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Genetic basis of human breast cancer metastasis

Authors :
M T, Debies
D R, Welch
Source :
Journal of mammary gland biology and neoplasia. 6(4)
Publication Year :
2002

Abstract

Once cancer cells have spread and formed secondary masses, breast cancers are largely incurable even with state-of-the-art medicine. To improve diagnosis and therapy, better markers are needed to distinguish cells which have a high probability for causing clinically relevant, macroscopic metastases. In this review, we summarize the several genes that regulate breast cancer metastasis. Two categories of genes are presented--metastasis activator (ras, MEK1, mta1, proteinases, adhesion molecules, chemoattractants/receptors, autotaxin, PKC, S100A4, RhoC, osteopontin) and metastasis suppressor (Nm23, E-cadherin, TIMPs, KiSS1, Kai1, Maspin, MKK4, BRMS1). While the mechanisms of action for most of these genes are not fully elucidated, some clues are emerging and are presented.

Details

ISSN :
10833021
Volume :
6
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of mammary gland biology and neoplasia
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........4180b087e1fbc69be373038f4239167b