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Title: Expression of the bcl-2 gene family in normal and malignant breast tissue: low bax-alpha expression in tumor cells correlates with resistance towards apoptosis. Author: Bargou RC, Daniel PT, Mapara MY, Bommert K, Wagener C, Kallinich B, Royer HD, Dörken B. Journal: Int J Cancer; 1995 Mar 16; 60(6):854-9. PubMed ID: 7896458. Abstract: We have studied the expression of the apoptosis-regulating genes bcl-2, bcl-x, bax and APO-1/fas (CD95) in human breast cancer. The expression pattern of these genes in human breast-cancer tissues and breast-cancer-derived cell lines was compared to that seen in normal breast epithelium and breast epithelial cell lines. No difference with regard to bcl-2 and bcl-xL expression was observed between normal breast epithelium and tumor tissue or breast cancer and non-malignant epithelial cell lines. In contrast, bax-alpha, a splice variant of bax, which promotes apoptosis, is expressed in high amounts in normal cell lines and breast tissue, whereas only weak or no expression could be detected in cancer-cell lines and malignant tissue. In contrast to malignant cell lines, which express low levels of bax-alpha, non-malignant epithelial cell lines displaying high amounts of bax-alpha were highly sensitive to induction of programmed cell death by both serum starvation and APO-1/fas (CD95) triggering. We therefore propose that dysregulation of apoptosis contributes to the pathogenesis of breast cancer, at least in part, due to an imbalance between anti-apoptosis genes (such as bcl-2/bcl-x) and apoptosis-promoting genes (bax).[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]