National Repository of Grey Literature 3 records found  Search took 0.00 seconds. 
Gene expression study of oxysterol signal pathway in breast cancer patients
Kloudová, Alžběta ; Souček, Pavel (advisor) ; Vopálenský, Václav (referee)
Hormonal therapy is a common part of breast carcinoma treatment in patients whose tumors express estrogen and progesterone receptors. The aim of hormonal therapy is to prevent proliferative effect of hormones througt their receptor proteins in order to inhibit tumor growth. However, certain number of tumors is resistant to hormonal therapy despite expression of hormonal receptors. Presently, the reasons of this resistance are not fully understood. Oxysterols are hydroxylated cholesterol derivates, which may play some role in development of the resistance. They may interfere with hormonal therapy effect and influence some signal pathways leading to cancer progression. This study comes with results of gene expression of proteins influenced by oxysterol action, metabolic and transport proteins, transcription factors and members of signaling pathways that may be related to oxysterol effect. This thesis identifies some candidate genes for future analysis on the basis of comparison of gene expression between estrogen receptor positive and negative tumors and correlation with clinopathological data. The final goal should lead to discovery of new diagnostic markers for breast cancer therapy. Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org)
Gene expression study of oxysterol signal pathway in breast cancer patients
Kloudová, Alžběta ; Souček, Pavel (advisor) ; Vopálenský, Václav (referee)
Hormonal therapy is a common part of breast carcinoma treatment in patients whose tumors express estrogen and progesterone receptors. The aim of hormonal therapy is to prevent proliferative effect of hormones througt their receptor proteins in order to inhibit tumor growth. However, certain number of tumors is resistant to hormonal therapy despite expression of hormonal receptors. Presently, the reasons of this resistance are not fully understood. Oxysterols are hydroxylated cholesterol derivates, which may play some role in development of the resistance. They may interfere with hormonal therapy effect and influence some signal pathways leading to cancer progression. This study comes with results of gene expression of proteins influenced by oxysterol action, metabolic and transport proteins, transcription factors and members of signaling pathways that may be related to oxysterol effect. This thesis identifies some candidate genes for future analysis on the basis of comparison of gene expression between estrogen receptor positive and negative tumors and correlation with clinopathological data. The final goal should lead to discovery of new diagnostic markers for breast cancer therapy. Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org)
The role of estrogen receptors in prognosis and therapy outcome of breast cancer
Kloudová, Alžběta ; Souček, Pavel (advisor) ; Dračínská, Helena (referee)
Estrogen receptors (ER) are members of nuclear receptor family, which mediate distinct physiological functions after binding a steroid ligand. Apart from that they play a role in many diseases including breast cancer. ER is among proteins routinely evaluated in clinical practice and on the basis of ER expression, patients are treated by endocrine therapy. There are different opinions of the role of ER in cancer cells, but in the future, detection of ER and treatment by ER- and ER-selective ligands could contribute to improvement of cancer therapy. Isoforms, mutations and posttranslational modifications of ER present other important factors, which can influence estrogen signalization and endocrine therapy efficiency and deciphering of their importance for cancer cells could bring better understanding of ER signalization and improvement of the therapy.

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4 Kloudová, Anna
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