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J Vet Sci. 2006 Sep;7(3):211-216 |
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Altered expression of thioredoxin reductase-1 in dysplastic bile ducts and cholangiocarcinoma in a hamster model
Byung-IL Yoon1,*, Dae-Yong Kim2, Ja-June Jang3, Jeong-Hee Han1 |
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1School of Veterinary Medicine and Institute of Veterinary Science, Kangwon National University, Chuncheon 200-701, Korea. byoon@kangwon.ac.kr 2Department of Veterinary Pathology, College of Veterinary Medicine, Seoul National University, Seoul 151-742, Korea 3Department of Pathology, College of Medicine, Seoul National University, Seoul 110-799, Korea |
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Thioredoxin reductase 1 (TrxR) is a homodimeric
selenoenzyme catalyzing thioredoxin (Trx) in an NADPHdependent
manner. With regard to carcinogenesis, these
redox proteins have been implicated in cell proliferation,
transformation and anti-apoptosis. In the present study,
using a hamster cholangiocarcinoma (ChC) model, we
evaluated the immunohistochemical expression pattern of
TrxR in precancerous lesions and ChCs as well as in
normal bile ducts. The goal of this study was to determine
the potential role and importance of TrxR in cholangiocarcinogenesis.
For the ChC model, we obtained liver
tissue specimens with dysplastic bile ducts prior to the
development of ChC 8 weeks after initiation of the
experiment and ChC samples at 27 weeks. The immunohistochemical
analysis showed diffuse cytoplasmic
overexpression of TrxR in the dysplastic bile duct
epithelial cells as well as in cholangiocarcinoma; this was
comparable to the negative or weakly positive in normal
and type 1 hyperplastic bile ducts. However, TrxR appeared
to be considerably down-regulated in the ChCs when
compared to the higher expression observed in the
dysplastic bile ducts. Therefore, these results suggest that
TrxR overexpression followed by down-regulation might
be an important event in cholangiocarcinogenesis, especially
at early stages including the cellular transformation of
candidate bile ducts. Further studies are however required
to determine whether TrxR may be a potential target
molecule for chemoprevention against cholangiocarcinogenesis.
In addition, the molecular mechanism as well
as the importance of the loss of TrxR in the development
of cholangiocarcinoma, following dysplastic transformation
of bile duct cells, also remains to be clarified.
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