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Title: MnSOD expression is less frequent in tumour cells of invasive breast carcinomas than in in situ carcinomas or non-neoplastic breast epithelial cells. Author: Soini Y, Vakkala M, Kahlos K, Pääkkö P, Kinnula V. Journal: J Pathol; 2001 Sep; 195(2):156-62. PubMed ID: 11592093. Abstract: Manganese superoxide dismutase (MnSOD) is an antioxidant enzyme capable of neutralizing superoxide anion molecules. In previous studies it has been suggested to suppress both tumour proliferation and apoptosis. This study investigated 65 invasive, 50 in situ and 19 benign hyperplastic breast lesions for its immunohistochemical expression. MnSOD expression was also tested with in situ hybridization. To study cell proliferation, apoptosis and their association with MnSOD expression the neoplastic breast lesions were immunostained with a monoclonal antibody to Ki-67 and the extent of apoptosis in them was determined by the TUNEL method. 32/65 (49%) of the invasive ductal carcinomas, 41/50 (82%) of the in situ and 15/19 (79%) of the benign hyperplasias expressed the MnSOD protein. There were significantly more MnSOD positive cases in in situ carcinoma and in benign hyperplasia than in invasive carcinoma (p=0.00016 and p=0.022, respectively). Positivity was also more frequently found in non-neoplastic ductal and acinar epithelial cells than in invasive carcinoma. On the other hand, neoplastic epithelial cells of invasive and in situ carcinoma showed strong positivity more often than the epithelial cells of benign hyperplasia or non-neoplastic epithelium. In breast lesions, MnSOD positivity did not associate with proliferation or apoptosis. The lower frequency of MnSOD positive cases in invasive breast carcinoma suggests that the lack of its expression might contribute to the development of an invasive breast carcinoma phenotype and that it could in this way operate as a tumour suppressor gene, as previously suggested.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]