p21 ras protein expression in benign and malignant human breast.

J Pathol

Department of Pathology, Leicester Royal Infirmary, U.K.

Published: October 1988

The ras oncogenes encode for GTP binding and GTPase active proteins of relative molecular mass 21,000 (p21ras) which are involved in the transduction of stimuli for cell proliferation. There have been conflicting reports about the detection and significance of expression of p21ras protein in human breast disease as determined by immunohistochemistry. The antibody Y13-259, which detects a single protein of Mr 21,000, has been applied immunohistochemically to frozen sections of normal, benign proliferative breast, fibroadenomas, and carcinomas. Uniform staining of normal breast epithelium and myoepithelium was found, with occasional stronger staining in areas of epithelial hyperplasia in benign breast disease. Contrary to previous reports, decreased expression, usually heterogeneous, was found in half of the carcinomas examined. Thirty per cent of the carcinomas exhibited heterogeneous staining stronger than that of normal breast, interpreted as increased expression of p21ras protein. This did not relate to tumour grade or node status but showed a significant correlation with proliferation rate as determined by the monoclonal antibody Ki-67. This study confirms previous reports that p21ras protein expression is a feature of normal cells, and has identified increased expression in 30 per cent of tumours associated with higher proliferation rates, which is a lower incidence than previously claimed when a different antibody was employed.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/path.1711560209DOI Listing

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