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Cytochemical and biochemical evidence of cathepsin B in malignant, transformed and normal breast epithelial cells
37
Citations
41
References
1987
Year
Breast OncologyImmunologyPathologyChemical BiologyEnzymatic ModificationMammary Gland DevelopmentTumor BiologyCysteine ProteinaseBioanalysisVarious Proteinase InhibitorsCancer ResearchBiochemistryBioconjugationBiochemical EvidenceMammary GlandCell BiologyCellular EnzymologyCathepsin BBreast Epithelial CellsNatural SciencesBreast CancerProtein EngineeringCellular BiochemistryMedicineExtracellular Matrix
Human breast cancer cell lines, as well as transformed mammary epithelial cells (HBL-100) and growth-stimulated normal breast epithelial cells showed positive cytochemical reaction with the proteinase substrate 2-(N-benzyloxycarbonyl-L-arginyl-L-arginylamido)-4-methoxynapht halene, in the presence of 5-nitrosalicylaldehyde. The reaction product, small fluorescent granules, was distributed throughout the cytoplasm, in the perinuclear zone, in some cytoplasmic projections, and at the cell surface. Using a panel of various proteinase inhibitors, we found that the formation of the reaction product was an enzymic function of a cysteine proteinase. Using the substrate 7-(N-benzyloxycarbonyl-L-arginyl-L-arginylamido)-4-methylcoumarin, we evaluated some biochemical properties of the cysteine proteinase, including pH-activity profile, pH stability, apparent relative molecular mass and sensitivity toward various proteinase inhibitors. We found that the proteinase from the studied breast epithelial cells exhibited characteristics of a mature form of cathepsin B. Taken together, the cytochemical and biochemical data provide evidence that human breast epithelial cells of cancer origin, as well as in the transformed or growth-stimulated state express active cathepsin B and compartmentalize it into specific subcellular sites.
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