0000000000931312

AUTHOR

Vera Timmermans-wielenga

showing 2 related works from this author

Tissue proteomics of the human mammary gland: towards an abridged definition of the molecular phenotypes underlying epithelial normalcy.

2010

Our limited understanding of the biological impact of the whole spectrum of early breast lesions together with a lack of accurate molecular-based risk criteria for the diagnosis and assignment of prognostic significance to biopsy findings presents an important problem in the clinical management of patients harboring precancerous breast lesions. As a result, there is a need to identify biomarkers that can better determine the outcome of early breast lesions by identifying subpopulations of cells in breast premalignant disease that are at high-risk of progression to invasive disease. A first step towards achieving this goal will be to define the molecular phenotypes of the various cell types …

ProteomicsPaperCancer ResearchCell typeMammary glandProtein Array AnalysisMuscle ProteinsBreast NeoplasmsBiologyBioinformaticsProteomicsMass SpectrometryImmunophenotypingCytokeratinImmunophenotypingGeneticsmedicineHumansProtein IsoformsElectrophoresis Gel Two-DimensionalBiomarker discoveryDatabases ProteinMammary Glands HumanKeratin-19Proteomic ProfilingKeratin-15Epithelial CellsGeneral MedicineImmunohistochemistrymedicine.anatomical_structurePhenotypeOncologyMolecular MedicineFemaleStem cellBiomarkersMolecular oncology
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15-prostaglandin dehydrogenase expression alone or in combination with ACSM1 defines a subgroup of the apocrine molecular subtype of breast carcinoma.

2008

Established histopathological criteria divide invasive breast carcinomas into defined groups. Ductal of no specific type and lobular are the two major subtypes accounting for around 75 and 15% of all cases, respectively. The remaining 10% include rarer types such as tubular, cribriform, mucinous, papillary, medullary, metaplastic, and apocrine breast carcinomas. Molecular profiling technologies, on the other hand, subdivide breast tumors into five subtypes, basal-like, luminal A, luminal B, normal breast tissue-like, and ERBB2-positive, that have different prognostic characteristics. An additional subclass termed "molecular apocrine" has recently been described, but these lesions did not ex…

AdultSilver StainingBreast NeoplasmsBiologyProteomicsBiochemistrySubclassAnalytical ChemistryImmunophenotypingCohort StudiesBreast cancerCoenzyme A LigasesmedicineBiomarkers TumorHumansElectrophoresis Gel Two-DimensionalNeoplasm Invasivenessskin and connective tissue diseasesMolecular BiologyAgedAged 80 and overTissue microarrayParaffin EmbeddingApocrineMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseImmunohistochemistryApocrine GlandsPhenotypeTissue Array AnalysisImmunologyCancer researchDisease ProgressionHydroxyprostaglandin DehydrogenasesImmunohistochemistryFemaleApocrine CellBreast carcinomaMolecularcellular proteomics : MCP
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