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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Thioesterase II, a new marker enzyme for human cells of breast epithelial origin.

Metabolic, enzymologic, and immunohistochemical techniques have been used to show that a human cell line of breast epithelial origin synthesized medium chain fatty acids via the ubiquitous fatty acid synthetase and a mammary-specific chain-terminating enzyme, thioesterase II. Previous studies in our laboratory with rodents indicated that thioesterase II is expressed exclusively in mammary epithelial cells, an observation consistent with the physiologic role of the enzyme in milk fat synthesis. Results of the present study suggest that the enzyme exhibits a similar cell specificity in its expression in humans and that the specificity is maintained in normal and neoplastic tissues. Thus thioesterase II was detected immunohistochemically in normal human breast epithelia derived from both lactating and nonlactating breast tissue, in cultured cells derived from both primary breast epithelial tumors and from a metastatic tumor of breast origin, and in several human breast epithelial cell lines; the enzyme could not be detected in HeLa cells, in a colon carcinoma, or in a mammary myoepithelial cell line. These findings raise the possibility that thioesterase II may be of use as a diagnostic tool to identify human tumors of breast epithelial origin.[1]

References

  1. Thioesterase II, a new marker enzyme for human cells of breast epithelial origin. Smith, S., Pasco, D., Pawlak, J., Thompson, B.J., Stampfer, M., Nandi, S. J. Natl. Cancer Inst. (1984) [Pubmed]
 
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