Publications
Team of Two Oncoproteins Crucial Step in Metastasis
Conquest - Spring 2010
Researchers have discovered a key molecular mechanism for the deadly transition of non-invasive breast cancer into invasive disease.
This transition is recognized as a crucial step in metastasis, the spread of cancer to distant organs that causes 90% of all cancer deaths.
Dihua Yu, M.D., Ph.D.
Researchers have shown that the protein 14-3-3ζ teams with the oncoprotein ErbB2, also known as HER2, in a two-hit process to convert normal mammary cells to invasive cancer cells, says Dihua Yu, M.D., Ph.D., professor in
MD Anderson’s Department of Molecular and Cellular Oncology.
In addition to identifying this key step, Yu notes the findings also provide a biomarker to identify high-risk patients who may benefit from more aggressive treatment before their non-invasive breast cancer converts to invasive disease.
Yu and colleagues previously showed that 14-3-3ζ is overexpressed in many other cancer types, like lung, liver, uterine and stomach cancers. “Our findings might have broader implications relating to the mechanism of invasion and metastasis in other types of cancer,” Yu says.
Reported in the Sept. 9, 2009, edition of the journal Cancer Cell.
Conquest - Spring 2010
Features
- Pathology: Investigating the Nature of Cancer
- What's in a Name? — New Logo Features Strike Through Cancer
- Found in Translation: SPORE Grants Turn Into Hope for Patients
- Transforming Cancer Care:
MD Anderson Launches Public Phase of Capital Campaign - Supportive Care Center Helps Manage Symptoms Throughout Cancer Journey
- Enlightened Choices: Individualized Options for Prostate Cancer Patients
- Moving Forward: Kevin Olson
Frontline
- Study Shifts Assessment of Certain Breast Cancer Patients
- An Advance for Multiple Myeloma Patients
- Team of Two Oncoproteins Crucial Step in Metastasis
- Blood Test May Detect Pancreatic Cancer
- Combined Therapies Show Promise in Small Cell Lung Cancer
- What Predicts Smoking Risk for Mexican-American Youth?
- Racial Disparities in Radiation Therapy for Early-Stage Breast Cancer

