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Effect of different ERK2 protein localizations on prognosis of patients with invasive breast carcinoma

15

Citations

31

References

2005

Year

Abstract

Mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAP kinase) pathways represent a cascade of phosphorylation events, including three pivotal kinases, Raf, MEK and ERK1/2, which have been implicated in the pathogenesis of cancer. We examined 151 cases of invasive breast carcinoma by immunohistochemistry and compared the ERK2 expression with clinicopathological parameters, MMP-11 immunoexpression and patients' survival. ERK2 immunoexpression was detected in the cytoplasm and nucleus of cancer cells in 37.7% and 19.2% of cases, respectively. Nuclear ERK2 was inversely correlated with ER (p = 0.039), whereas cytoplasmic ERK2 was positively correlated with MMP-11 in fibroblasts (p = 0.032) and more often expressed in lobular than ductal carcinomas (p = 0.026). Nuclear ERK2 expression was found to be an independent prognostic factor of shortened overall survival of patients (p = 0.040), while cytoplasmic ERK2 had an independent, favorable effect on both disease-free and overall survival (p < 0.0001 and p = 0.002, respectively). These findings suggest that the different subcellular localizations of ERK2 seem to be related to different, possibly contradictory, effects on patient survival.

References

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