Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:1.10.3.1 (tyrosinase)
9,065 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The differentiation pattern of two related human neuroblastoma cell lines, SK-N-SHF and SK-N-SHN, induced by retinoic acid and staurosporine was studied. Immunohistochemical and electron microscopic examination of the cells indicated that the SHF variant could undergo differentiation along a melanocytic route when treated with retinoic acid and to neuronal cells when treated with retionic acid and staurosporine together. Treatment of SHN cells with either or both these agents caused neuronal differentiation. The melanocytic pathway was characterized in part by the flattening of the cells, the appearance of melanocytic antigens and various forms of melanosomes, an increase in tyrosinase activity, and the absence of neuronal marker proteins. The neuronal route was typified by the development of long neuritic processes containing microtubules and numerous neurosecretory granules as well as by immunohistochemical reactions for neural cell adhesion molecule, synaptophysin, and neurofilament proteins. The significance of these results is discussed in terms of the differentiation responses of neuroblastoma cells to chemical agents as well as some of the factors involved in the regulation of phenotype expressions of these cells.
...
PMID:Retinoic acid- and staurosporine-induced bidirectional differentiation of human neuroblastoma cell lines. 151 32

Neuroblastomas are malignant childhood neoplasms that arise from derivatives of the neural crest. We report the characterization of a new neuroblastoma cell line, designated NBL-W, derived from the primary tumor of a patient with stage IVS disease (S. L. Cohn, C. V. Herst, H. S. Maurer, and S. T. Rosen, J. Clin. Oncol., 5: 1441-1444, 1987) according to the criteria of Evans [A. E. Evans, G. J. D'Angio, and J. Randolf, Cancer (Phila.), 27: 374-378, 1971]. Neurite-bearing (N) and substrate-adherent (S) cell lines have been subcloned from the parent line. N and S cells can interconvert, and both cell types label with the neural crest cell surface marker antibody, HNK-1. Cells in the subcloned lines and in the parent line have been shown by Southern blot analysis to contain approximately 100 copies of the N-myc gene. Cytogenetic analysis shows a homogeneously staining region present on chromosome 19. Although these subclones are of identical genotype, the S cells express lower amounts of N-myc mRNA and protein as compared to the N cells. N cells express several neuronal proteins including the neurotransmitter-processing enzymes tyrosine hydroxylase and dopamine beta-hydroxylase, the neuronal intermediate filament proteins peripherin and NF66/alpha-internexin, and the neural cell adhesion molecule. S cells generally lack neuronal markers but express the mesenchymal intermediate filament protein vimentin, and a small subset of the S cells express glial fibrillary acidic protein. Some S cells were labeled weakly with neural cell adhesion molecule antibody; others were negative. S cells did not express the glial marker S-100 or a melanocyte marker, tyrosinase. Thus, S cells express the neural crest marker HNK-1 but do not express a set of antigens characteristic of any known cell type derived from the neural crest. These results are consistent with the suggestion that differential N-myc expression may be involved in the interconversion of N and S cells but indicate that the S cell phenotype need not represent a highly differentiated neural crest derivative.
...
PMID:Differential expression of N-myc in phenotypically distinct subclones of a human neuroblastoma cell line. 193 96

Spindle cell melanoma is a rare and distinctive variant of malignant melanoma that is composed of spindled neoplastic cells and includes desmoplastic and neurotropic melanoma. The lack of expression of several melanoma markers may result in a delayed or wrong diagnosis. In this study, we have analyzed in detail the phenotype of the tumor cells in 9 spindle cell melanomas on both paraffin-embedded and frozen material, using melanocytic, neural, and mesenchymal markers. The neoplastic cells expressed the melanocytic markers S-100, Mel-CAM, and NKIC3, but lacked gp100 and Melan-A; tyrosinase and c-Kit were expressed in 2 of 7 cases. Most cases expressed the neural markers p75-nerve growth factor receptor, neural cell adhesion molecule, and NSE. All cases expressed vimentin but lacked the mesenchymal markers CD34 and alpha-smooth muscle actin. Remarkably, all spindle cell melanomas strongly and diffusely expressed the fibroblastic markers Thy1 (CD90) and aminopeptidase N (CD13) and variably expressed the enzyme prolyl-4-hydroxylase, involved in procollagen formation. The coexpression of melanocytic, neural, and fibroblastic markers suggests bidirectional differentiation of neoplastic melanocytes toward (myo)fibroblasts and Schwann cells, a feature that was confirmed by electron microscopy. Furthermore, the lack of CD90 and CD13 staining in a wide range of melanocytic lesions suggests specificity of these markers for spindle cell melanoma.
...
PMID:New phenotypical and ultrastructural findings in spindle cell (desmoplastic/neurotropic) melanoma. 1466 57