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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: cancer + breast + estrogen  Related to the article below (Last Update: 12/1/2008)

 News results: Standard Version | Text Version | Image Version Results 1 - 10 of about 970 for cancer breast estrogen. (0.20 seconds) 
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Researchers Use Affymetrix Technology to Discover Why Some Breast ...
MarketWatch -
Previously it was known that tamoxifen worked by blocking estrogen from causing unchecked cell growth in breast cancer by switching certain genes on, ...
European ancestry increases breast cancer risk among Latinas EurekAlert (press release)
all 17 news articles »  AFFX
FDA Approves Duramed's Synthetic Conjugated Estrogens-A Vaginal Cream
MarketWatch -
The estrogen-plus-progestin sub-study of the WHI reported increased risks of myocardial infarction, stroke, invasive breast cancer, pulmonary emboli, ...

ABC News
Obese Older Women Have An Increased Risk Of Breast Cancer
eFluxMedia - Nov 28, 2008
Such an assumption is not new, especially in postmenopausal women who follow hormone replacement therapy, known to increase breast cancer risk. ...
Weight Boosts Older Women's Breast Cancer Risk U.S. News & World Report
Overweight women at increased risk of advanced breast cancer Media Newswire (press release)
Breast cancer risk higher in overweight and obese women TopNews
Tehran Times - eFluxMedia
all 276 news articles »

CTV.ca
Why some early breast cancers may spontaneously disappear
CTV.ca, Canada -
Given that approximately two out of three breast cancer tumours are estrogen-driven, the sudden drop-off in ovarian estrogen at menopause may starve those ...
Melton as 'Person of the Year'? Boston Globe
all 2 news articles »
Cell cycle arrest in metformin treated breast cancer cells ...
7thSpace Interactive (press release), NY -
Results: In this study, metformin was found to inhibit proliferation of most cultured breast cancer cell lines. This was independent of estrogen receptor, ...
The Law Offices of Robert H. Weiss Appointed to Plaintiffs ...
MarketWatch -
... lead to the same effects as the body's own estrogens. Exposure to BPA (even at very low doses) has been linked to prostate and breast cancer, diabetes, ...

BBC News
Migraine Might Lower Breast Cancer Risk
Washington Post, United States - Nov 6, 2008
Levels of estrogen may be the key to this association: High levels of estrogen are associated with an increased risk of breast cancer, but women who suffer ...
Migraines May Cut Breast Cancer Risk WebMD
Do Migraines Lower Breast Cancer Risk? Scientific American
Up Side to Migraines Less Risk of Breast Cancer? MedHeadlines
MedPage Today - eFluxMedia
all 436 news articles »
22 federal suits filed over hormone replacement drugs
West Virginia Record, WV - Nov 29, 2008
A New York gynecologist wrote an article in 1962 claiming estrogen reduced breast and genital cancers. He wrote a book called "Feminine Forever" where he ...
?Three cups of coffee a day can make your breasts shrink? ? but ...
McGill Daily, Canada -
But as I read on, the article revealed that coffee can simultaneously help to protect against breast cancer. I breathed a small sigh of relief at the fact ...

I Really Should Study
Home > Health > On Women > Breast Cancer in the Family? 7 Things ...
U.S. News & World Report, DC - Nov 18, 2008
Body fat churns out estrogen, and excess fat around the abdomen causes hormonal changes that make breast tissue more vulnerable to estrogen's detrimental ...
Research: Exercise May Diminish Cancer Risk eFluxMedia
Exercise Shown to Help Prevent Cancer Natural News.com
Pink power Stuff.co.nz
HemOncToday - Cancer Consultants
all 635 news articles »
Source: Google News


 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: cancer + may + breast  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/7/2008)

Study Suggests Bone Mineral Density May Indicate Breast Cancer Risk
DOTmed.com (press release), NY -
The findings suggest that adding bone mineral density to the current risk assessment tools may significantly improve the prediction of breast cancer risk. ...

Los Angeles Times
Perceived Medical Discrimination May Discourage Cancer Screening
MedPage Today, NJ -
The primary outcome measures were rates of screening for colorectal cancer in men and women ages 50 to 75 and rates of breast cancer screening in women ages ...
Routine prostate screens 'premature' The Age
Health Buzz: Prostate Cancer Screening and Other Health News U.S. News & World Report
Prostate cancer screening - maybe not, says the USA Financial Times
So Md News - findingDulcinea
all 769 news articles »
Goldman-Led Genentech's Avastin May Force Higher Bid (Update1)
Bloomberg - 16 minutes ago
Success against colon tumors, he said, would mean ``the likelihood of it benefiting breast or lung cancer patients'' as an early-stage treatment ``increases ...DNA - OTC:RHHBY - SWF:RO

Los Angeles Times
Sex After Breast Cancer
U.S. News & World Report, DC - Aug 5, 2008
(Some breast cancer survivors use a prescription testosterone gel to restore their sex drive, though this treatment may have risks. ...
Breast cancer screenings: How soon to start? WRAL.com
Breast cancer: What you need to know Food Consumer
The emotional side of breast cancer and its treatments Gather.com
FOXNews
all 7 news articles »
deCODE genetics Announces Second Quarter 2008 Financial Results
MarketWatch -
Diagnostics: Breast cancer. In the second quarter deCODE discovered a fourth set of common single-letter variants (SNPs) associated with risk of estrogen ...DCGN
Vitamin D May Prevent Breast Cancer Spread
Stop Aging Now, DC -
By Gale Maleskey, MS, RD If you?ve been diagnosed with breast cancer, or you?re at risk for it, have your blood levels of vitamin D checked right away. ...
Young Women May be Underrepresented in Breast Cancer Research ...
Newswise (press release) -
He believes the project may be a good place for families to get personally involved in breast cancer prevention and the future of personalized medicine. ...

Ottawa Citizen
Producer: We?re ?Praying? For Christina Applegate
Access Hollywood -
star announced on Saturday that she has been diagnosed with breast cancer. ?To be on the show and to hear other people, it?s comforting to be around other ...
AssociatedPress
Actress fighting deadly disease Applegate's mum also had breast cancer Bild.de
Breast MRI Helps Diagnose Christina Applegate's Breast Cancer KLAS-TV
People Magazine - Food Consumer
all 1,011 news articles »
Perceived Discrimination Affects Screening Rates
Science Daily (press release) -
If detected early, five-year survival rates for colorectal and breast cancer are approximately 90 percent. However, if caught in later stages, the survival ...

BBC News
European payers question value of new cancer drugs
guardian.co.uk, UK -
GlaxoSmithKline, which last month had its Tykerb breast cancer pill rebuffed by NICE, is investigating "innovative pricing mechanisms" for its products, ...
Pfizer, Roche Cancer Drugs Rejected by UK Agency on Cost Bloomberg
Kidney patients denied 'too expensive' life-extending drugs Telegraph.co.uk
Uproar as NICE draft rejects four kidney cancer drugs Pharma Times (subscription)
The Birmingham Post
all 214 news articles »  PFE - OTC:RHHBY - SWF:RO
Source: Google News

Adequate locoregional treatment for early breast cancer may prevent secondary dissemination -
R Arriagada, LE Rutqvist, A Mattsson, A Kramar, S … - Journal of Clinical Oncology, 1995 - jco.ascopubs.org
... Clinical Oncology. ARTICLES. Adequate locoregional treatment for early breast
cancer may prevent secondary dissemination. R Arriagada ...

… , a Putative Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase Gene Mutated in Human Brain, Breast, and Prostate Cancer -
J Li, C Yen, D Liaw, K Podsypanina, S Bose, SI … - Science, 1997 - sciencemag.org
... that a large fraction of glioblastomas and advanced prostate cancers may harbor
PTEN mutations, whereas the mutation frequency in breast cancer may be lower. ...

… for Breast Cancer May Reliably Represent the Axilla Except for Inflammatory Breast Cancer -
V Stearns, CA Ewing, R Slack, MF Penannen, DF … - Annals of Surgical Oncology, 2002 - Soc Surgical Oncol
... Sentinel Lymphadenectomy After Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy for Breast Cancer May Reliably
Represent the Axilla Except for Inflammatory Breast Cancer. ...

Lymphatic mapping and sentinel lymphadenectomy for breast cancer. -
AE Giuliano, DM Kirgan, JM Guenther, DL Morton - Annals of Surgery, 1994 - pubmedcentral.nih.gov
... Kissin MW, Thompson EM, Price AB, Slavin G, Kark AE. The inadequacy of axillary
sampling in breast cancer. Lancet. 1982 May 29;1(8283):1210?1212. [PubMed]; ...

Expression of the Antimetastatic Gene nm23 in Human Breast Cancer: An Association WIth Good … -
C Hennessy, JA Henry, FEB May, BR Westley, B Angus … - jnci, 1991 - jnci.oxfordjournals.org
... expression in human breast cancer was associated with good prognosis and a lack
of lymph node metastasis and suggests that the nm23 gene product may play an ...

[PDF] Circulating concentrations of insulin-like growth factor-I and risk of breast cancer -
SE Hankinson, WC Willett, GA Colditz, DJ Hunter, … - Lancet, 1998 - mcgill.ca
... increase in breast-cancer risk among premenopausal women 50 years or younger suggests
that the relation between IGF-I and risk of breast cancer may be greater ...
-

Birthweight as a Risk Factor for Breast Cancer. -
KB Michels, D Trichopoulos, JM Robins, BA Rosner, … - Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey, 1997 - obgynsurvey.com
... Some observations in migrant populations support the hypothesis that human breast
cancer may originate before birth and that the risk is modulated in early life ...

Linkage of early-onset familial breast cancer to chromosome 17q21 -
JM Hall, MK Lee, B Newman, JE Morrow, LA Anderson, … - Science, 1990 - sciencemag.org
... Mapping the genes responsible for inherited breast cancer may also allow the
identification of early lesions that are critical for the development of breast ...

… insulin-like growth factor receptor in the estrogen-stimulated proliferation of human breast cancer -
AJ Stewart, MD Johnson, FE May, BR Westley - Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1990 - ASBMB
... the proliferation of hormone-dependent breast cancer cells involves sensitization
to the proliferative effects of IGFs and that this may involve regulation of ...

Expression of cyclooxygenase-1 and cyclooxygenase-2 in human breast cancer -
D Hwang - J Natl Cancer I, 1998 - jnci.oxfordjournals.org
... to a lesser extent, the risk of breast cancer. NSAIDs are known to inhibit COX,
suggesting that the beneficial effect of NSAIDs in colon cancer may be related ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Partner proteins may help estrogen foster breast cancer

A study suggests that the hormone estrogen works in partnership with other proteins to activate or suppress gene activity in breast cancer cells.
Surprisingly, one of the partner proteins is known as c-MYC, a gene activator that has long been associated with cancer development but was not known to interact with estrogen during tumor progression.

The study, by researchers at The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center – Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute, answers the puzzling question of how estrogen can turn on some genes and turn off others during cancer progression.

" Our results indicate that the interaction of estrogen with one of seven different partner proteins determines whether the gene is activated or suppressed," says coauthor Ramana V. Davuluri.

The findings could also reveal potential new drug targets and lead to a test to identify breast-cancer patients with tumors that are likely to become resistant to hormonal therapies such as Tamoxifen and aromatase inhibitors.

The research is published in the journal Molecular Cell.

The study is unusual because it used microarray technology and mathematical modeling to predict which cell proteins work with estrogen to contribute to breast cancer development, and then used more traditional experimental biology to verify one of the predictions.

" We conducted this study with almost equal contributions from computational scientists and experimental scientists," says principal investigator Tim Hui-Ming Huang.

" This strategy, in which computational predictions are verified by the bench scientist, will be a trend for future cancer research," Huang says.

Scientists have known for decades that estrogen plays a key role in the development of cancers of the breast, uterus and ovaries. Upon entering cells in these tissues, the molecules of the hormone first link with a molecule known as the estrogen receptor ( ER ), activating the ER.

The activated ER then links with, or binds to, genes and turns some on and some off.

For this study, Huang, Davuluri and their colleagues first needed to identify the genes that ERs will bind with. They did this using microarray, or gene-chip, technology. Gene chips allow scientists to compare thousands of genes at one time to learn which ones are turned on or turned off in cells under particular conditions, such as exposure to estrogen.

Specifically, the researchers used a form of this technology known as the Chromatin Immunoprecipitation chip, or the ChIP-chip. From this, they learned that ER would bind with 92 genes out of some 10,000 genes tested.

Of these 92, about 40 were strongly activated by the hormone and about 30 were strongly suppressed. The researchers focused on these two groups.

 
Proteins that bind to DNA do so by linking to specific DNA sequences in a particular region of a gene. The researchers then identified these sequences for each gene in the two groups using a pubic DNA database.

Next, they used that sequence information to write a computer program that scanned a different database, one containing information for the 5,000 or so proteins that are known to bind with DNA.

Of these, the program identified five partner proteins that should bind to one of the genes activated by ER, and two partner proteins that would bind to genes suppressed by ER.

In this way, they investigators computationally identified seven partner proteins that help ER activate or suppress gene activity in breast-cancer cells. And one of the activating partner proteins was c-MYC.

But were the computational predictions right or wrong ? The researchers answered that question for the most important prediction, that c-MYC is an ER partner protein.

This work, by Huang and a group of colleagues, used laboratory-grown breast-cancer cells. They learned, for example, that if either the ER binding site or the c-MYC binding site of a particular gene is lost, estrogen will no longer activate the gene.

Next, the researchers will study how the interaction between ER and its partner proteins is changed in cells from Tamoxifen-resistant tumors.

Source: Ohio State University, 2006
 
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