Abstract

Insulin receptor (INSR) or insulin-like growth factor (IGF) signalling is speculated to be involved in mammary tumour development. Expression levels of members of the insulin receptor family (INSR, IGF1R, IGF2R, GHR) and their ligands IGF1and IGF2 were quantified in macro- and microdissected tissue samples of normal canine mammary gland, adenomas, carcinomas and their lymph node metastases to evaluate their potential impact on the carcinogenesis of canine mammary tumours. Normal mammary gland and adenomas had strong INSR expression, while carcinomas and metastases had significantly decreased expression. No differences were observed for IGF1R expression. IGF1, IGF2 and GHR mRNA expressions were strongly decreased in adenomas, carcinomas and metastases. INSR and IGF1R are therefore expressed in normal gland and adenomas and an increased stimulus by their ligands may be a proliferative stimulus in those tissues. However, decreased INSR expression carcinomas and their metastases render questionable its impact at late stages of carcinogenesis.

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