The platinum-based anticancer drugs cisplatin, carboplatin, and oxaliplatin are an important component of chemotherapy but are limited by severe dose-limiting side effects and the ability of tumors to develop resistance rapidly. These drugs can be improved through the use of drug-delivery vehicles that are able to target cancers passively or actively. In this study, we have tethered the active component of the anticancer drug oxaliplatin to a gold nanoparticle for improved drug delivery. Naked gold nanoparticles were functionalized with a thiolated poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) monolayer capped with a carboxylate group. [Pt(1R,2R-diaminocyclohexane)(H2O)2]2NO3 was added to the PEG surface to yield a supramolecular complex with 280 (±20) drug molecules per nanoparticle. The platinum-tethered nanoparticles were examined for cytotoxicity, drug uptake, and localization in the A549 lung epithelial cancer cell line and the colon cancer cell lines HCT116, HCT15, HT29, and RKO. The platinum-tethered nanoparticles demonstrated as good as, or significantly better, cytotoxicity than oxaliplatin alone in all of the cell lines and an unusual ability to penetrate the nucleus in the lung cancer cells.
Mammary gland involution is characterized by extensive apoptosis of the epithelial cells. At the onset of involution, Stat3 is specifically activated. To address the function of this signaling molecule in mammary epithelial apoptosis, we have generated a conditional knockout of Stat3 using the Cre-lox recombination system. Following weaning, a decrease in apoptosis and a dramatic delay of involution occurred in Stat3 null mammary tissue. Involution is normally associated with a significant increase in IGFBP-5 levels. This was observed in control glands, but not in the absence of Stat3. IGFBP-5 has been suggested to induce apoptosis by sequestering IGF-1 to casein micelles, thereby inhibiting its survival function. Our findings suggest that IGFBP-5 is a direct or indirect target for Stat3 and its upregulation is essential to normal involution. No marked differences were seen in the regulation of Stat5, Bcl-x(L), or Bax in the absence of Stat3. Precocious activation of Stat1 and increases in levels of p53 and p21 occurred and may act as compensatory mechanisms for the eventual initiation of involution observed in Stat3 null mammary glands. This is the first demonstration of the importance of a Stat factor in signaling the initiation of physiological apoptosis in vivo.
The six members of the insulin-like growth factor-binding protein family (IGFBP-1-6) are important components of the IGF (insulin-like growth factor) axis. In this capacity, they serve to regulate the activity of both IGF-I and -II polypeptide growth factors. The IGFBPs are able to enhance or inhibit the activity of IGFs in a cell- and tissue-specific manner. One of these proteins, IGFBP-5, also has an important role in controlling cell survival, differentiation and apoptosis. In this review, we report on the structural and functional features of the protein which are important for these effects. We also examine the regulation of IGFBP-5 expression and comment on its potential role in tumour biology, with special reference to work with breast cancer cells.
1. Changes in the mean volume, the rate of fatty acid and acylglycerol glycerol synthesis, the activity of lipoprotein lipase and the numbers and affinities of insulin receptors of subcutaneous adipocytes are reported for sheep at different stages of pregnancy and lactation. In addition, the serum concentrations of insulin, progesterone, prolactin, choriomammotropin, somatotropin, glucose, acetate, L-lactate, glycerol and unesterified fatty acids are reported for these sheep. 2. A switch from lipid accumulation to net lipid mobilization accompanied by a decline in the capacity for lipid synthesis, occurred at the onset of the last third of pregnancy. Net lipid mobilization continued during lactation. 3. The changes that occurred in the serum concentrations of the various hormones listed above are discussed in relation to their possible roles in the modulation of adipose tissue metabolism in sheep during pregnancy and lactation. The observations are compared with those from previous studies on the hormonal control of adipose tissue metabolism in the rat during pregnancy and lactation.
Changes in the volume, the rates of fatty acid synthesis and synthesis of the glycerol moiety of acylglycerols, the activity of lipoprotein lipase, and the number and affinity of insulin receptors of adipocytes, and concentrations of serum insulin, prolactin and progesterone were determined in virgin rats and in rats at various stages of pregnancy and lactation. Changes in the metabolic activities of adipose tissue appeared to be synchronized and primarily comprised a marked decrease in anabolic activity around parturition. In contrast, the number of insulin receptors (Kd 1.5 nM) per adipocyte doubled during pregnancy before returning to normal values around parturition. It is postulated that the increase in the number of insulin receptors is an adaptation to counteract the effects of insulin-antagonistic hormones during pregnancy and that the decrease in the number of receptors is primarily responsible for the loss of anabolic activity around parturition.
Patients may have voicing abnormalities before thyroid surgery is performed. Surgery may improve or worsen the voice irrespective of the pre-operative voice status.
STATs (signal transducer and activator of transcription) are a family of latent transcription factors which are activated in response to a variety of cytokines and growth factors. This family of signalling molecules have been implicated in growth, differentiation, survival and apoptosis. In this article, we will review work which highlights the role of individual STAT factors in mammary gland and demonstrate the value of genetically modified mice in defining the function of STAT3. Involution of the mouse mammary gland is characterised by extensive apoptosis of the epithelial cells and the activation of STAT3. STATs 3 and 5 have reciprocal patterns of activation throughout a mammary developmental cycle suggesting that STAT5 may be a survival factor and STAT3 a death factor for differentiated mammary epithelium. To clarify the role of STAT3 in mammary epithelial apoptosis, we have generated a conditional knockout using the lox/Cre recombination system. Mammary glands from crosses of transgenic mice expressing Cre recombinase under the control of the beta-lactoglobulin milk protein gene promoter with mice harbouring one floxed STAT3 allele and one null STAT3 allele, showed a decrease in epithelial apoptosis and a dramatic delay of the involution process upon forced weaning. This was accompanied by precocious activation of STAT1 and increases in p53 and p21 levels--these may act as a compensatory mechanism for initiating the eventual involution which occurs in STAT3 null mammary glands. This demonstrates for the first time the importance of STAT factors in signalling the initiation of physiological apoptosis in vivo and highlights the utility of the lox/Cre system for addressing the function of genes, which have an embryonic lethal phenotype, specifically in mammary gland.
We have developed a mouse model of diet-induced obesity that shows numerous abnormalities relating to mammary gland function. Animals ate approximately 40% more calories when offered a high-fat diet and gained weight at three times the rate of controls. They exhibited reduced conception rates, increased peripartum pup mortality, and impaired lactogenesis. The impairment of lactogenesis involved lipid accumulation in the secretory epithelial cells indicative of an absence of copius milk secretion. Expression of mRNAs for beta-casein, whey acid protein, and alpha-lactalbumin were all decreased immediately postpartum but recovered as lactation was established over 2-3 days. Expression of acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC)-alpha mRNA was also decreased at parturition as was the total enzyme activity, although there was a compensatory increase in the proportion in the active state. By day 10 of lactation, the proportion of ACC in the active state was also decreased in obese animals, indicative of suppression of de novo fatty acid synthesis resulting from the supply of preformed fatty acids in the diet. Although obese animals consumed more calories in the nonpregnant and early pregnant states, they showed a marked depression in fat intake around day 9 of pregnancy before food intake recovered in later pregnancy. Food intake increased dramatically in both lean and obese animals during lactation although total calories consumed were identical in both groups. Thus, despite access to high-energy diets, the obese animals mobilized even more adipose tissue during lactation than their lean counterparts. Obese animals also exhibited marked abnormalities in alveolar development of the mammary gland, which may partially explain the delay in differentiation evident during lactogenesis.
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