The human telomerase enzyme is composed of two essential components, hTR, which acts as a template for reverse transcription, and hTERT, which is the putative catalytic subunit for the enzyme. Recent studies have demonstrated a good correlation between hTERT expression and telomerase activation, whe
Presence of activated ras correlates with increased cysteine proteinase activities in human colorectal carcinomas
โ Scribed by Kwonseop Kim; Jinguo Cai; Sania Shuja; Tom Kuo; Mary Jo Murnane
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- French
- Weight
- 176 KB
- Volume
- 79
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0020-7136
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
The metastatic potential of ras-transfected cells has been attributed in part to significant ras induction of proteinase expression. To determine whether primary cancers also demonstrate higher cysteine proteinase activities in the presence of activated ras genes or altered ras protein expression, we have analyzed 60 primary human colorectal carcinomas for ras gene or protein changes together with the expression of cathepsins B and L. Cancers containing K-ras mutations (47% of 60 carcinomas) demonstrated greater increases in cathepsin L activity than cancers without K-ras mutations (p โซุโฌ 0.029), with particularly significant correlations for earlier stage cancers (Dukes' A and B carcinomas, p โซุโฌ 0.006). Western blots used to characterize ras protein patterns in the same cancer/normal pairs have demonstrated that N-ras protein is more highly expressed in colon tissues than H-or K-ras proteins and that N-ras overexpression occurs in almost 70% of colorectal cancers, with or without a concurrent change in electrophoretic mobility of N-ras protein. Our current study has now shown that N-ras protein overexpression alone does not significantly induce cathepsin B or L activity levels in colon cancers. However, carcinomas demonstrating altered N-ras protein forms, in the absence of any K-or N-ras mutations, expressed significantly higher levels of cathepsin B and L activities compared with carcinomas with normal N-ras protein banding patterns. Our data suggest that colorectal carcinomas with either K-ras mutations or altered forms of N-ras protein may increase their tumorigenic potential via the induction of cathepsin L or B expression levels. Our results also confirm that ras oncogene up-regulation of cathepsin B and L activities, previously reported in cultured cells, is a frequent event in primary human colorectal carcinomas.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
We and others have reported an association between raf-1 protein serine/threonine kinase activity and transformation of mammalian cells. Because constitutive tyrosine phosphorylation of specific polypeptides is, in general, indicative of the transformed state of cells, we investigated the effect of