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Dive into the research topics where Olli Carpén is active.

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Featured researches published by Olli Carpén.


BMC Cancer | 2011

MMP-1 expression has an independent prognostic value in breast cancer

Pia Boström; Mirva Söderström; Tero Vahlberg; Karl-Ove Söderström; Peter J. Roberts; Olli Carpén; Pirkko Hirsimäki

AbstractBackgroundBreast cancer consists of a variety of tumours, which differ by their morphological features, molecular characteristics and outcome. Well-known prognostic factors, e.g. tumour grade and size, Ki-67, hormone receptor status, HER2 expression, lymph node status and patient age have been traditionally related to prognosis. Although the conventional prognostic markers are reliable in general, better markers to predict the outcome of an individual tumour are needed.Matrix metalloproteinase-1 (MMP-1) expression has been reported to inversely correlate with survival in advanced cancers. In breast cancer MMP-1 is often upregulated, especially in basal-type breast tumours. The purpose of this retrospective study was to analyse MMP-1 expression in breast cancer cells and in cancer associated stromal cells and to correlate the results with traditional prognostic factors including p53 and bcl-2, as well as to patient survival in breast cancer subtypes.MethodsImmunohistochemical analysis of MMP-1, ER, PR, Ki-67, HER2, bcl-2, p53 and CK5/6 expression was performed on 125 breast cancers. Statistical analyses were carried out using Kruskal-Wallis and Mann-Whitney -tests. In pairwise comparison Bonferroni-adjustment was applied. Correlations were calculated using Spearman rank-order correlation coefficients. Kaplan-Meier survival analyses were carried out to compare breast cancer-specific survival curves. Factors significantly associated with disease-specific survival in univariate models were included in multivariate stepwise.ResultsPositive correlations were found between tumour grade and MMP-1 expression in tumour cells and in stromal cells. P53 positivity significantly correlated with MMP-1 expression in tumour cells, whereas HER2 expression correlated with MMP-1 both in tumour cells and stromal cells. MMP-1 expression in stromal cells showed a significant association with luminal A and luminal B, HER2 overexpressing and triple-negative breast cancer subtypes.ConclusionsThe most important finding of this study was the independent prognostic value of MMP-1 as well as Ki-67 and bcl-2 expression in tumour cells. Our study showed also that both tumoural and stromal MMP-1 expression is associated with breast tumour progression and poor prognosis. A significant difference of MMP-1 expression by cancer associated stromal cells in luminal A, luminal B and triple-negative breast cancer classes was also demonstrated.n Please see related commentary articlehttp://www.biomedcentral.com/1741-7015/9/95


Neuromuscular Disorders | 2006

Myotilinopathy in a family with late onset myopathy

Isabelle Pénisson-Besnier; Kati Talvinen; Catherine Dumez; Anna Vihola; Frédéric Dubas; Michel Fardeau; Peter Hackman; Olli Carpén; Bjarne Udd

Mutations in titin are well known cause of late onset autosomal dominant distal myopathy. Mutations in another sarcomeric protein, myotilin, were first identified in two families with dominant limb girdle muscular phenotype. Recently, however, myotilin mutations have been associated with more distal phenotypes in patients with late onset myofibrillar myopathy. We report here a multigenerational French family in which gene sequencing identified a S60F myotilin mutation in all patients with full penetrance despite very late onset. The family was originally reported as a distal myopathy but intrafamilial variability was remarkable with proximal or distal muscle weakness or both. Extended morphological characteristics of muscle biopsy findings in myotilinopathy indicate that immunohistochemistry may be important for selection of molecular genetic approach in myofibrillar myopathy.


British Journal of Cancer | 2011

EGFR gene copy number assessment from areas with highest EGFR expression predicts response to anti-EGFR therapy in colorectal cancer

Annika Ålgars; Minnamaija Lintunen; Olli Carpén; Raija Ristamäki; Jari Sundström

Background:Only 40–70% of metastatic colorectal cancers (mCRCs) with wild-type (WT) KRAS oncogene respond to anti-epidermal growth factor receptor (anti-EGFR) antibody treatment. EGFR amplification has been suggested as an additional marker to predict the response. However, improved methods for bringing the EGFR analysis into routine laboratory are needed.Methods:The material consisted of 80 patients with mCRC, 54 of them receiving anti-EGFR therapy. EGFR gene copy number (GCN) was analysed by automated silver in situ hybridisation (SISH). Immunohistochemical EGFR protein analysis was used to guide SISH assessment.Results:Clinical benefit was seen in 73% of high (⩾4.0) EGFR GCN patients, in comparison with 59% of KRAS WT patients. Only 20% of low EGFR GCN patients responded to therapy. A high EGFR GCN number associated with longer progression-free survival (P<0.0001) and overall survival (P=0.004). Together with KRAS analysis, EGFR GCN identified the responsive patients to anti-EGFR therapy more accurately than either test alone. The clinical benefit rate of KRAS WT/high EGFR GCN tumours was 82%.Conclusion:Our results show that automated EGFR SISH, in combination with KRAS mutation analysis, can be a useful and easily applicable technique in routine diagnostic practise for selecting patients for anti-EGFR therapy.


BMC Research Notes | 2009

Analysis of cyclins A, B1, D1 and E in breast cancer in relation to tumour grade and other prognostic factors

Pia Boström; Mirva Söderström; Tuire Palokangas; Tero Vahlberg; Yrjö Collan; Olli Carpén; Pirkko Hirsimäki

BackgroundThe cell cycle is promoted by activation of cyclin dependent kinases (Cdks), which are regulated positively by cyclins and negatively by Cdk inhibitors. Proliferation of carcinoma is associated with altered regulation of the cell cycle. Little is known on the combined alterations of cyclins A, B1, D1 and E in breast cancer in relation to the tumour grade and other prognostic factors.FindingsImmunohistochemical analysis of cyclins A, B1, D1 and E, estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor, Ki-67, Her-2/neu and CK5/6 was performed on 53 breast carcinomas. mRNA levels of the cyclins were analysed of 12 samples by RT-PCR. The expression of cyclins A, B1 and E correlated with each other, while cyclin D1 correlated with none of these cyclins. Cyclins A, B1 and E showed association with tumour grade, Her-2/neu and Ki-67. Cyclin E had a negative correlation with hormone receptors and a positive correlation with triple negative carcinomas. Cyclin D1 had a positive correlation with ER, PR and non-basal breast carcinomas.ConclusionCyclin A, B1 and E overexpression correlates to grade, Ki-67 and Her2/neu expression. Overexpression of cyclin D1 has a positive correlation with receptor status and non-basal carcinomas suggesting that cyclin D1 expression might be a marker of good prognosis. Combined analysis of cyclins indicates that cyclin A, B and E expression is similarly regulated, while other factors regulate cyclin D1 expression. The results suggest that the combined immunoreactivity of cyclins A, B1, D and E might be a useful prognostic factor in breast cancer.


Neuromuscular Disorders | 2007

Myotilin – a prominent marker of myofibrillar remodelling

Lena Carlsson; Ji-Guo Yu; Monica Moza; Olli Carpén; Lars-Eric Thornell

Myofibrillar remodelling with insertion of sarcomeres is a typical feature of biopsies taken from persons suffering of exercise-induced delayed onset muscle soreness. Here we studied the presence of the sarcomeric protein myotilin in eccentric exercise related lesions. Myotilin is a component of sarcomeric Z-discs and it binds several other Z-disc proteins, i.e. alpha-actinin, filamin C, F-actin and FATZ. Myotilin has previously been shown to be present in nemaline rods and central cores and to be mutated in limb girdle muscular dystrophy 1A (LGMD1A) and in a subset of myofibrillar myopathies, indicating an important role in Z-disc maintenance. Our findings on non-diseased muscle affected by eccentric exercise give new information on how myotilin is associated to myofibrillar components upon remodelling. We show that myotilin was present in increased amount in lesions related to Z-disc streaming and events leading to insertion of new sarcomeres in pre-existing myofibrils and can therefore be used as a marker for myofibrillar remodelling. Interestingly, myotilin is preferentially associated with F-actin rather than with the core Z-disc protein alpha-actinin during these events. This suggests that myotilin has a key role in the dynamic molecular events mediating myofibrillar assembly in normal and diseased skeletal muscle.


Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology | 2008

The Z-Disk Diseases

Duygu Selcen; Olli Carpén

Recent studies have identified disease-causing mutations in four genes that encode Z-disk proteins. Mutations in myotilin (MYOT), ZASP and filamin C (FLNC) encoding genes cause autosomal dominant myopathy that manifests in adulthood. The clinical features and morphological changes in myopathies caused by mutations in all three genes are highly similar. The disease typically manifests as distal myopathy, but may also affect proximal muscles and the heart. The morphological findings are typical of myofibrillar myopathy (MFM) and include Z-disk alterations and aggregation of dense filamentous material visible in trichrome staining. The disease mechanism is still unclear, but may involve structural alterations of the Z-disk caused by dysfunctional proteins or their abnormal accumulation due to defective degradation. Although the fourth gene product, telethonin, is also involved in the Z-disk organization, its mutations cause a different phenotype. Telethonin mutations result in recessive muscular dystrophy, which manifests in childhood as proximal weakness. The morphologic alterations caused by telethonin mutations are not well characterized, but may share common features of MFM. Future work aims at understanding the pathophysiology of Z-disk related disorders and identification of novel genetic defects in patients with morphological features of MFM.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2014

Actin-associated protein palladin promotes tumor cell invasion by linking extracellular matrix degradation to cell cytoskeleton

Pernilla von Nandelstadh; Erika Gucciardo; Jouko Lohi; Rui Li; Nami Sugiyama; Olli Carpén; Kaisa Lehti

This study identifies a novel protein interaction between the key cell-surface collagenase MT1-MMP and the dynamic actin-binding protein palladin, which links extracellular matrix degradation to cytoskeletal dynamics and migration signaling, thus promoting mesenchymal invasion of breast carcinoma cells.


Acta Neuropathologica | 2012

Neurofibromatosis 2011: A Report of the Children’s Tumor Foundation Annual Meeting

Michel Kalamarides; Maria T. Acosta; Dusica Babovic-Vuksanovic; Olli Carpén; Karen Cichowski; D. Gareth Evans; Filippo G. Giancotti; C. Oliver Hanemann; David A. Ingram; Alison C. Lloyd; Debra A. Mayes; Ludwine Messiaen; Helen Morrison; Kathryn N. North; Roger J. Packer; Duojia Pan; Anat Stemmer-Rachamimov; Meena Upadhyaya; David H. Viskochil; Margret R. Wallace; Kim Hunter-Schaedle; Nancy Ratner

The 2011 annual meeting of the Children’s Tumor Foundation, the annual gathering of the neurofibromatosis (NF) research and clinical communities, was attended by 330 participants who discussed integration of new signaling pathways into NF research, the appreciation for NF mutations in sporadic cancers, and an expanding pre-clinical and clinical agenda. NF1, NF2, and schwannomatosis collectively affect approximately 100,000 persons in US, and result from mutations in different genes. Benign tumors of NF1 (neurofibroma and optic pathway glioma) and NF2 (schwannoma, ependymoma, and meningioma) and schwannomatosis (schwannoma) can cause significant morbidity, and there are no proven drug treatments for any form of NF. Each disorder is associated with additional manifestations causing morbidity. The research presentations described in this review covered basic science, preclinical testing, and results from clinical trials, and demonstrate the remarkable strides being taken toward understanding of and progress toward treatments for these disorders based on the close interaction among scientists and clinicians.


Developmental Cell | 2014

Tensin-4-Dependent MET Stabilization Is Essential for Survival and Proliferation in Carcinoma Cells

Ghaffar Muharram; Pranshu Sahgal; Taina Korpela; Nicola De Franceschi; Riina Kaukonen; Katherine Clark; David Tulasne; Olli Carpén; Johanna Ivaska

Inappropriate MET tyrosine kinase receptor signaling is detected in almost all types of human cancer and contributes to malignant growth and MET dependency via proliferative and antiapoptotic activities. Independently, Tensin-4 (TNS4) is emerging as a putative oncogene in many cancer types, but the mechanisms of TNS4 oncogenic activity are not well established. Here, we demonstrate that TNS4 directly interacts with phosphorylated MET via the TNS4 SH2-domain to positively regulate cell survival, proliferation, and migration, through increased MET protein stability. In addition, TNS4 interaction with β1-integrin cytoplasmic tail positively regulates β1-integrin stability. Loss of TNS4 or disruption of MET-TNS4 interaction triggers MET trafficking toward the lysosomal compartment that is associated with excessive degradation of MET and triggers MET-addicted carcinoma cell death in vitro and in vivo. Significant correlation between MET and TNS4 expression in human colon carcinoma and ovarian carcinoma suggests TNS4 plays a critical role in MET stability in cancer.


Breast Cancer Research and Treatment | 2013

Eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4E (eIF4E) expression is associated with breast cancer tumor phenotype and predicts survival after anthracycline chemotherapy treatment

Tuomas Heikkinen; Taina Korpela; Rainer Fagerholm; Sofia Khan; Kristiina Aittomäki; Päivi Heikkilä; Carl Blomqvist; Olli Carpén; Heli Nevanlinna

Abnormal translation of mRNAs frequently occurring during carcinogenesis is among the mechanisms that can affect the expression of proteins involved in tumor development and progression. Eukaryotic initiation factor eIF4E is a key regulator of translation of many cancer-related transcripts and its expression is altered in various cancers and has been associated with worse survival. We determined the eIF4E protein levels using immunohistochemistry (IHC) in 1,233 breast tumors on tissue microarrays. We analyzed the effects of the IHC expression level on tumor characteristics and patient survival, also with stratification by adjuvant chemotherapy treatment. In 1,085 successfully stained tumors, high level of eIF4E protein expression was associated with features of aggressive tumor phenotype, namely grade, estrogen and progesterone receptor negativity, HER2 receptor positivity, and high expression of p53 and Ki67, and with triple negative subtype (pxa0<xa00.001). High eIF4E expression was associated with worse breast cancer-specific survival with a hazard ratio (HR) of 1.99 (95xa0% CI 1.32–3.00, pxa0=xa00.0008) and was in a multivariate analysis an independent prognostic factor. High eIF4E expression was associated with worse outcome also after detection of distant metastasis (HRxa0=xa01.88, 95xa0% CI 1.20–2.94, pxa0=xa00.0060). In the subgroup analysis the survival effect was strongest among patients treated with anthracycline chemotherapy (HRxa0=xa03.34, 95xa0% CI 1.72–6.48, pxa0=xa00.0002), whereas no such effect was seen among patients who had not received anthracycline with significant difference in heterogeneity between the two groups (pxa0=xa00.0358). High expression of eIF4E is associated with adverse tumor characteristics and predicts poor breast cancer-specific survival. This effect is emphasized in patients treated with anthracycline chemotherapy. eIF4E as a treatment predictive factor warrants further studies.

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Seija Grénman

Turku University Hospital

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Annika Auranen

Turku University Hospital

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Annika Ålgars

Turku University Hospital

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Jari Sundström

Turku University Hospital

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Kaisa Huhtinen

Turku University Hospital

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Jutta Huvila

Turku University Hospital

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