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Lumican and decorin are differentially expressed in human breast carcinoma

✍ Scribed by Etienne Leygue; Linda Snell; Helmut Dotzlaw; Sandra Troup; Tamara Hiller-Hitchcock; Leigh C. Murphy; Peter J. Roughley; Peter H. Watson


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2000
Tongue
English
Weight
338 KB
Volume
192
Category
Article
ISSN
0022-3417

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✦ Synopsis


Previous studies have shown that lumican is expressed and increased in the stroma of breast tumours. Lumican expression has now been examined relative to other members of the small leucine-rich proteoglycan gene family in normal and neoplastic breast tissues, to begin to determine its role in breast tumour progression. Western blot study showed that lumican protein is highly abundant relative to decorin, while biglycan and ®bromodulin are only detected occasionally in breast tissues (n=15 cases). Further analysis of lumican and decorin expression performed in matched normal and tumour tissues by in situ hybridization showed that both mRNAs were expressed by similar ®broblast-like cells adjacent to epithelium. However, lumican mRNA expression was signi®cantly increased in tumours (n=34, p<0.0001), while decorin mRNA was decreased ( p=0.0002) in neoplastic relative to adjacent normal stroma. This was accompanied by a signi®cant increase in lumican protein (n=12, p=0.0122), but not decorin. Further evidence of altered lumican expression in breast cancer was manifested by discordance between lumican mRNA and protein localization in some regions of tumours but not in adjacent morphologically normal tissues. It is concluded that lumican is the most abundant of these proteoglycans in breast tumours and that lumican and decorin are inversely regulated in association with breast tumourigenesis.


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