PMID: 9192810Jun 15, 1997Paper

Overexpression of CDC25A and CDC25B in head and neck cancers

Cancer Research
D GasparottoM Boiocchi

Abstract

The deregulation of several cell cycle-related genes participates in neoplastic transformation. Cell cycle progression is driven by cyclin-dependent kinases, which are positively regulated by association with cyclins and negatively regulated by binding to inhibitory subunits. The activity of cyclin-dependent kinases is also regulated by the phosphorylation status, which is controlled by the antagonistic action of wee1 kinase and CDC25 phosphatases. Three CDC25 genes are present in human cells: CDC25A, CDC25B, and CDC25C. These three genes function at different phases of the cell cycle. Whereas CDC25A and CDC25B are expressed throughout the cell cycle, with peak expression in G1 for CDC25A and in both G1-S-phase and G2 for CDC25B, CDC25C is predominantly expressed in G2. Several lines of evidence suggest a role for CDC25s as oncogenes. CDC25A and CDC25B cooperate with Ha-ras or loss of Rb1 in the oncogenic transformation of rodent fibroblasts. Moreover, they are transcriptional targets of c-myc, and CDC25A in particular plays an important role as a mediator of myc functions. On the basis of the evidence that CDC25 phosphatases can act as oncogenes, we analyzed the expression of CDC25A, CDC25B, and CDC25C genes in 20 squamous cel...Continue Reading

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