DC-SCRIPT Found to Have Prognostic Value in Breast Cancer

In this study, a team led by Gosse J. Adema, Ph.D., of the Department of Tumor Immunology, at the Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre, the Netherlands, and colleagues assessed the role of DC-SCRIPT as a co-regulator of nuclear receptors, including estrogen receptor (ER), progesterone receptor (PR)-B, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma, and retinoic acid receptor alpha. Prognostic value was assessed in three independent cohorts of breast cancer patients.

The researchers found that DC-SCRIPT suppressed ER- and PR-mediated transcription in a ligand-dependent fashion, whereas it enhanced the activity of the other two receptors. Quantification of DC-SCRIPT mRNA expression in the three cohorts of patients revealed that this expression is an independent prognostic factor for breast cancer patients with ER- and/or PR-positive tumors, according to the authors.

» Read more: DC-SCRIPT Found to Have Prognostic Value in Breast Cancer

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Mother’s Day Mission: Take down breast cancer

Mother’s Day Mission: Take down breast cancer
For years, Donna Deegan has wanted to stage a race on Mother’s Day. The Players Championship helped her make that happen with the second Players 5K with Donna, a beach run that begins at 8 a.m. today at the Ahern Street beach access in Atlantic Beach. Deegan, a three-time breast cancer survivor, has become the First Coast’s resident expert at staging races to raise funds for breast cancer …

Read more on The Florida Times-Union

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FDA Approved Leukemia Drugs Shows Promise In Ovarian Cancer Cells

The drug, when paired with a chemotherapy regimen, was even more effective in fighting ovarian cancer in cell lines in which signaling of the Src family kinases, associated with the deadly disease, is activated.

The study appears in the Nov. 10, 2009 edition of the British Medical Journal.

Ovarian cancer, which will strike 21,600 women this year and kill 15,500, causes more deaths than any other cancer of the female reproductive system. Few effective therapies for ovarian cancer exist, so it would be advantageous for patients if a new drug could be found that fights the cancer, said Gottfried Konecny, an assistant professor of hematology/oncology, a Jonsson Cancer Center researcher and first author of the study.

» Read more: FDA Approved Leukemia Drugs Shows Promise In Ovarian Cancer Cells

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