Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2437224 | Journal of Comparative Pathology | 2014 | 8 Pages |
SummaryClaudins (CLDNs) are tight junction proteins that have a role in regulating cell adhesion and polarity, paracellular permeability, proliferation and differentiation. Several immunohistochemical studies have shown reduced expression of CLDN-1 and CLDN-7 in human and canine mammary carcinomas, suggesting that these proteins may participate in mammary carcinogenesis, invasion and metastasis. The present study characterizes expression of CLDN-1 and CLDN-7 in feline mammary carcinomas (n = 52) and their metastases (n = 29). There was an inverse association between CLDN-7 expression and histological grade of tumour. Reduced expression of CLDN-7 was significantly associated with decreased tubule formation, high proliferative activity and metastasis. No significant associations were found between CLDN-1 expression and any of these features. Evaluation of expression of CLDN-7, but not CLDN-1, may therefore provide prognostic information, assisting in the diagnosis of a subgroup of aggressive feline mammary carcinomas that share some features with the recently described ‘claudin-low’ subgroup of human breast cancer.