A 2-DIMENSIONAL ELECTROPHORESIS DATABASE OF HUMAN BREAST EPITHELIAL-CELL PROTEINS

Citation
Cs. Giometti et al., A 2-DIMENSIONAL ELECTROPHORESIS DATABASE OF HUMAN BREAST EPITHELIAL-CELL PROTEINS, Electrophoresis, 18(3-4), 1997, pp. 573-581
Citations number
22
Categorie Soggetti
Biochemical Research Methods
Journal title
ISSN journal
01730835
Volume
18
Issue
3-4
Year of publication
1997
Pages
573 - 581
Database
ISI
SICI code
0173-0835(1997)18:3-4<573:A2EDOH>2.0.ZU;2-0
Abstract
As sequencing of the human genome progresses, attention is turning to when and where specific genes are being expressed and how that express ion is regulated. The human breast, with the highly specific, but tran sient, function of milk production (lactation), exemplifies human gene regulation. The molecular mechanisms for the dramatic structural and functional changes involved in shifting from lactation-capable to lact ation-incapable tissue are poorly understood, as are the mechanisms th at result in deviation from normal breast cell growth into different t ypes of breast neoplasms. We are using quantitative two-dimensional el ectrophoresis (2-DE) to determine which proteins are present in differ ent types of human breast cells (milk-producing and -nonproducing, est rogen-receptor-positive and -negative, normal and malignant) and which proteins change in abundance in response to stimuli that trigger cell differentiation, growth, or death. A composite map of proteins found in human breast cells is being generated and used as an index of human genes that are differentially expressed, both qualitatively and quant itatively. Proteins found in 15 different types of human breast cells, two from healthy tissue (from milk and reduction mammoplasty tissue) and 13 from tumor tissue, are now included in the composite map. Copie s of the human breast epithelial cell protein map are available on the World Wide Web (URL: http://www.anl.gov/CMB/PMG/projects/index hbreas t, html) with links to quantitative data and identifications for prote ins found to be differentially expressed in these epithelial cells. Li nks to the Swiss-Prot and enzyme metabolic pathway databases are also provided. The World Wide Web presentation is designed to allow public access to the available 2-DE data together with logical connections to databases providing genome-related information.