' (SA) test is often used in which students choose one correct answer, in which they are unable to demonstrate partial knowledge.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn a recent study, we have shown that in mammary tumors from mice lacking the Cav-1 gene, there are alterations in specific heat shock proteins as well as in tumor development. With this in mind, we have now investigated other proteins in the same mammary mouse tumor model (Her-2/neu expressing mammary tumors from Cav-1 wild type and Cav-1 null mice), to further comprehend the complex tumor-stroma mechanisms involved in regulating stress responses during tumor development. In this tumor model the cancer cells always lacked of Cav-1, so the KO influenced the Cav-1 in the stroma.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: Caveolin-1 (CAV1) is a structural protein of caveolae involved in lipid homeostasis and endocytosis. Using newly generated pure Balb/C CAV1 null ((Balb/C)CAV1-/-) mice, CAV1-/- mice from Jackson Laboratories ((JAX)CAV1-/-), and CAV1-/- mice developed in the Kurzchalia Laboratory ((K)CAV1-/-), we show that under physiological conditions CAV1 expression in mouse tissues is necessary to guarantee an efficient progression of liver regeneration and mouse survival after partial hepatectomy. Absence of CAV1 in mouse tissues is compensated by the development of a carbohydrate-dependent anabolic adaptation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn a previous study, we measured caveolin-1 protein levels, both in the normal breast and in breast cancer. The study revealed no association between caveolin-1 expression in the epithelial compartment and clinical disease outcome. However, high levels of caveolin-1 in the stromal tissue surrounding the tumor associated strongly with reduced metastasis and improved survival.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: High-dose synchrotron microbeam radiation therapy (MRT) can be effective at destroying tumors in animal models while causing very little damage to normal tissues. The aim of this study was to investigate the cellular processes behind this observation of potential clinical importance.
Methods And Materials: MRT was performed using a lattice of 25 mum-wide, planar, polychromatic, kilovoltage X-ray microbeams, with 200-microm peak separation.
Caveolin-1 has been linked to tumor progression and clinical outcome in breast cancer, but a clear resolution of its role as a prognostic marker is lacking. We assessed caveolin-1 levels in normal breast tissue and two breast cancer cohorts for which outcome data were available. We found that caveolin-1 was not expressed in normal breast luminal epithelium but was present in the epithelial compartment of some tumors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEarlier we generated novel derivatives of the hydroxamate-based histone deacetylase inhibitor (HDACi), Oxamflatin (Ox), which demonstrate considerable HDACi activity. Here the effects of one such derivative, Metacept-1 (MCT-1), alone or in combination with tamoxifen on mammary tumour growth have been assessed in a syngeneic orthotopic model. MCT-1 alone resulted in a trend towards inhibition of growth of 4T1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochemical studies have suggested that annexin 2 (A2) may participate in cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection. In the current work, effects of A2 monomer (p36) and heterotetramer (A2t; p36(2)p11(2)) were investigated. Demonstrating a role for endogenous A2, the four stages of infection that were followed were each inhibited by anti-p36 or anti-p11 at 37 degrees C.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA clinically relevant model of spontaneous breast cancer metastasis to multiple sites, including bone, was characterized and used to identify genes involved in metastatic progression. The metastatic potential of several genetically related tumor lines was assayed using a novel real-time quantitative RT-PCR assay of tumor burden. Based on this assay, the tumor lines were categorized as nonmetastatic (67NR), weakly metastatic to lymph node (168FARN) or lung (66cl4), or highly metastatic to lymph node, lung, and bone (4T1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe plasminogen-activating (PA) and matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) enzyme systems are implicated in proteolytic turnover of the extracellular matrix (ECM) associated with biologic processes including wound healing, inflammation and angiogenesis. Aberrant expression of components of the PA and MMP enzyme systems occurs in the pathogenesis of metastatic cancer. Oxamflatin (Ox), a novel hydroxamic acid derivative, inhibits u-PA mRNA expression and proteolytic activity while simultaneously upregulating the expression of the natural inhibitor of u-PA, plasminogen activator inhibitor type 2 (PAI-2) in metastatic cancer cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnnexins are a family of homologous proteins that associate with anionic phospholipid (aPL) in the presence of Ca(2+). Evidence that the function of one annexin type may be regulated by another was recently reported in studies investigating cytomegalovirus-aPL interactions, where the fusogenic function of annexin 2 (A2) was attenuated by annexin 5 (A5). This observation suggested that A2 may bind directly to A5.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSteroid hormones are lipophilic suggesting they intercalate into the bilayer of target cell plasma membranes, potentially altering the fluidity and function of the membrane. The present study measured the effects of steroidal exposure on both phospholipid fluidity and integral protein mobility. Studies were performed on the effects of a variety of steroids on phosphatidylcholine liposomes, synaptosomal plasma membranes and sarcoplasmic reticulum membranes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPharmacol Biochem Behav
April 1998
Changes in the biochemical composition of synaptosomal plasma membranes (SPM) isolated from mouse brains have been measured. The protein, phospholipid, and cholesterol contents all increased over the first 30 days of postnatal life, with the cholesterol to phospholipid molar ratio (one of the major determinants of lipid fluidity) also increasing in direct relation to the decrease in lipid fluidity. The fatty acid composition of SPM also changes with the increase in 18:0, and the decrease in 18:2, 18:3, and 22:4, in keeping with the increase in membrane order.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe binding of leukotriene B4 (LTB4) to macrophages from the head kidney of the rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss was measured. Binding of [3H]LTB4 achieved a steady state after approximately 30 min of incubation and was 30% reversible in the presence of a minimum of 1000-fold excess of LTB4. Scatchard analysis of the kinetics of LTB4 binding over a range of [3H]LTB4 concentrations indicated the existence of only a single class of receptor with a dissociation constant, KD, of 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochim Biophys Acta
September 1989
The (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase from sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) has been solubilized with 1-alkanoyl propanediol-3-phosphorylcholines with chainlengths ranging between 8 and 12 C atoms. A marked dependence of the ATPase activity upon the chainlength was found, indicating that alkyl chainlengths with 12 C atoms are necessary for retention of activity. Addition of poly(ethylene glycol) to the eluting buffers used for gel filtration of the ATPase-detergent micelles was found to increase the activity and the long-term stability significantly.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHighly purified sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) has been prepared from dog hearts and has been incubated with the triplet probe erythrosinyl isothiocyanate to specifically label the Ca2+-stimulated ATPase (Ca2+-ATPase) of the SR. The rotational mobility of the Ca2+-ATPase has been studied in this erythrosin-labelled SR using time-resolved phosphorescence polarization. Qualitatively, the mobility of the cardiac Ca2+-ATPase resembles that of skeletal muscle SR Ca2+-ATPase.
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