2004
DOI: 10.1002/ijc.20151
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Alterations in tropomyosin isoform expression in human transitional cell carcinoma of the urinary bladder

Abstract: Previous studies of transformed rodent fibroblasts have suggested that specific isoforms of the actin-binding protein tropomyosin (TM) could function as suppressors of transformation, but an analysis of TM expression in patient tumor tissue is limited. The purpose of our study was to characterize expression of the different TM isoforms in human transitional cell carcinoma of the urinary bladder by immunohistochemistry and Western blot analysis. We found that TM1 and TM2 protein levels were markedly reduced and… Show more

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Cited by 76 publications
(75 citation statements)
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References 25 publications
(17 reference statements)
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“…However, the existence of other TPM family members varied among the different types of cancers or studies (17)(18)(19). In the present study, TPM1 was significantly downregulated in most RCC tissues compared to that in the tumor adjacent normal renal tissues while TPM2-4 showed no significant expression differences in the RCC tissue samples.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 49%
“…However, the existence of other TPM family members varied among the different types of cancers or studies (17)(18)(19). In the present study, TPM1 was significantly downregulated in most RCC tissues compared to that in the tumor adjacent normal renal tissues while TPM2-4 showed no significant expression differences in the RCC tissue samples.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 49%
“…Work from this and other laboratories has identified that the tropomyosin isoform-1 (TM1), is consistently suppressed in breast cancer cell lines (Bhattacharya et al, 1990) and breast tumors (Raval et al, 2003), and is downregulated in urinary bladder tumors (Pawlak et al, 2004), suggesting that the loss of TM1 may contribute to the neoplastic transformation. Restoration of TM1 expression in several oncogene-transformed (Prasad et al, 1993(Prasad et al, , 1999Braverman et al, 1996) and spontaneously transformed breast cancer cells (Mahadev et al, 2002;Raval et al, 2003) reorganizes microfilaments, forms stress fibers in a Rho-kinase-dependent fashion (Shah et al, 2001) and suppresses the anchorage-independent growth.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…The loss of tropomyosin expression in tumour cells may prevent proper assembly of microfilaments and, thereby contribute to the invasive and metastatic properties of cancer cells (Shah et al, 2001). In bladder carcinoma alterations in TM expression (reduced TM1, 2 and 3) seem to be an early event in bladder carcinogenesis (Pawlak et al, 2004). Similar to our findings, low expression of TM1 and TM2 has been detected in cervical carcinoma (Bae et al, 2005), of TM2 in oesophageal squamous cell carcinoma (Jazii et al, 2006) and of TM1 in breast carcinoma (Franzen et al, 1996;Raval et al, 2003).…”
Section: Cytoskeletal Proteinsmentioning
confidence: 99%