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J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 275, Issue 47, 36502-36505, November 24, 2000
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,
,
¶
From the
Cedars-Sinai Research Institute, UCLA School
of Medicine, Los Angeles, California 90048 and the
§ Molecular Oncology Program, H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center
and Research Institute, Tampa, Florida 33612
Received for publication, August 14, 2000, and in revised form, September 20, 2000
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ABSTRACT |
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The pituitary tumor transforming gene,
PTTG, is abundantly expressed in several neoplasms. We recently
showed that PTTG overexpression is associated with apoptosis and
therefore have now studied the role of p53 in this process. In
MCF-7 breast cancer cells that express wild type p53, PTTG
overexpression caused apoptosis. p53 was translocated to the nuclei in
cells expressing PTTG. Overexpression of p53, along with PTTG,
augmented apoptosis, whereas expression of the human papillomavirus E6
protein inhibited PTTG-induced apoptosis. In MG-63 osteosarcoma cells
that are deficient in p53, PTTG caused cell cycle arrest and subsequent
apoptosis that was inhibited by caspase inhibitors. A proteasome
inhibitor augmented PTTG expression in stable PTTG transfectants,
suggesting that down-regulated PTTG expression is required for cell
survival. Finally, MG-63 cells expressing PTTG showed signs of
aneuploidy including the presence of micronuclei and multiple nuclei.
These results indicate that PTTG overexpression causes
p53-dependent and p53-independent apoptosis. In the absence
of p53, PTTG causes aneuploidy. These results may provide a mechanism
for PTTG-induced tumorigenesis whereby PTTG mediates aneuploidy and
subsequent cell transformation.
Pituitary Tumor Transforming Gene
(PTTG)1 is highly expressed
in pituitary tumors and other neoplasms (1-3). In vitro,
PTTG transforms 3T3 fibroblasts (1, 4), but the full mechanism of PTTG
action has not been clarified. PTTG induces basic fibroblast growth
factor secretion (1, 5) and transactivates DNA transcription (6, 7).
PTTG is a mammalian securin that maintains binding of sister chromatids
during mitosis (8). We recently studied the cellular characteristics of
PTTG (9) and showed that PTTG mRNA and protein expressions are cell
cycle-dependent and peak at the G2/M phase.
PTTG is localized to both the nucleus and cytoplasm and is degraded at
the initiation of anaphase. PTTG overexpression causes apoptosis and
inhibits mitosis (9).
Tumor suppressor p53 subjects cells with severe DNA damage or other
stress to apoptosis by transactivating apoptosis-inducing genes.
Expression of oncogenes such as myc (10-12)
activates p53 and renders cells apoptotic. The same oncogenes, however,
also activate p53-independent apoptosis (13, 14). In this report, we studied p53 involvement in PTTG-induced cell death in cells expressing or lacking wild type p53. Our results show that PTTG overexpression causes p53-dependent and p53-independent
apoptosis. Aneuploidy arises as a result of PTTG overexpression in
p53-negative cells. These results suggest that aneuploidy may be a
mechanism for PTTG-induced tumorigenesis.
Cell Culture, Plasmids, and Transfection--
MCF-7 and MG-63
cells were grown in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium with
10% fetal calf serum in a 37 °C, humidified incubator with 5%
CO2. Cells were synchronized with double thymidine block (9). Cell cycle was analyzed with a fluorescence-activated cell sorter.
Plasmids encoding wild type and an enhanced green fluorescent protein
(EGFP)-tagged human PTTG and the parental plasmid pEGFP-N3 were
described before (9). Plasmids encoding p53 and R175H p53 were gifts
from Dr. C. W. Miller (Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles,
CA). Plasmid encoding human papillomavirus (HPV) E6 protein was
described before (15). Cells were transfected with FuGene (Hoffmann-La
Roche). Stable MG-63 cell lines expressing EGFP or PTTG-EGFP
were established by incubating cells with 1 mg/ml G418 after
transfection. Caspase inhibitors I and III were from Calbiochem (La
Jolla, CA).
Apoptosis Assay--
Cells transfected with EGFP or PTTG-EGFP
were fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde and permeabilized with 0.6% Tween
20 and stained with Hoechst 33258 (1:10,000; Molecular Probes,
Eugene, OR). Slides were observed with a 40× objective, and
green cells with apoptotic nuclear characteristics such as nuclear
condensation and fragmentation were scored as apoptotic. Apoptosis was
confirmed by terminal dUTP nick-end labeling staining. 200-300 green
cells were examined on each slide. Nuclear morphology of green cells
was also examined for signs of aneuploidy such as micronuclei and macronuclei.
Immunofluorescent staining and fluorescence microscopy were performed
as described (9). An antibody to p53 (1:1,000; Calbiochem) or to mdm2
(16) was used and detected with rhodamine-labeled goat anti-mouse IgG
(1:500; Molecular Probes). Cells were finally stained with Hoechst
33258 (Molecular Probes). Several hundred cells were observed in each
of the 2 to 3 staining experiments, and representative cells are
depicted. Western blotting of PTTG-EGFP was performed as
described (9).
Metaphase Karyotyping--
Growing cells were treated with 100 ng/ml colcemid (Calbiochem) for 90 min, and G2/M cells were
isolated by brief trypsinization and gentle tapping. These cells were
incubated with 75 mM KCl for 30 min and fixed and
washed with methanol-acetic acid (3:1) and dropped onto glass slides.
Metaphase chromosomes were observed.
PTTG Causes Apoptosis in MCF-7 and MG-63 Cells--
Human breast
cancer MCF-7 cells express wild type p53 (17), and human osteosarcoma
MG-63 cells are deficient in p53 (18). Both MCF-7 and MG-63 cells
express PTTG mRNA (data not shown). EGFP had no significant effect
on apoptosis in either MCF-7 or MG-63 cells (Fig.
1). Expression of PTTG-EGFP caused
apoptosis in both MCF-7 and MG-63 cells. In MCF-7 cells, apoptosis
occurred earlier. These results demonstrate that PTTG-induced apoptosis occurs independently of the presence of p53.
PTTG Activates p53-mediated Apoptosis in MCF-7 Cells--
p53
mostly distributes in the cytoplasm in normal MCF-7 cells. 64 of 215 cells (30%) expressing PTTG-EGFP had bright nuclear p53 staining (Fig.
2a), versus 20 of
217 cells (9%) expressing EGFP (p < 0.05), suggesting
that p53 is translocated to the nuclei as a result of PTTG expression.
Very few cells (<1%) expressing PTTG-EGFP revealed nuclear staining
of mdm2, a negative regulator of p53, suggesting that mdm2-induced
inhibition of p53 export from the nucleus is not responsible for p53
up-regulation. Overexpression of wild type p53 increased apoptosis of
MCF-7 cells expressing either EGFP or PTTG-EGFP; however, a
preferential increase of apoptosis in cells expressing PTTG-EGFP was
observed (Fig. 2b). Overexpression of mutant (R175H) p53 did
not have a significant impact on MCF-7 cell death. Overexpression of
E6, a protein that targets p53 to degradation, eliminated p53
immunoreactivity in most cells expressing PTTG-EGFP (Fig.
2b, inset). E6 promoted death of cells expressing
EGFP, possibly because of lowered checkpoint function, but it protected
MCF-7 cells from death induced by PTTG-EGFP. Similar experiments on
MG-63 cells showed that p53 did not affect apoptosis induced by PTTG
(Fig. 2c).
PTTG Arrests MG-63 Cell Cycle--
To investigate the relationship
between apoptosis and cell cycle changes induced by PTTG, we first
observed the same live cells expressing either EGFP or PTTG-EGFP after
they were released from a double thymidine block, using fluorescence
microscopy (Fig. 3a). In the
18 h after release, 16 of 39 cells (41%) expressing EGFP divided,
1 cell (3%) died, and 22 cells (56%) did not change appreciably. EGFP
fluorescence was stable among all cells expressing EGFP alone. During
the same period, none of the cells expressing PTTG-EGFP divided, 6 of
30 cells (20%) died, EGFP fluorescence disappeared in 3 cells
(10%), and 21 cells (70%) exhibited no obvious change. Consistent
with our previous observation (9), these results demonstrated that PTTG
blocked mitosis, and cells were able to degrade PTTG in interphase.
To determine where the cell cycle was blocked by PTTG, we analyzed the
cell cycle of unsynchronized MG-63 cells expressing EGFP or PTTG-EGFP
48 h after transfection (Fig. 3b). EGFP itself did not
affect the cell cycle (Fig. 3b, left).
PTTG-EGFP-expressing cells had a similar number of cells in S phase
(Fig. 3b, right), but a prominent
G2/M phase (14%) and a corresponding smaller
G1 phase were observed, suggesting a blockade on exit from mitosis.
Caspases have been implicated in apoptosis induced by taxol and human
immunodeficiency virus viral protein R (19, 20), both blocking cell
cycle at G2/M phase. We used the total number of green
cells and the number of live green cells on day 5 after transfection
with PTTG-EGFP as indicators of cell survival. Both caspase inhibitor I
(Z-VAD-FMK) and III (Boc-D-FMK)
promoted survival of PTTG-EGFP-expressing cells (Fig.
3c).
PTTG Protein Is Continuously Degraded--
7 h after
treatment with a proteasome inhibitor, LLnL, there was no significant
change in EGFP fluorescence (Fig.
4a) or in EGFP protein level,
revealed by Western blotting of MG-63 cells stably expressing EGFP
(Fig. 4b). In cells stably expressing PTTG-EGFP, PTTG-EGFP
fluorescence and PTTG-EGFP protein level were both enhanced after LLnL
treatment. These results show that PTTG-EGFP was continuously degraded
through the ubiquitin pathway and suggested that cells stably
expressing PTTG escape apoptosis by down-regulating PTTG.
PTTG Overexpression Causes Aneuploidy--
Because PTTG is a
mammalian securin that helps keep sister chromatids together, its
overexpression may cause abnormal chromosomal separation. In both the
parental MG-63 cells and in cells expressing EGFP, signs of aneuploidy
were uncommon. In MG-63 cells transiently or stably expressing
PTTG-EGFP, the severity and frequency of aneuploidy signs such as
micronuclei, macronuclei, or chromosomal bridges were both enhanced
(Fig. 5). In a representative experiment, only 3 of 253 cells (1%) transiently expressing EGFP were aneuploid, whereas 45 of 133 cells (34%) transiently expressing PTTG-EGFP were
aneuploid. In MG-63 cells stably expressing EGFP or PTTG-EGFP, the
observed differences in aneuploidy were less dramatic. In a
representative counting, 12 of 244 cells (5%) stably expressing EGFP
were aneuploid, whereas 21 of 203 cells (10%) stably expressing PTTG-EGFP were aneuploid. The modal number of chromosomes was counted
on metaphase chromosome spreads derived from cells stably expressing
EGFP or PTTG-EGFP. Both cells had a modal chromosome number of 56, and
occasionally (<5%) tetraploid chromosomes were observed with a modal
number of about 100. There was no significant difference in the
frequency of tetraploid chromosomes between cells expressing EGFP or
PTTG-EGFP. The lack of differing in chromosome numbers may be because
most aneuploid cells did not divide or because of the low frequency of
aneuploid cells.
PTTG-EGFP did not induce aneuploidy in MCF-7 and human choriocarcinoma
JEG-3 cells, which also express wild type p53 (data not shown).
Aneuploidy was observed in some MCF-7 and JEG-3 cells transfected with
PTTG-EGFP and HPV E6 protein. Because the transfection efficiency in MCF-7 cells was low, we counted the rate of
aneuploidy only in JEG-3 cells where transfection efficiency was
higher. In one representative experiment, 24 of 650 cells (3.7%)
expressing PTTG-EGFP and HPV E6 protein were aneuploid, whereas only 5 of 647 cells (0.8%) expressing EGFP and HPV E6 protein were aneuploid. These results suggested that p53 prevents aneuploidy induced by PTTG.
In this study, we have elucidated mechanisms for PTTG-induced
apoptosis. Although all results shown were derived from the comparison
of PTTG-EGFP and EGFP, PTTG-EGFP appears to faithfully represent PTTG,
because they exhibit similar cellular characteristics (9) and caused
similar cell death (data not shown). Several lines of evidence from our
study indicate that p53 mediates PTTG-induced apoptosis in MCF-7 cells.
PTTG up-regulated and translocated p53 to the nucleus, overexpression
of p53 augmented PTTG-induced apoptosis, and the HPV E6 protein, a p53
inactivator, prevented PTTG-induced apoptosis. It is not clear,
however, how p53 is activated by PTTG. myc and
ras activate p53 by activating ARF, a tumor
suppressor protein (12, 21) that in turn causes nuclear accumulation of
mdm2, preventing p53 nuclear export and subsequent degradation (22,
23). We did not observe a simultaneous nuclear accumulation of p53 and
mdm2, suggesting that the ARF mechanism may not apply to PTTG-induced
apoptosis, yet PTTG may induce p53 nuclear accumulation by inhibiting
mdm2 expression through other mechanisms (23). The dominant negative
p53 mutant did not inhibit PTTG-induced apoptosis in MCF-7 cells,
possibly indicating that the mutant p53 may not completely inhibit
endogenous p53 activity as effectively as the HPV E6 protein. It is
also likely that mechanisms other than p53 are also involved in
PTTG-induced apoptosis.
PTTG caused apoptosis in p53-negative MG-63 cells, demonstrating that
PTTG-induced apoptosis can be p53-independent. It appeared that PTTG
causes cell cycle arrest prior to apoptosis. This was evident inasmuch
as cells expressing PTTG did not divide after release from double
thymidine block, and cycling PTTG-expressing cells were also partially
blocked at G2/M. The PTTG effect on the cell cycle may
therefore be both direct and indirect. The securin function of PTTG (8,
9) would predict that exit from mitosis is inhibited in cells
overexpressing PTTG, and overexpression of a nondegradable PTTG
disrupts sister chromatid separation (8). The direct impact of PTTG
overexpression on mitosis does not explain why only a small percentage
of cells were blocked at G2/M after one to two doubling
times, therefore suggesting an additional indirect mechanism,
i.e. that PTTG activates a surveillance mechanism other than p53, which in turn causes cell cycle arrest. The nature of
this surveillance is not clear, but the checkpoint kinases chk1 and
chk2 are possible candidates, because they have been involved in
p53-independent apoptosis induced by DNA damage (24, 25). Apoptosis may
thus result from PTTG-induced cell cycle arrest.
We show evidence that PTTG causes aneuploidy in MG-63 cells. Transient
and stable PTTG expression is associated with a higher frequency of
aneuploidy. PTTG degradation is required to start the anaphase (8, 9).
When a cell overexpresses PTTG, sister chromatids may not separate
completely, resulting in a cell with one or more extra chromosomes
manifesting as micronuclei. Sister chromatids may not separate at all,
forming cells with multiple nuclei or macronuclei. It appears that p53
plays a role in preventing PTTG-induced aneuploidy, because aneuploidy
was evident in p53-deficient MG-63 cells and in MCF-7 and JEG-3 cells
after endogenous p53 was inhibited. Similar observations have been made
on the myc (26) and ras (27) oncogenes that
induce chromosome instability only after p53 is inactivated.
The dual effects of PTTG on apoptosis and aneuploidy are distinct but
closely related in tumorigenesis. Apoptosis does not occur as a result
of aneuploidy, because the majority of cells were not aneuploid before
they entered apoptosis. Rather, by clearing cells that can become
aneuploid, apoptosis appears to be a means of protecting against
aneuploidy and the resultant tumorigenesis. The dual effects of PTTG on
apoptosis and aneuploidy suggest a mechanism for PTTG-induced
tumorigenesis. PTTG overexpression activates p53 and a p53-independent
apoptosis pathway. Where both apoptotic systems fail, PTTG-induced
aneuploid cells survive and divide, prompting daughter cells to be
tumorous. This model implies that PTTG-induced tumorigenesis is a slow
process, and tumors do not form until apoptosis surveillance systems
fail. On the other hand, if PTTG expression is down-regulated by the
ubiquitin pathway as we show in this paper, the resultant slightly
increased PTTG expression may still escape surveillance and cause
aneuploidy. Thus PTTG potentially can contribute to tumorigenesis even
when the apoptosis surveillance systems are intact. Because aneuploidy is assumed to be less severe when PTTG is down-regulated, tumorigenesis should also be slow.
In summary, we show that PTTG induced both apoptosis and aneuploidy,
and the results suggest that apoptosis may play an important role in
preventing tumorigenesis. We have now established mice deficient in
PTTG2 and will more directly
address the mechanism of PTTG-induced tumorigenesis in these animals.
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INTRODUCTION
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES
![]()
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES
![]()
RESULTS
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES

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Fig. 1.
PTTG induces apoptosis in MCF-7 and MG-63
cells. MCF-7 (left) and MG-63 (right) cells
were transfected with EGFP or PTTG-EGFP. On each day after
transfection, cells were fixed and stained with Hoechst 33258. Nuclei
of green cells were examined with fluorescence microscopy, and the
number of cells with apoptotic nuclei was divided by the number of all
green cells examined. 200-300 cells were examined for each
point.

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Fig. 2.
PTTG activates p53, and p53 facilitates
apoptosis in MCF-7 cells. a, MCF-7 cells were transfected
with PTTG-EGFP (2 µg of plasmid/well) and fixed 24 h later.
Cells were stained with an antibody to p53 and Hoechst 33258. Images
were acquired under appropriate filters. b, MCF-7 cells were
cotransfected with PTTG-EGFP (0.4 µg of plasmid/well) and p53, R175H
p53, or E6 (1.6 µg/well). Cells were fixed 24 h later, and
apoptotic cells were counted as described in the legend to Fig. 1.
Inset, images of a cell co-transfected with PTTG-EGFP and
E6. The cells were stained similarly as in a. p53 was
negative in this cell. Note that in this experiment, MCF-7 cell death
rate was lower (compare Fig. 1 and Fig. 2b), probably
because much less PTTG-EGFP plasmid was used to accommodate the other
plasmids. c, MG-63 cells were co-transfected with PTTG-EGFP
(0.4 µg of plasmid/well) and p53, R175H p53, or E6 (1.6 µg/well).
Cells were fixed 48 h later, and apoptotic cells were counted
as described in the legend to Fig. 1. Inset, images of a
cell co-transfected with PTTG-EGFP and p53. The cells were stained
similarly to those in a. Bar, 10 µm.

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Fig. 3.
PTTG arrests MG-63 cell growth. a,
MG-63 cells transiently transfected with EGFP or PTTG-EGFP were
synchronized with double thymidine block and released. The same
live cells were continuously observed for 18 h after double
thymidine block. Shown are the numbers of cells that remained
unchanged, divided, degraded EGFP, or died. 39 EGFP-expressing and 30 PTTG-EGFP-expressing cells were observed. b, MG-63 cells
were transfected with EGFP (left) or PTTG-EGFP
(right). 2 days later, cells were fixed and cell-cycle
analyzed for cells that express EGFP or PTTG-EGFP only and all cells
(Total) including green and non-green cells. c,
2,000 MG-63 cells were plated in each well of a 48-well plate. Cells
were transfected the next day with PTTG-EGFP and treated with 1%
Me2SO or 100 µM caspase
inhibitor I (Inh. I) or III (Inh. III). Medium
was changed every day with fresh drugs added. Shown are total numbers
of green cells (Total) including live and apoptotic cells
and the number of live cells on day 5 after transfection.

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Fig. 4.
Proteasome inhibitor increases PTTG protein
expression. MG-63 cells stably expressing EGFP or PTTG-EGFP were
established. Cells were treated with LLnL (50 µM) for
7 h. a, fluorescence images were acquired under
identical conditions from cells expressing EGFP (A and
B) or PTTG-EGFP (C and D) before
(A and C) and after (B and
D) LLnL treatment. Bar, 50 µm. b, in
parallel experiments, cells were lysed and EGFP, and PTTG-EGFP proteins
were assayed with Western blotting using an anti-EGFP antibody. The
same blot was stained with an antibody to nuclear lamin to ensure equal
loading.

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Fig. 5.
PTTG-induced aneuploidy. MG-63 cells
were transiently (A and B) or stably
(C and D) transfected with PTTG-EGFP. An MG-63
cell transiently expressing PTTG-EGFP and a group of MG-63 cells stably
expressing PTTG-EGFP are shown in phase contrast (A and
C) and after staining with Hoechst 33258 to depict the
nucleus (B and D). The asterisk
indicates two micronuclei, and the arrowhead indicates a
cell with eight apparent nuclei. Bar, 50 µ m.
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DISCUSSION
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES
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FOOTNOTES |
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* Supported by National Institutes of Health Grant CA75979, the Doris Factor Molecular Endocrinology Laboratory, and the Annenberg Foundation.The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
¶ To whom correspondence should be addressed: Academic Affairs, 2015 Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, 8700 Beverly Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90048. Tel.: 310-423-4691; Fax: 310-423-0119; E-mail: melmed@csmc.edu.
Published, JBC Papers in Press, September 29, 2000, DOI 10.1074/jbc.C000546200
2 Z. Wang, R. Yu, and S. Melmed, manuscript in preparation.
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ABBREVIATIONS |
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The abbreviations used are: PTTG, pituitary tumor transforming gene; EGFP, enhanced green fluorescent protein; PTTG-EGFP, EGFP-tagged PTTG; HPV, human papillomavirus.
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D.S. Kim, J.A. Franklyn, V.E. Smith, A.L. Stratford, H.N. Pemberton, A. Warfield, J.C. Watkinson, T. Ishmail, M.J.O. Wakelam, and C.J. McCabe Securin induces genetic instability in colorectal cancer by inhibiting double-stranded DNA repair activity Carcinogenesis, March 1, 2007; 28(3): 749 - 759. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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S. A. van de Pavert, J. Meuleman, A. Malysheva, W. M. Aartsen, I. Versteeg, F. Tonagel, W. Kamphuis, C. J. McCabe, M. W. Seeliger, and J. Wijnholds A Single Amino Acid Substitution (Cys249Trp) in Crb1 Causes Retinal Degeneration and Deregulates Expression of Pituitary Tumor Transforming Gene Pttg1 J. Neurosci., January 17, 2007; 27(3): 564 - 573. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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R. Yu, M. Cruz-Soto, S. L. Calzi, H. Hui, and S. Melmed Murine pituitary tumor-transforming gene functions as a securin protein in insulin-secreting cells. J. Endocrinol., October 1, 2006; 191(1): 45 - 53. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. Tfelt-Hansen, D. Kanuparthi, and N. Chattopadhyay The emerging role of pituitary tumor transforming gene in tumorigenesis. Clin. Med. Res., June 1, 2006; 4(2): 130 - 137. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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V. Chesnokova, K. Kovacs, A.-V. Castro, S. Zonis, and S. Melmed Pituitary Hypoplasia in Pttg-/- Mice Is Protective for Rb+/- Pituitary Tumorigenesis Mol. Endocrinol., September 1, 2005; 19(9): 2371 - 2379. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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A. L. Stratford, K. Boelaert, L. A. Tannahill, D. S. Kim, A. Warfield, M. C. Eggo, N. J. L. Gittoes, L. S. Young, J. A. Franklyn, and C. J. McCabe Pituitary Tumor Transforming Gene Binding Factor: A Novel Transforming Gene in Thyroid Tumorigenesis J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab., July 1, 2005; 90(7): 4341 - 4349. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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N. Sanchez-Puig, D. B. Veprintsev, and A. R. Fersht Human full-length Securin is a natively unfolded protein Protein Sci., June 1, 2005; 14(6): 1410 - 1418. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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S.-J. Tsai, S.-J. Lin, Y.-M. Cheng, H.-M. Chen, and L.-Y. C. Wing Expression and Functional Analysis of Pituitary Tumor Transforming Growth Factor-1 in Uterine Leiomyomas J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab., June 1, 2005; 90(6): 3715 - 3723. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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K Boelaert, R Yu, L A Tannahill, A L Stratford, F L Khanim, M C Eggo, J S Moore, L S Young, N J L Gittoes, J A Franklyn, et al. PTTG's C-terminal PXXP motifs modulate critical cellular processes in vitro J. Mol. Endocrinol., December 1, 2004; 33(3): 663 - 677. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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R. Yu, W. Lu, J. Chen, C. J. McCabe, and S. Melmed Overexpressed Pituitary Tumor-Transforming Gene Causes Aneuploidy in Live Human Cells Endocrinology, November 1, 2003; 144(11): 4991 - 4998. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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K. Boelaert, C. J. McCabe, L. A. Tannahill, N. J. L. Gittoes, R. L. Holder, J. C. Watkinson, A. R. Bradwell, M. C. Sheppard, and J. A. Franklyn Pituitary Tumor Transforming Gene and Fibroblast Growth Factor-2 Expression: Potential Prognostic Indicators in Differentiated Thyroid Cancer J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab., May 1, 2003; 88(5): 2341 - 2347. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. A. Fagin Minireview: Branded from the Start--Distinct Oncogenic Initiating Events May Determine Tumor Fate in the Thyroid Mol. Endocrinol., May 1, 2002; 16(5): 903 - 911. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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Z. Wang, R. Yu, and S. Melmed Mice Lacking Pituitary Tumor Transforming Gene Show Testicular and Splenic Hypoplasia, Thymic Hyperplasia, Thrombocytopenia, Aberrant Cell Cycle Progression, and Premature Centromere Division Mol. Endocrinol., November 1, 2001; 15(11): 1870 - 1879. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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A. P. Heaney, V. Nelson, M. Fernando, and G. Horwitz Transforming Events in Thyroid Tumorigenesis and Their Association with Follicular Lesions J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab., October 1, 2001; 86(10): 5025 - 5032. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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