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Medical Molecular Biology Commons

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

2004

Neoplastic

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Medical Molecular Biology

Transcriptional Activation Of The Human Prostatic Acid Phosphatase Gene By Nf-Kappab Via A Novel Hexanucleotide-Binding Site., Stanislav Zelivianski, Richard Glowacki, Ming-Fong Lin Jul 2004

Transcriptional Activation Of The Human Prostatic Acid Phosphatase Gene By Nf-Kappab Via A Novel Hexanucleotide-Binding Site., Stanislav Zelivianski, Richard Glowacki, Ming-Fong Lin

Journal Articles: Biochemistry & Molecular Biology

Human prostatic acid phosphatase (PAcP) is a prostate epithelium-specific differentiation antigen. Cellular PAcP functions as a neutral protein tyrosine phosphatase and is involved in regulating androgen-promoted prostate cancer cell proliferation. Despite the fact that the promoter of the PAcP gene has been cloned, the transcriptional factors that regulate PAcP expression remain unidentified. This article describes our analyses of the promoter of the PAcP gene. Deletion analyses of the promoter sequence up to -4893 (-4893/+87) revealed that a 577 bp fragment (-1356/-779) represents the unique positive cis-active element in human prostate cancer cells but not in HeLa cervix carcinoma cells. Interestingly, …


Muc4 Mucin Expression In Human Pancreatic Tumours Is Affected By Organ Environment: The Possible Role Of Tgfbeta2., A. Choudhury, N. Moniaux, A. B. Ulrich, B. M. Schmied, J. Standop, Parviz M. Pour, S. J. Gendler, Michael A. Hollingsworth, J-P Aubert, Surinder K. Batra Feb 2004

Muc4 Mucin Expression In Human Pancreatic Tumours Is Affected By Organ Environment: The Possible Role Of Tgfbeta2., A. Choudhury, N. Moniaux, A. B. Ulrich, B. M. Schmied, J. Standop, Parviz M. Pour, S. J. Gendler, Michael A. Hollingsworth, J-P Aubert, Surinder K. Batra

Journal Articles: Biochemistry & Molecular Biology

MUC4 is highly expressed in human pancreatic tumours and pancreatic tumour cell lines, but is minimally or not expressed in normal pancreas or chronic pancreatitis. Here, we investigated the aberrant regulation of MUC4 expression in vivo using clonal human pancreatic tumour cells (CD18/HPAF) grown either orthotopically in the pancreas (OT) or ectopically in subcutaneous tissue (SC) in the nude mice. Histological examination of the OT and SC tumours showed moderately differentiated and anaplastic morphology, respectively. The OT tumour cells showed metastases to distant lymph nodes and faster tumour growth (P