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Publication Date: 10 Feb 2008
Journal: Gene Regulation and Systems Biology 2008:2 21-42
Abstract Doris M. Benbrook1,2, Stan Lightfoot3, James Ranger-Moore4, Tongzu Liu1, Shylet Chengedza2, William L. Berry5 and Igor Dozmorov6
1Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, OK. 2Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, OK. 3Department of Pathology, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, OK. 4Arizona Cancer Center, AZ. 5Department of Cell Biology, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, OK. 6Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation, Oklahoma City, OK.
Abstract
An organotypic model of endometrial carcinogenesis and chemoprevention was developed in which normal endometrial organotypic cultures exposed to the carcinogen, DMBA (7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene), developed a cancerous phenotype in the absence, but not presence of subsequent treatment with a fl exible heteroarotinoid (Flex-Het), called SHetA2. A discriminant function based on karyometric features of cellular nuclei and an agar clonogenic assay confirmed these histologic changes. Interpretation of microarray data using an internal standard approach identified major pathways associated with carcinogenesis and chemoprevention governed by c-myc, p53, TNFα and Jun genes. Cluster analysis of functional associations of hypervariable genes demonstrated that carcinogenesis is accompanied by a stimulating association between a module of genes that includes tumor necrosis factor α (TNFα), c-myc, and epidermal growth factor-receptor (EGF-R) and a module that includes insulin-like growth factor I-receptor (IGF-IR), p53, and Jun genes. Two secreted proteins involved in these systems, tenascin C and inhibin A, were validated at the protein level. Tenascin C is an EGF-R ligand, and therefore may contribute to the increased EGF-R involvement in carcinogenesis. The known roles of the identifi ed molecular systems in DMBA and endometrial carcinogenesis and chemoprevention supports the validity of this model and the potential clinical utility of SHetA2 in chemoprevention.
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I had an excellent experience publishing our review article in Clinical Medicine Reviews. The managing editor was very helpful and the process was very timely and transparent.Professor Jonathan A. Bernstein (University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Division of Immunology, Allergy Section, Cincinnati, OH, USA) What our authors say
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