跳转至内容

Dear Customer:

The current international situation is complex and volatile, and uncertain tariff policies may potentially impact our product prices. Given these uncertainties, we value your understanding regarding order-related matters.

If you decide to place an order during this period, we reserve the right to adjust the price based on the evolving situation. We understand that market changes may cause inconvenience. We will negotiate with you if there’s a significant price fluctuation due to tariff policy changes before the order’s actual delivery, and in such cases we may adjust or cancel the order as necessary.

For important updates on recent policy changes, please click here for more details.

Merck
CN
  • Identification of a subset of breast carcinomas characterized by expression of cytokeratin 15: relationship between CK15+ progenitor/amplified cells and pre-malignant lesions and invasive disease.

Identification of a subset of breast carcinomas characterized by expression of cytokeratin 15: relationship between CK15+ progenitor/amplified cells and pre-malignant lesions and invasive disease.

Molecular oncology (2007-12-01)
Julio E Celis, Irina Gromova, Teresa Cabezón, Pavel Gromov, Tao Shen, Vera Timmermans-Wielenga, Fritz Rank, José M A Moreira
摘要

Recently, we presented evidence--based on the analysis of benign hyperproliferative lesions of the breast--for the presence of cells that express the stem cell marker cytokeratin (CK) 15 in combination with CK19, a protein widely expressed by mammary epithelial cells. Here we report the finding of a subset of breast carcinomas characterized by expression of CK15. CK15 expressing tumors constituted 5% (6 out of 120; 4 of ductal type and 2 of lobular type) of the high-risk breast carcinomas examined by gel-based proteomics and immunohistochemistry. Five out of the six CK15+ carcinomas were CK15+/CK19-. The remaining tumor was mainly composed of cells expressing both CK15 and CK19 (CK15+/CK19+), but it also contained invasive areas with cells expressing only one of these makers (CK15+/CK19- and CK15-/CK19+ cells). To address the relationship between putative luminal progenitor/amplified CK15+ cells and malignant disease, and to determine whether cells/lesions lose expression of CK15 as a result of tumour initiation and/or progression, we searched among our sample set for carcinomas in which invasive tumor areas co-existed with non-malignant cells and hyperproliferative and known pre-malignant lesions. Only one such tumour was found (T71), a CK15-/CK19+/p53+ carcinoma that contained p53 negative non-malignant epithelial cells exhibiting a variety of, CK15/CK19 cellular phenotypes (CK15+/CK19+; CK15+/CK19-; CK15-/CK19+; CK15-/CK19-), often associated with simple columnar cells. Single layers of epithelial cells exhibiting all four CK15/CK19 phenotypes were observed contiguous to areas of atypical ductal hyperplasia that contained p53 positive cells that lost CK15 expression (CK15-/CK19+) and had a very similar phenotype to those of the neighboring ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) and invasive cells. The undifferentiated CK15+/CK19+ cells, which had the phenotype CK15+/CK19+/CK14+/CK8+ and -/ER-/PgR-/AR-/CD44+ (weak)/CK17-/p63-/vimentin+/Ki67-/Bcl-2+ (weak)/GATA-3-/p53-, most likely correspond to lineage-restricted luminal progenitor cells able to generate the other more differentiated CK15/CK19 cellular phenotypes, thus giving rise to the daunting intratumour heterogeneity displayed by carcinoma T71. Cells with a very similar phenotype to the CK15+/CK19+ progenitor cells were observed in a juvenile fibroadenoma as well as in the large collecting ducts of the breast. The latter, however, expressed in addition CK14 and had a phenotype (CK15+/CK19+/CK14+/CK8+ (weak)/ER-/PgR-/AR-/CD44+ (weak)/CK17-/p63-/vimentin-/Ki67-/Bcl-2+/GATA-3-/p53-) that resembled that of the putative normal adult breast stem cells as inferred from published data. Further molecular characterization of these progenitor cells as well as unraveling of the signaling pathways that regulate their growth and differentiation may prove invaluable for developing novel therapeutic strategies that target cancer at an early stage.