Plakophilin (PKP1) 1 is a member of the arm-repeat family of catenins and acts as a structural component of desmosomes, which are important stabilizers of cell-cell adhesion. Besides this, PKP1 also occurs in a non-junctional, cytoplasmic form contributing to post-transcriptional regulation of gene expression. Moreover, PKP1 is expressed in the prostate epithelium but its expression is frequently downregulated in prostate cancers with a more aggressive phenotype.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCytoplasmic dynein-1 is a large minus-end-directed microtubule motor complex involved in membrane trafficking, organelle positioning, and microtubule organization. The roles of dynein light intermediate chains (DLICs; DLIC1 and DLIC2) within the complex are, however, still largely undefined. In this study, we investigated the possible roles of DLICs in epithelial homeostasis and colon cancer development.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDue to its profound therapeutic consequences, the distinction between thymoma and T-lymphoblastic lymphoma in needle biopsies is one of the most challenging in mediastinal pathology. One essential diagnostic criterion favouring thymoma is the demonstration of increased numbers of keratin-positive epithelial cells by immunohistochemistry. Loss of keratin expression in neoplastic epithelial cells could lead to detrimental misdiagnoses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAmassments of heterochromatin in somatic cells occur in close contact with the nuclear envelope (NE) but are gapped by channel- and cone-like zones that appear largely free of heterochromatin and associated with the nuclear pore complexes (NPCs). To identify proteins involved in forming such heterochromatin exclusion zones (HEZs), we used a cell culture model in which chromatin condensation induced by poliovirus (PV) infection revealed HEZs resembling those in normal tissue cells. HEZ occurrence depended on the NPC-associated protein Tpr and its large coiled coil-forming domain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe plakophilins, members of the armadillo-repeat family, consist of three different proteins (PKP1-3) that are specifically recruited to desmosomal plaques in a highly cell type-specific manner. Using immunofluorescence, immunoelectron microscopy, and immunoblot, we found that all three plakophilins occurred in luminal and basal cells of the pseudostratified prostate epithelium. The analysis of 135 cases of prostatic adenocarcinomas grouped into tumors with low (Gleason score < or = 6), intermediate (Gleason score 7), and high Gleason score (8 < or = Gleason score < or = 10) showed that the expression of PKP1 was reduced or lost in adenocarcinomas with high Gleason scores.
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