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Clinical Cancer Research Vol. 12, 405-410, January 2006
© 2006 American Association for Cancer Research


Human Cancer Biology

Increased Expression of Mitotic Checkpoint Genes in Breast Cancer Cells with Chromosomal Instability

Bibo Yuan1, Yi Xu1, Ju-Hyung Woo1, Yunyue Wang1, Young Kyung Bae3, Dae-Sung Yoon4, Robert P. Wersto2, Ellen Tully1, Kathleen Wilsbach1 and Edward Gabrielson1

Authors' Affiliations: 1 Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, 2 Gerentology Research Center, National Institute on Aging, Baltimore, Maryland; 3 Yeungnam University School of Medicine, and 4 Konyang University School of Medicine, Daegu, Korea

Requests for reprints: Edward Gabrielson, Johns Hopkins Cancer Center, 417 North Caroline Street, Baltimore, MD 21231. Phone: 410-502-5250; Fax: 410-955-8780; E-mail: egabriel{at}jhmi.edu.

Purpose: Most breast cancers have chromosomal instability that seems related to defective mitotic spindle checkpoints. Because the molecular basis of this defect is unknown, we evaluated breast cancer cell lines and tissues for possible defects involving the major mitotic checkpoint genes responsible for maintaining chromosomal stability.

Experimental Design: We analyzed sequences and expression levels (RNA and protein) of eight major spindle checkpoint genes (MAD1L1, MAD2L1, MAD2L2, BUB1, BUB1B, BUB3, CDC20, and TTK) in a panel of 12 breast cancer cell lines, most with established genetic instability and defective spindle damage checkpoint response. mRNA levels of these genes were also measured in primary tumor samples, and immunohistochemical staining was used to evaluate BUB1B protein levels in a panel of 270 additional cases of breast cancer.

Results: No functionally significant sequence variations were found for any of the eight genes in the breast cancer cell lines with chromosomal instability. More surprisingly, the mRNA and protein levels for these checkpoint genes are significantly higher in the genetically unstable breast cancer cell lines and in high-grade primary breast cancer tissues than in the stable (and checkpoint proficient) MCF-10A and normal mammary epithelial cells, or in normal breast tissues. In fact, overexpression of the BUB1B protein is a marker that recognizes nearly 80% of breast cancers in paraffin-embedded tissues.

Conclusions: Defective mitotic spindle checkpoints in breast cancer are most likely not caused by low expression or mutations of these eight checkpoint genes. High levels of these particular transcripts could represent a cellular compensation for defects in other molecular components of the mitotic spindle damage checkpoint, and increased expression of these genes might be markers of breast cancers with chromosomal instability.




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CarcinogenesisHome page
I. Perez de Castro, G. de Carcer, and M. Malumbres
A census of mitotic cancer genes: new insights into tumor cell biology and cancer therapy
Carcinogenesis, May 1, 2007; 28(5): 899 - 912.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




HOME HELP FEEDBACK SUBSCRIPTIONS ARCHIVE SEARCH TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Copyright © 2006 by the American Association for Cancer Research.