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Breast tumors are initially dependent on estrogens for growth and progression and can be inhibited by anti-estrogens such as tamoxifen. However, breast cancers progress to become anti-estrogen resistant. Breast cancer anti-estrogen resistance gene 3 was identified in the search for genes involved in the development of estrogen resistance. The gene encodes a component of intracellular signal transduction that causes estrogen-independent proliferation in human breast cancer cells. The protein contains a putative src homology 2 (SH2) domain, a hall mark of cellular tyrosine kinase signaling molecules, and is partly homologous to the cell division cycle protein CDC48.
AI131758; And34; AND-34; Bcar3; breast cancer anti-estrogen resistance 3; breast cancer antiestrogen resistance 3 protein; breast cancer anti-estrogen resistance protein 3; dJ1033H22.2 (breast cancer anti-estrogen resistance 3); KIAA0554; novel SH2-containing protein 2; NSP2; OTTHUMP00000011961; p130Cas-binding protein AND-34; SH2 domain-containing protein 3B; SH2D3B; UNQ271/PRO308
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