Publication | Closed Access
Expression of a novel antiapoptosis gene, survivin, correlated with tumor cell apoptosis and p53 accumulation in gastric carcinomas.
466
Citations
17
References
1998
Year
Chemoprevention StrategyApoptosis InhibitionP53 AccumulationApoptosisCell DeathPathologyEscherichia ColiCancer BiologyTumor BiologyGastrointestinal OncologyCancer Cell BiologyAnti-cancer AgentCancer ResearchOncogenic AgentMedicineGastric CancerPharmacologyCell BiologyTumor MicroenvironmentNovel Antiapoptosis GeneTumor SuppressorOncologyTumor Cell Apoptosis
A novel inhibitor of apoptosis designated survivin has recently been found in many common human cancers but not in normal tissues. A potential distribution of survivin in gastric cancer and its implication for apoptosis inhibition have been investigated. Recombinant survivin expressed in Escherichia coli as a glutathione S-transferase fusion protein was used to raise a novel panel of mouse monoclonal antibodies. In an immunohistochemical analysis of 174 cases of gastric carcinomas (stages I-III), anti-survivin monoclonal antibody 8E2 (IgG1) reacted with 34.5% of cases (60 of 174 cases) with a variable number of tumor cells stained (20-100%). In contrast, no expression of survivin in neighboring normal tissues was observed. When stratified for p53 and bcl-2 expression and apoptotic index, the expression of survivin significantly segregated with p53- and bcl-2-positive cases [56.1 versus 15.2% (P = 0.001) and 69.2 versus 31.6% (P = 0.006), respectively] and with a decreased apoptotic index as compared with that of survivin-negative tumors (0.97 +/- 0.64 versus 0.62 +/- 0.39%, P < 0.001). These data identify a role for survivin in promoting aberrantly increased cell viability in gastric cancer and suggest a potential correlation between accumulated p53 and survivin expression in neoplasia.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1