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    Cancer Cells. 1990 Dec;2(12):383-8.

    Cathepsin D in breast cancer: from molecular and cellular biology to clinical applications.

    Source

    Unité Hormones et Cancer (U 148) INSERM, University of Montpellier 1, France.

    Abstract

    Cathepsin D is a ubiquitously expressed lysosomal protease. Initially synthesized as an inactive precursor of 52 kD (pro-cathepsin D), the enzyme is subsequently converted to its active forms by proteolytic processing. Breast cancer cells, unlike normal cells, secrete high levels of pro-cathepsin D; this abnormal secretion is due to both overexpression of the gene and altered processing of the protein. Recent transfection experiments indicate that overexpression of cathepsin D can increase the metastatic potential of tumor cells in nude mice. This study complements clinical studies, which have shown than high cathepsin D concentrations in the cytosol of primary breast cancers may be predictive of subsequent metastasis, particularly for patients with axillary node-negative tumors. These results, and the potential mechanisms by which cathepsin D may promote metastasis, are considered here.

    PMID:
    1965134
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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