Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Digital Commons Network

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Articles 1 - 8 of 8

Full-Text Articles in Entire DC Network

Cellular Uptake Of Neutrohpil Elastase Links Inflammation To Adaptive Immunity, Elizabeth A. Mittendorf Dec 2012

Cellular Uptake Of Neutrohpil Elastase Links Inflammation To Adaptive Immunity, Elizabeth A. Mittendorf

Dissertations & Theses (Open Access)

Many tumors arise from sites of inflammation providing evidence that innate immunity is a critical component in the development and progression of cancer. Neutrophils are primary mediators of the innate immune response. Upon activation, an important function of neutrophils is release of an assortment of proteins from their granules including the serine protease neutrophil elastase (NE). The effect of NE on cancer has been attributed primarily to its ability to degrade the extracellular matrix thereby promoting invasion and metastasis. Recently, it was shown that NE could be taken up by lung cancer cells leading to degradation of insulin receptor substrate-1 …


Kiss1r Induces Human Mammary Epithelial Cell Invasiveness And Promotes Breast Cancer Cell Migration And Invasion Via Iqgap1, Donna Cvetkovic Aug 2012

Kiss1r Induces Human Mammary Epithelial Cell Invasiveness And Promotes Breast Cancer Cell Migration And Invasion Via Iqgap1, Donna Cvetkovic

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

Kisspeptins (KP), peptide products of the kisspeptin-1 (KISS1) gene are the endogenous ligands for a G protein-coupled receptor (KISS1R). KISS1 acts as a metastasis suppressor in numerous human cancers. However, recent studies have demonstrated that an increase in KISS1 and KISS1R expression in human breast tumors correlates with higher tumor grade and metastatic potential. We have previously shown that KP-10, the most potent KP, stimulates invasion of estrogen receptor (ER)-negative breast cancer cells via transactivation of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR). Here, I report that KP-10 treatment of the ER-negative non-malignant mammary epithelial MCF10A cells, or stable …


Sorafenib Enhances Pemetrexed-Induced Cytotoxicity Through And Autophagy-Dependent Mechanism In Cancer Cells, Bareford Mary Aug 2012

Sorafenib Enhances Pemetrexed-Induced Cytotoxicity Through And Autophagy-Dependent Mechanism In Cancer Cells, Bareford Mary

Theses and Dissertations

Acquired cellular resistance to traditional chemotherapeutics is a common obstacle in the treatment of most cancer cell types. This resistance occurs as a result of changes in the underlying molecular mechanisms of disease progression. The development of novel chemotherapeutic approaches designed to enhance the efficacy of protypical anti-cancer drugs is important in order to overcome this issue. Such approaches will aid in understanding the biomolecular phenomena responsible for drug resistance and disease progression. Combining signaling pathway inhibitors has become an effective strategy for enhancing tumor cell death by targeting multiple pathways known to regulate cell survival. Pemetrexed, an FDA-approved anti-folate …


The Embryonic Protein Nodal Supports Metastatic Phenotypes In Breast Cancer, Daniela F. Quail Jun 2012

The Embryonic Protein Nodal Supports Metastatic Phenotypes In Breast Cancer, Daniela F. Quail

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

Metastasis is the process by which tumour cells disseminate to distant organ sites. Aberrant expression of stem cell-associated proteins within tumours is associated with metastasis and poor patient prognosis. One example of a stem cell factor that is associated with cancer progression is Nodal, a member of the TGF-β superfamily. Nodal is normally limited to pluripotent stem cells during embryonic development, and to specialized dynamic adult tissue (such as the cycling endometrium), but is aberrantly re-expressed in multiple cancer types, including melanoma, glioma, prostate cancer, and pancreatic cancer. The central objective of this thesis is to determine the role of …


Roles Of Resveratrol And Genistein In Invasion And Metastasis Of Breast Cancer, Brittany Wolfe Jun 2012

Roles Of Resveratrol And Genistein In Invasion And Metastasis Of Breast Cancer, Brittany Wolfe

College of Science and Health Theses and Dissertations

Breast cancer is a cellular disease characterized by the exploitation of several cellular and molecular mechanisms involved in cell proliferation, apoptosis, motility, and invasion. Effective treatment is available for non-invasive breast cancer at diagnosis, leading to a very high survival rate compared to the low survival rate for those where the breast cancer has spread. Thus, identifying effective therapies and preventative agents is imperative to successfully treat breast cancer. Since diet compromises a large component of the risk factors for breast cancer, it would be beneficial to examine dietary compounds that could potentially play a beneficial role in inhibiting cancer …


Lmw-E Mediates Mammary Tumorigenesis By Deregulating Acinar Morphogenesis & Generating Cancer Stem Cells, Mylinh T. Duong May 2012

Lmw-E Mediates Mammary Tumorigenesis By Deregulating Acinar Morphogenesis & Generating Cancer Stem Cells, Mylinh T. Duong

Dissertations & Theses (Open Access)

Cyclin E is the regulatory subunit of the cyclin E/CDK2 complex that

mediates the G1-S phase transition. N-terminal cleavage of cyclin E by elastase in

breast cancer generates two low molecular weight (LMW) isoforms that exhibit both

enhanced kinase activity and resistance to p21 and p27 inhibition compared to fulllength cyclin E. Clinically, approximately 27% of breast cancer patients overexpress

LMW-E and associate with poor survival. Therefore, we hypothesize that LMW-E

disrupts normal mammary acinar morphogenesis and serves as the initial route into

breast tumor development. We first demonstrate that LMW-E overexpression in

non-tumorigenic hMECs is sufficient to induce tumor …


14-3-3 Zeta Overexpression Serves As A Novel Molecular Switch Turning Tgf-Beta From Tumor Suppressor To Tumor Promoter, Jia Xu May 2012

14-3-3 Zeta Overexpression Serves As A Novel Molecular Switch Turning Tgf-Beta From Tumor Suppressor To Tumor Promoter, Jia Xu

Dissertations & Theses (Open Access)

TGF-β plays an important role in differentiation and tissue morphogenesis as well as cancer progression. However, the role of TGF-β in cancer is complicate. TGF-β has primarily been recognized as tumor suppressor, because it can directly inhibit cell proliferation of normal and premalignant epithelial cell. However, in the last stage of tumor progression, TGF-β functions as tumor promoter to enhance tumor cells metastatic dissemination and expands metastatic colonies. Currently, the mechanism of how TGF-β switches its role from tumor suppressor to promoter still remains elusive. Here we identify that overexpression of 14-3-3ζ inhibits TGF-β’s cell cytostatic program through destabilizing p53 …


Crosstalk Between Lysophospatidic Acid (Lpa) And Transforming Growth Factor Beta (Tgfβ) In Breast And Ovarian Cancer Cells, Jinhua Wu Jan 2012

Crosstalk Between Lysophospatidic Acid (Lpa) And Transforming Growth Factor Beta (Tgfβ) In Breast And Ovarian Cancer Cells, Jinhua Wu

Theses and Dissertations

Lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) and transforming growth factor beta (TGFβ) are platelet-derived intercellular mediators of cell proliferation and motility. LPA is a general growth, survival and motility-stimulating factor in mammalian cells. TGFβ prevents proliferation of normal epithelial cells. However, the growth-inhibitory effect of TGFβ is lost or reduced in most malignant cells. Instead, TGFβ promotes migration and invasion of advanced cancer cells. Since LPA and TGFβ are both present in the blood and tumor microenvironments, we were interested in signal integration and functional outcomes in malignant epithelial cells in an LPA and TGFβ co-stimulatory context. In a subset of breast and …