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Showing papers by "Georgia Sotiropoulou published in 2009"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Kallikrein-related peptidases constitute a single family of 15 (chymo)trypsin-like proteases (KLK1–15) with pleiotropic physiological roles and represent attractive biomarkers for clinical applications and potential therapeutic targets for common human pathologies.

213 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
26 Jun 2009-RNA
TL;DR: The emergent roles of microRNAs as switches that function to turn on/off known cellular microcircuits are discussed and exciting insights into aberrant microRNA control in cancer-associated circuits are exploited for cancer therapies that will target deregulated miRNA switches.
Abstract: Transformation of normal cells into malignant tumors requires the acquisition of six hallmark traits, e.g., self-sufficiency in growth signals, insensitivity to antigrowth signals and self-renewal, evasion of apoptosis, limitless replication potential, angiogenesis, invasion, and metastasis, which are common to all cancers (Hanahan and Weinberg 2000). These new cellular traits evolve from defects in major regulatory microcircuits that are fundamental for normal homeostasis. The discovery of microRNAs (miRNAs) as a new class of small non-protein-coding RNAs that control gene expression post-transcriptionally by binding to various mRNA targets suggests that these tiny RNA molecules likely act as molecular switches in the extensive regulatory web that involves thousands of transcripts. Most importantly, accumulating evidence suggests that numerous microRNAs are aberrantly expressed in human cancers. In this review, we discuss the emergent roles of microRNAs as switches that function to turn on/off known cellular microcircuits. We outline recent compelling evidence that deregulated microRNA-mediated control of cellular microcircuits cooperates with other well-established regulatory mechanisms to confer the hallmark traits of the cancer cell. Furthermore, these exciting insights into aberrant microRNA control in cancer-associated circuits may be exploited for cancer therapies that will target deregulated miRNA switches.

153 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that KLK6 is an epigenetically regulated tumor suppressor in human breast cancer and ways of pharmacologic modulation are provided to provide ways of Pharmacologic modulation.
Abstract: Human kallikrein-related peptidase 6 (KLK6) was cloned as a putative class II tumor suppressor based on its inactivated expression in metastatic breast cancer. Here, we investigated the mechanism(s) underlying the silencing of KLK6 gene in metastatic breast cancer and its putative implications for tumor progression. We present evidence that tumor-specific loss of KLK6 expression is due to hypermethylation of specific CpGs located in the KLK6 proximal promoter. Methylation-dependent binding of methyl CpG-binding protein 2 and the formation of repressive chromatin mediated by localized histone deacetylation are critical components of KLK6 silencing in breast tumors. Re-expression of KLK6 in nonexpressing MDA-MB-231 breast tumor cells by stable cDNA transfection resulted in marked reversal of their malignant phenotype, manifested by lower proliferation rates and saturation density, marked inhibition of anchorage-independent growth, reduced cell motility, and their dramatically reduced ability to form tumors when implanted in severe combined immunodeficiency mice. Interestingly, inhibition of tumor growth was observed at physiologic concentrations of KLK6, but not when KLK6 was highly overexpressed, as observed in a subset of breast tumors. Differential proteomic profiling revealed that KLK6 re-expression results in significant down-regulation of vimentin which represents an established marker of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition of tumor cells and in concomitant up-regulation of calreticulin and epithelial markers cytokeratin 8 and 19, indicating that KLK6 may play a protective role against tumor progression that is likely mediated by inhibition of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition. We suggest that KLK6 is an epigenetically regulated tumor suppressor in human breast cancer and provide ways of pharmacologic modulation.

87 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: CST6 promoter methylation status in tumor cells seems to provide important prognostic information in operable breast cancer and merits to be further evaluated and validated in a larger cohort of patients.
Abstract: The methylation status of cystatin M (CST6) gene in breast tumors was investigated and its prognostic significance as a novel breast cancer biomarker was evaluated. Using methylation-specific PCR (MSP), CST6 promoter methylation was examined in 134 formalin fixed paraffin-embedded tissues (FFPEs): 10 pairs of breast tumors and their surrounding normal tissues, 10 breast fibroadenomas, 11 normal breast tissues and 93 breast tumors. Methylation of CST6 promoter was observed in 2/21 (9.5%) noncancerous breast tissues, 1/10 (10%) benign breast tumors (fibroadenomas) and 52 (55.9%) operable breast cancer tumor samples. CST6 was rarely methylated in the normal tissue surrounding the tumor (10%). During the follow-up period, 24 (25.8%) patients relapsed and 19 (20.4%) died. CST6 methylation was detected in 19 (79.2%) of patients who relapsed and in 15 (78.9%) of patients who died. Disease-free-interval (DFI) and overall survival (OS) were significantly associated with CST6 promoter methylation (p = 0.004 and p = 0.001 respectively). Multivariate analysis revealed that CST6 methylation is an independent prognostic factor for DFI (HR = 3.484; 95% CI: 1.155–10.511; p = 0.027). and OS (HR = 9.190; 95% CI: 1.989–42.454; p = 0.004). CST6 promoter methylation status in tumor cells seems to provide important prognostic information in operable breast cancer and merits to be further evaluated and validated in a larger cohort of patients. © 2009 UICC

40 citations