Carolyn D. Scott
Royal Prince Alfred Hospital
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Featured researches published by Carolyn D. Scott.
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1990
Mercedes Ballesteros; Carolyn D. Scott; Robert C. Baxter
This study examined levels of insulin-like growth factor-II/mannose 6-phosphate receptor (IGF-II/M6PR) mRNA in tissues of rats at different stages of growth. Northern blot analysis of total RNA from tissues of rats aged 2, 9, 21 and 42 days and from 21 day fetal rats was carried out using a cDNA probe to the IGF-II/M6PR. Northern blots showed this probe hybridized to a single 9kb band in all tissues tested. Highest hybridization signals were detected in fetal and neonatal tissues with levels rapidly decreasing after birth. For all age groups tested the highest signal was obtained with heart followed by muscle, lung, and kidney, with liver and brain showing lower levels of message. These results indicate that IGF-II/M6PR mRNA is developmentally regulated, and suggest a role for the IGF-II/M6PR in fetal and neonatal growth.
Archive | 1990
Robert C. Baxter; Carolyn D. Scott
In the past few years there has been an explosive increase in interest in peptides of the insulin-like growth factor (IGF) family. This follows a period of over two decades, dating back to the discovery of “somatomedins,” as the IGFs were originally known, in the late 1950s. Independent research groups isolated and characterized peptides with three apparently unrelated groups of biological activities: “sulfation factor,” peptides that stimulate proteoglycan synthesis in cartilage; “nonsuppressible insulin-like activity,” peptides with the ability to mimic the various actions of insulin, such as the stimulation of glucose oxidation by fat cells; and “multiplication-stimulating activity” or MSA, peptides that promote cell replication (Baxter, 1986). In time it was realized that all of these properties were in fact possessed by all of the peptides in the three groups; these, in turn, were eventually categorized, on the basis of their primary sequences, into two peptide groups, IGF-I and IGF-II. For example, MSA is now regarded as rat IGF-II (Marquardt et al., 1981). Although there have been suggestions that different IGF classes (such as “fetal somatomedins”) might exist, it can be concluded from recent protein and cDNA sequencing studies that, notwithstanding the many proven or predicted structural variants of each peptide type, all known IGFs may be classified as either IGF-I or IGF-II.
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1988
Carolyn D. Scott; Jane E. Taylor; Robert C. Baxter
This study compares the regulation of IGF-II receptors in three rat hepatoma lines, HTC, H-35 and 5123tc, and primary rat hepatocytes. In all cell types [125I]IGF-II bound solely to a species of approximately 250 kDa. Cell surface IGF-II receptors in hepatoma cells had slightly lower affinities (1-2 liters/nmol) than in hepatocytes (4 liters/nmol), but slightly higher IGF-I cross-reactivity (2-4% compared to 1% in hepatocytes). In confluent cultures, the three hepatoma lines expressed 5- to 15-fold more cell-surface receptors per cell than hepatocytes. However, while hepatocyte receptors showed marked inverse density-dependence, increasing over 6-fold between dense (3 x 10(5) cells/3.8 cm2) and sparse (0.16 x 10(5) cells/3.8 cm2) cultures, receptors in all hepatoma lines remained at a constant high level regardless of culture density. These distinct regulatory patterns resemble those described for growth-related functions in hepatocytes and hepatoma cells, and are thus consistent with a role for IGF-II receptors in liver cell proliferation.
Endocrine-related Cancer | 2018
Tiffany Scully; Carolyn D. Scott; Sue M. Firth; Lisa M. Sedger; John E. Pintar; Stephen M. Twigg; Robert C. Baxter
Epidemiological studies show an association between obesity and poor breast cancer prognosis. We previously demonstrated that global IGFBP-3 deficiency, in IGFBP-3-null mice, resulted in a 50% reduction in mammary tumour growth over 3 weeks relative to tumours in wild-type (WT) C57BL/6 mice. This growth reduction was ameliorated by high fat feeding-induced obesity. This study aimed to examine how IGFBP-3 promotes tumour growth by influencing the immune tumour microenvironment in healthy and obese mice. Syngeneic EO771 cells, which lack detectable IGFBP-3 expression, were grown as orthotopic tumours in WT and IGFBP-3-null C57BL/6 mice placed on either a control chow or a high-fat diet (HFD), and examined by quantitative PCR and immunohistochemistry. In WT mice, increased stromal expression of IGFBP-3 was positively associated with tumour growth, supporting the hypothesis that IGFBP-3 in the microenvironment promotes tumour progression. Examining markers of immune cell subsets, gene expression of Ifng, Cd8a, Cd8b1 and Tnf and CD8 measured by immunohistochemistry were elevated in tumours of IGFBP-3-null mice compared to WT, indicating an accumulation of CD8+ T cells, but this increase was absent if the IGFBP-3-null mice had been exposed to HFD. Expression of these genes was negatively associated with tumour growth. Although similar among groups overall, Nkg2d and Tnfsf10 tumoural expression was associated with decreased tumour growth. Overall, the results of this study provide an immune-based mechanism by which host IGFBP-3 may promote breast tumour growth in the EO771 murine breast cancer model, and suggest that targeting IGFBP-3 might make a novel contribution to immune therapy for breast cancer.
The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2000
Ken K. Ong; Jürgen Kratzsch; Wieland Kiess; Michael Costello; Carolyn D. Scott; David B. Dunger
Endocrinology | 1987
David J. Handelsman; Jennifer A. Spaliviero; Carolyn D. Scott; Robert C. Baxter
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1991
Randy L. Jirtle; Brian I. Carr; Carolyn D. Scott
European Journal of Endocrinology | 1985
David J. Handelsman; Jennifer A. Spaliviero; Carolyn D. Scott; Robert C. Baxter
Endocrinology | 1986
Carolyn D. Scott; Robert C. Baxter
Endocrinology | 1987
Carolyn D. Scott; Robert C. Baxter