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Query: EC:2.7.10.1 (
ERK
)
95,504
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Imatinib mesylate (imatinib) is an orally administered competitive inhibitor of the tyrosine kinases associated with the KIT protein (stem cell factor receptor), ABL protein and platelet-derived growth factor receptors. The
KIT
tyrosine kinase is abnormally expressed in gastrointestinal stromal tumour (GIST), a rare neoplasm for which there has been no effective systemic therapy. In a randomised, nonblind, multicentre study that evaluated imatinib 400 or 600mg once daily in 147 patients with advanced GIST, confirmed partial responses were achieved in 54% of patients overall (median duration of follow-up was 288 days). Stable disease was experienced by 28% of patients and the estimated 1-year survival rate was 88%. Similar response rates were reported in a smaller, dose-escalation study, in which objective tumour response was a secondary endpoint. Although nearly all patients with GIST treated with imatinib experienced adverse events, most events were mild or moderate in nature. Severe or serious adverse events occurred in 21% of patients in the larger study, and included gastrointestinal or tumour haemorrhage. The control of cellular processes, such as cell growth, division and death, involves signal transduction, which commonly involves the transfer of phosphate from adenosine triphosphate (ATP) to tyrosine residues on substrate proteins, by tyrosine kinase enzymes. Activation of oncogenes coding for kinase proteins can lead to the production of kinases that are continually active in the absence of a normal stimulus,leading to increased cell proliferation and/or decreased apoptosis. A major focus of cancer research in recent years has been to identify oncogenic molecules and the signal transduction pathways in which they are involved, in order to develop specifically targeted drugs. One such drug is imatinib mesylate (imatinib, Glivic/Gleevec), an orally administered 2-phenylaminopyrimidine derivative that is a competitive inhibitor of the tyrosine kinases associated with platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) receptors, the Abelson (ABL) protein and the KIT protein (also known as stem cell factor [SCF] receptor). Imatinib was initially evaluated for the treatment of chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML) [reviewed previously in Drugs]. More recently, imatinib has been approved for the treatment of patients with advanced gastrointestinal stromal tumour (GIST), in which
KIT
, a tyrosine kinase receptor, is abnormally expressed. GISTs are soft tissue gastrointestinal sarcomas probably arising from mesenchymal cells. They are rare neoplasms, with between 5000 and 10 000 new cases being diagnosed each year in the US. GISTs occur throughout the gastrointestinal tract but the stomach and small intestine are the most common sites. Symptoms depend on the site and size of the tumour, and may include abdominal pain, gastrointestinal bleeding or signs of obstruction; small tumours may be asymptomatic. The diagnosis of GIST is made by immunohistochemical staining for
CD117
, a cell surface antigen on the extracellular domain of
KIT
, in conjunction with pathological examination of tissue with light microscopy. All GISTs may have some degree of malignant potential. They are unresponsive to standard chemotherapy and to radiotherapy, and the mainstay of treatment in the past has been surgery. However, recurrence rates are high, and there has been no effective systemic treatment for unresectable GIST or metastatic disease. For patients in whom complete resection is not possible, or in patients with metastatic or recurrent disease, the median duration of survival is 9-12 months, and 10-19 months, respectively. Gain-of-function mutations of the KIT proto-oncogene occur in up to 90% of GISTs, allowing constitutive activation of tyrosine kinase (i.e. auto-phosphorylation of tyrosine residues independent of ligand-receptor binding), leading to aberrant cell division and tumour growth. Imatinib selectively inhibits the tyrosine kinase activity associated with
KIT
, which forms the rationale for evaluating its effects in GIST. Subsequent to initial evidence of the clinical efficacy of imatinib in a single patient with progressive, metastatic,
CD117
-positive GIST, formal studies of imatinib in this new indication were initiated. This article summarises the pharmacology, efficacy and tolerability profile of imatinib in the treatment of patients with advanced GIST.
...
PMID:Imatinib mesylate: in the treatment of gastrointestinal stromal tumours. 1260 Feb 28
Immunohistochemical staining for
KIT
(
CD117
) was performed on 144 cases of soft tissue sarcoma and 11 cases of gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST). Diffuse global staining in almost all neoplastic cells was a consistent feature of GIST but was also seen in some types of soft tissue sarcoma that resemble GISTs morphologically, such as synovial sarcoma and leiomyosarcoma. This finding is of diagnostic importance because some of these sarcoma types may involve the intestinal wall and simulate primary GIST. Most other positive cases showed focal staining. Although focal positivity may not be a problem in resected specimens, it has the potential to be misleading in biopsy material. Our results are concordant with some reports of
CD117
expression in soft tissue tumors, but they differ from those reported by other laboratories. This discrepancy in the literature may be the result of variation in antibodies used or variation in immunohistochemical staining protocol. Regardless of the technical or scientific explanation, an understanding of the difficulties with
KIT
immunostaining is critical. Not only is
KIT
positivity used as a prerequisite for the diagnosis of GISTs, but treatment eligibility for STI571 in patients with GIST, and increasingly with other tumors, relies on positive
KIT
immunostaining.
...
PMID:The problem with KIT: clinical implications and practical difficulties with CD117 immunostaining. 1261 Mar 58
Despite maturation arrest, blast cells in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) are often capable of expressing lineage-restricted (granulomonocytic or myelomastocytic) differentiation antigens. Tryptases are lineage-associated serine proteases primarily expressed in mast cells, and less abundantly in blood basophils. We have recently shown that myeloblasts in a group of patients with AML (approximately 40%) produce significant amounts of tryptase(s). In these patients, serum tryptase levels are elevated (> 15 ng/ml) and reflect the total burden of leukemic cells. In most cases, myeloblasts express alpha-tryptase mRNA in excess over beta-tryptase mRNA, and secrete the respective protein (= pro-alpha-tryptase) in a constitutive manner. It was also found that these AML blasts frequentlyco-express tryptase with additional mast cell lineage- and/or basophil-related differentiation antigens including
KIT
(
CD117
), histamine, and 2D7. We hypothesize that tryptase-positive AMLs arise from a leukemic progenitor that exhibits a limited potential to differentiate into mast cells and/or basophils.
...
PMID:Tryptase a novel biochemical marker of acute myeloid leukemia. 1261 10
Fifty canine gastrointestinal (GI) mesenchymal tumors were examined to determine the occurrence of leiomyomas (LM) and GI stromal tumors and to compare their clinicopathologic features. Twenty-one tumors (42%) were histologically reclassified as gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) and 29 tumors (58%) as LMs on the basis of their histologic similarity with homologous human tumors. The GISTs occurred equally in males and females, with a mean age of 11 years (range 5-14 years). Five GISTs (24%) were associated with clinical signs and six (29%) had metastasis in liver or abdominal cavity. The GISTs occurred in large intestine (10, 48%), small bowel (six, 29%), stomach (four, 19%), and mesentery of small intestine (one, 5%). Histologically, they were highly cellular spindle, or less commonly epithelioid tumors with mitotic rates ranging from 0 to 19 per 10 HPF. Eleven tumors (52%) were positive for
CD117
(
KIT
); seven (33%) were positive for smooth muscle actin but none for desmin and S-100 protein. Sequences of
KIT
exon 11, often mutated in human GISTs, were evaluated from four GISTs. Deletion of Try556-Lys557 coexisting with duplication of Gln555 in one case of GIST and T to C transition resulting in substitution of Pro for Leu575 in another were identified. The LMs occurred predominantly in males (82%) with a mean age of 11 years (range 8-17 years). Nine tumors (31%) had associated clinical signs. They occurred in the stomach (22, 76%), esophagus (four, 14%), and intestines (three, 10%); all were paucicellular, had no mitoses, and were composed of mature smooth muscle cells. Twenty-eight (97%) were positive for smooth muscle actin and 18 (62%) for desmin but none for
CD117
and S-100. Both GISTs and true LMs occur in the GI tract of dogs. Both tumors have distinctive pathologic features.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal stromal tumors and leiomyomas in the dog: a histopathologic, immunohistochemical, and molecular genetic study of 50 cases. 1262 12
Gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) are unique neoplasms that occur throughout the gastrointestinal tract, mesentery, omentum, and retroperitoneum. They are the most common mesenchymal neoplasm of the gastrointestinal tract and are defined by their expression of
KIT
(
CD117
), a tyrosine kinase growth factor receptor. The expression of
KIT
is important to distinguish GISTs from other mesenchymal neoplasms such as leiomyomas, leiomyosarcomas, schwannomas, and neurofibromas and to determine the appropriateness of
KIT
-inhibitor therapy. The series described herein was accumulated over 2 years and includes 64 pathologically proved GISTs (28 gastric, 27 small intestinal, six anorectal, one colonic, one esophageal, and one from the small bowel mesentery). Radiologic features of GISTs vary depending on tumor size and organ of origin. Since most GISTs arise within the muscularis propria of the stomach or intestinal wall, they most commonly have an exophytic growth pattern and manifest as dominant masses outside the organ of origin. Dominant intramural and intraluminal masses are less common radiologic manifestations. GISTs occurring in the gastrointestinal tract and mesentery characteristically have hemorrhage, necrosis, or cyst formation that appears as focal areas of low attenuation on computed tomographic images. Although the radiologic features of GISTs are often distinct from those of epithelial tumors, criteria to separate GISTs radiologically from other nonepithelial tumors have not yet been fully developed.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal stromal tumors: radiologic features with pathologic correlation. 1264 Jan 47
c-kit is a proto-oncogene that codes for a transmembrane tyrosine kinase receptor (
CD117
). The gene product
KIT
is constitutively overexpressed in mastocytosis and gastrointestinal stromal tumors. Recently the use of the tyrosine kinase inhibitors, such as STI-571, has resulted in the successful treatment of bcr-abl-positive leukemias and gastrointestinal stromal tumors. In gastrointestinal stromal tumors, immunostaining for c-kit is diffusely positive. Because the expression of c-kit in mesenchymal tumors of the uterus and ovary has not been previously studied, we evaluated its expression in 38 of these tumors by immunohistochemistry. The number of positive labeled/total tumors were as follows: 0/8 malignant mullerian mixed tumors, 4/7 ovarian fibrosarcomas, 0/1 clear-cell ovarian sarcoma, 0/4 uterine leiomyosarcomas, 1/10 low-grade endometrial stromal sarcomas, 0/2 high-grade endometrial stromal sarcomas, and 3/6 endometrial stromal nodules. In all positive cases, no more than 5% of the cells were labeled. In conclusion, unlike gastrointestinal stromal tumors, mesenchymal tumors of the uterus and ovary rarely express c-kit. Therefore, it is unlikely that patients with these tumors will benefit from treatment with the currently available tyrosine kinase inhibitors.
...
PMID:Lack of expression of c-kit protein (CD117) in mesenchymal tumors of the uterus and ovary. 1264 74
Previous studies have shown that STI571, a selective tyrosine kinase inhibitor of c-
KIT
, is highly effective in c-
KIT
/
CD117
-positive gastrointestinal stromal tumours (GIST), especially those that have activating mutations in the c-kit exon 11 that encodes the juxtamembrane (JM) domain of the c-
KIT
oncoprotein. We examined the prevalence of activating exon 11 c-kit mutations in 26 small-cell lung cancer (SCLC) cases in order to explore whether this disease is also a potential target for treatment with STI571. Expression of c-
KIT
, estimated by immunohistochemistry, was demonstrated in 14 out of 22 SCLC samples (64%); nine samples showed moderate to strong staining (41%), five samples were weakly positive (23%), whereas eight samples (36%) were negative for
CD117
. Next, we examined the mutational status of exon 11 of the c-kit gene, by single-stranded conformational polymorphism (SSCP) and sequencing in all of the cKIT/
CD117
-positive tumours. However, no activating mutations in the c-kit exon 11 were found by either technique. Apparently, c-
KIT
oncoprotein expression in SCLC was not correlated with activating mutations in c-kit exon 11. In analogy to GISTs, our results could imply that SCLC patients would not benefit from treatment with STI571.
...
PMID:Lack of c-kit exon 11 activating mutations in c-KIT/CD117-positive SCLC tumour specimens. 1265 Dec 5
Although the majority of mesenchymal lesions of the gastrointestinal tract are neoplastic in nature, nonneoplastic reactive processes may involve the gastrointestinal tract and mesentery, causing diagnostic confusion with more aggressive neoplasms, such as fibromatosis or gastrointestinal stromal tumors. In this study, we report a series of fibroinflammatory lesions of the gastrointestinal tract that we think represent a relatively cohesive group of tumors and describe the clinical and pathologic features of this entity, which we have termed "reactive nodular fibrous pseudotumor." The tumors affected five patients (four male and one female patient) who ranged in age from 48 to 71 years (mean 56 years). Two patients presented with acute abdominal pain without a significant past medical history, two had incidental lesions discovered during evaluation for other medical conditions, and one was found to have an abdominal mass. Three patients had a history of abdominal surgery. The tumors were multiple in three patients and solitary in two patients. In four cases, at least one of the tumors involved the small intestine or colon, and the lesion was confined to the peripancreatic soft tissue in one case. The tumors were firm, tan-white, ranged in size from 4.3 to 6.5 cm in greatest dimension, and were grossly well circumscribed. All of the lesions were of low to moderate cellularity and composed of stellate or spindled fibroblasts arranged haphazardly or in intersecting fascicles. Three cases had microscopically infiltrative borders. The stroma was rich in collagen, which was wire-like, keloidal, or hyalinized. Intralesional mononuclear cells were sparse but were more numerous peripherally and frequently arranged in lymphoid aggregates. Immunohistochemical stains demonstrated that all of the tumors stained for vimentin, 80% stained for
CD117
or muscle specific actin, 60% stained for smooth muscle actin or desmin, and none of the tumors stained for CD34, S-100 protein, or
anaplastic lymphoma kinase
-1. Follow-up information was available in all cases: four patients had no residual disease following surgical resection (mean follow-up 16.3 months) and one patient who had an incomplete surgical resection had stable disease at 26 months. In summary, we report a series of distinct intraabdominal fibroinflammatory pseudotumors that we have collectively termed "reactive nodular fibrous pseudotumors." These lesions are uncommon and may infiltrate the bowel wall, thereby mimicking primary bowel neoplasms or intraabdominal fibromatosis. Recognition of these nonneoplastic lesions is important, as they pursue a benign clinical course, but may be confused with other mesenchymal neoplasms that require more aggressive treatment.
...
PMID:Reactive nodular fibrous pseudotumor of the gastrointestinal tract and mesentery: a clinicopathologic study of five cases. 1510 9
Recent morphological and molecular genetic findings have greatly expanded our understanding of gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs). GISTs are now defined by their overexpression of
CD117
(
KIT
), the receptor for the stem cell factor, and can thus be discriminated from smooth muscle tumors. Cytogenetically, GISTs are characterized even in early lesions by frequent entire or partial loss of the chromosomes 14 and 22 and terminal deletions of the chromosomal arm 1p. During tumor progression further chromosomal imbalances accumulate. Following the first report on activating
KIT
mutations in GISTs, several studies have addressed the role of wild-type and mutant
KIT
in GISTs and demonstrated activating
KIT
mutations in the majority of cases. Moreover,
KIT
tyrosine phosphorylation is even present in
KIT
mutation-negative GISTs, implicating
KIT
activation as a central event in the pathogenesis of GISTs. Imatinib (STI571/Glivec) is a selective inhibitor of BCR/ABL,
PDGFR
and
KIT
receptor-tyrosine kinases. First therapeutic applications of imatinib in patients with progressive GISTs have yielded promising results. This review focuses on the morphological and molecular findings in GISTs which have opened up a new therapeutic perspective.
...
PMID:[Gastrointestinal stromal tumors. A morphologic and molecular genetic independent tumor entity with new therapeutic perspectives]. 1273 51
The molecular basis of testicular germ cell tumourigenesis are not well elucidated. Growth factors regulate cell growth, differentiation and apoptosis. Major families of growth factors are present in the male gonad from early fetal development to adult life. They are involved in germ cell proliferation and differentiation. Growth signalling pathways suffer deregulation in many human malignancies. Given the importance of growth signals in normal testicular development and their acquired deregulation in most human cancers, growth factors and signalling molecules that have been implicated in the genesis of testicular germ cell tumours, are reviewed. We detected a somatic mutation of SMAD4 gene, responsible for loss of protein function in seminomas. This mutational inactivation may affect the activity of several members of TGFbeta superfamily (TGFbeta, activin, inhibin, BMP). VEGF expression has been shown to predict metastasis in seminomas. A significant association of HST-1 expression, a member of fibroblast growth factors, with the nonseminomatous phenotype and with tumour stage has been described. In contrast,
C-KIT
is expressed by seminomas only, from the preinvasive stage. Despite intense expression in almost all seminomas, activating mutation of
C-KIT
gene is seldom reported. Recently, the first animal model of classical testicular seminoma has been identified in transgenic mouse overexpressing GDNF.
RET
(GDNF receptor) expression is demonstrated in human seminomas, and not in nonseminomatous tumours. However, the exact molecular alterations of GDNF/
RET
/GFRalpha1 complex in germ cell tumours are not known. Finally, beside growth factors, other signalling molecules such as peptide hormones may be involved in testicular carcinogenesis. We have demonstrated a specific pattern of somatostatin receptors expression in each type of testicular germ cell tumours, with a loss of sst3 and sst4 in seminomas and loss of sst4 and expression of sst1 in nonseminomas only. These data suggest an antiproliferative action of somatostatin in testicular cancers. In summary, many growth factors and signalling molecules seem to represent specific markers for different histological types of germ cell tumours (seminomas versus nonseminomas) and may play a role in the differentiation of germ cell tumours. Despite a complex signalling pathway involved in the physiological functions of male gonad, little is known about the implication of this signalling network in testicular malignancies. From a practical stand-point, further studies on the role of growth factors in human germ cell tumours may offer a new therapeutical perspective with the development of specific pharmacological signalling modulators that could be used as therapeutic agents.
...
PMID:Growth regulatory factors and signalling proteins in testicular germ cell tumours. 1275 64
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