[HTML][HTML] A novel potent tumour promoter aberrantly overexpressed in most human cancers

A Takahashi, H Tokita, K Takahashi, T Takeoka… - Scientific Reports, 2011 - nature.com
A Takahashi, H Tokita, K Takahashi, T Takeoka, K Murayama, D Tomotsune, M Ohira…
Scientific Reports, 2011nature.com
The complexity and heterogeneity of tumours have hindered efforts to identify commonalities
among different cancers. Furthermore, because we have limited information on the
prevalence and nature of ubiquitous molecular events that occur in neoplasms, it is
unfeasible to implement molecular-targeted cancer screening and prevention. Here, we
found that the FEAT protein is overexpressed in most human cancers, but weakly expressed
in normal tissues including the testis, brain and liver. Transgenic mice that ectopically …
Abstract
The complexity and heterogeneity of tumours have hindered efforts to identify commonalities among different cancers. Furthermore, because we have limited information on the prevalence and nature of ubiquitous molecular events that occur in neoplasms, it is unfeasible to implement molecular-targeted cancer screening and prevention. Here, we found that the FEAT protein is overexpressed in most human cancers, but weakly expressed in normal tissues including the testis, brain and liver. Transgenic mice that ectopically expressed FEAT in the thymus, spleen, liver and lung spontaneously developed invasive malignant lymphoma (48%, 19/40) and lung-metastasizing liver cancer (hepatocellular carcinoma) (35%, 14/40) that models human hepatocarcinogenesis, indicating the FEAT protein potently drives tumorigenesis in vivo. Gene expression profiling suggested that FEAT drives receptor tyrosine kinase and hedgehog signalling pathways. These findings demonstrate that integrated efforts to identify FEAT-like ubiquitous oncoproteins are useful and may provide promising approaches for cost-effective cancer screening and prevention.
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