11 research outputs found
Evidence that involucrin, a marker for differentiation, is oxygen regulated in human squamous cell carcinomas
Hypoxia is associated with poor prognosis in squamous cell carcinomas affecting both local control and distant spread (Hockel et al., 1996a, 1996b, 1999; Nordsmark et al, 1996; Fyles et al, 2002; Kaanders et al, 2002). Local control is believed to depend on local radiation response while distant spread is thought to depend, at least in part, on the induction of oxygen-regulated proteins. In order to test this, pimonidazole, an extrinsic marker for tissue hypoxia (Arteel et al, 1995; Kennedy et al, 1997; Varia et al, 1998; Raleigh et al, 1999), with prognostic value (Kaanders et al, 2002) was used to examine whether ORPs such as VEGF (Raleigh et al, 1998a), metallothionein (Raleigh et al, 2000), HIF-1α (Janssen et al, 2002), Glut-1 (Airley et al, 2003) and CAIX (Olive et al, 2001) were, in fact, associated with cellular hypoxia in human tumours. Unexpectedly, VEGF and metallothionein (MT) were not expressed in the majority of hypoxic cells in squamous cell carcinomas (Raleigh et al, 1998a, 2000) even though these ORPs were induced by hypoxia in experimental systems (Shweiki et al, 1992; Raleigh et al, 1998b; Murphy et al, 1999)