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Query: EC:2.7.10.1 (
ERK
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95,504
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Anaplastic astrocytoma (AA, WHO grade III) is, second to
Glioblastoma
, the most common and most malignant type of adult CNS tumour. Since survival for patients with AA varies markedly and there are no known useful prognostic or therapy response indicators, the primary purpose of this study was to examine whether knowledge of the known genetic abnormalities found in AA had any clinical value. The survival data on 37 carefully sampled AA was correlated with the results of a detailed analysis of the status of nine genes known to be involved in the development of astrocytic tumours. These included three genes coding for proteins in the p53 pathway (TP53, p14(ARF)and MDM2), four in the Rb1 pathway (CDKN2A, CDKN2B, RB1 and CDK4) and PTEN and
EGFR
. We found that loss of both wild-type copies of any of the three tumour suppressor genes CDKN2A, CDKN2B and RB1 or gene amplification of CDK4, disrupting the Rb1 pathway, were associated with shorter survival (P=0.009). This association was consistent in multivariate analysis, including adjustment for age (P=0.013). The findings suggest that analysis of the genes coding for Rb1 pathway components provides additional prognostic information in AA patients receiving conventional therapy.
...
PMID:Mutations in Rb1 pathway-related genes are associated with poor prognosis in anaplastic astrocytomas. 1597 Sep 25
Glioblastomas (GBMs) are the most frequent malignant brain tumors with very limited treatment options and nearly all
GBM
patients dying within 1 year. Pleiotrophin (PTN, HB-GAM, HBNF, OSF-1) is a secreted growth factor that shows mitogenic, chemotactic and transforming activity. While PTN expression is tightly regulated during embryogenesis and very limited in normal adult tissues, a marked PTN upregulation is seen in tumors including glioblastomas. Targeting of the PTN receptors,
ALK
and RPTP-zeta, indicates a contribution of PTN-activated signaling pathways in glioblastomas. However, the relevance of PTN expression itself is unknown especially since, besides PTN, at least one more growth factor, midkine (MK), signals through
ALK
and is expressed in glioblastoma. Here we demonstrate the biologic relevance of PTN in 2 glioblastoma cell lines in vitro and in vivo. We show that stable ribozyme-targeting leads to a robust reduction of PTN mRNA and protein levels. This results in decreased cell proliferation, cell migration and soft agar colony formation in vitro. Comparing clonal ribozyme-transfected cells with different residual PTN levels, we establish a PTN gene-dose effect of glioblastoma cell proliferation. In a subcutaneous tumor xenograft mouse model, in vivo growth is markedly reduced upon PTN depletion, which is paralleled by decreased PTN serum levels. Furthermore, the immunohistochemical analysis of the tumors shows reduced angiogenesis in PTN-depleted tumors. We conclude that PTN is a rate-limiting growth factor in glioblastoma. Since PTN is overexpressed in glioblastomas but rarely found in normal tissue, PTN may represent an attractive therapeutic target.
...
PMID:Ribozyme-targeting reveals the rate-limiting role of pleiotrophin in glioblastoma. 1598 44
The epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) gene is commonly amplified and rearranged in glioblastoma multiforme leading to overexpression of wild-type and mutant EGFRs. Expression of wild-type EGFR ligands, such as transforming growth factor-alpha (TGF-alpha) or heparin-binding EGF (HB-EGF), is also often increased in gliomas resulting in an autocrine loop that contributes to the growth autonomy of glioma cells.
Glioblastoma
multiformes express a characteristic EGFR mutant (EGFRvIII, de 2-7) that does not bind ligand, signals constitutively, and is more tumorigenic than the wild-type receptor. However, the downstream signals that mediate this increased tumorigenicity are not well understood. We hypothesized that signals induced specifically by EGFRvIII and not the wild-type receptor are more likely to mediate its increased tumorigenic activity and examined the gene expression profiles resulting from inducible expression of comparable levels of either wild-type EGFR or EGFRvIII in a U251-MG glioma cell line. Expression of EGFRvIII resulted in specific up-regulation of a small group of genes. Remarkably, all these genes, which include TGFA, HB-EGF,
EPHA2
, IL8, MAP4K4, FOSL1, EMP1, and DUSP6, influence signaling pathways known to play a key role in oncogenesis and function in interconnected networks. Increased expression of EGFRvIII-induced genes was validated by real-time PCR. The mutant receptor does not bind ligand, and EGFRvIII-induced expression of TGF-alpha and HB-EGF suggests that EGFRvIII plays a role in generating an autocrine loop using the wild-type EGFR in glioma. It also raises the possibility that EGFRvIII may signal, at least in part, through the wild-type receptor. Indeed, we show that inhibiting the activity of HB-EGF, a potent mitogen, with neutralizing antibodies reduces cell proliferation induced by expression of EGFRvIII. This suggests that the EGFRvIII-HB-EGF-wild-type EGFR autocrine loop plays an important role in signal transduction by EGFRvIII in glioma cells. We also show by immunohistochemistry that HB-EGF expression correlates with the presence of EGFRvIII in glioblastoma multiforme. Thus, our study provides a new insight into oncogenic signaling by EGFRvIII and improves our understanding of how autocrine loops are generated in glioma.
...
PMID:Differential gene expression analysis reveals generation of an autocrine loop by a mutant epidermal growth factor receptor in glioma cells. 1642 19
Glioblastoma
is the most common primary tumor of the central nervous system, but the underlying genetic changes that give rise to these tumors are still poorly understood. We report a primary glioblastoma with an unusual age of presentation. The patient was a 22-year-old man with a survival of 16 months. Morphological findings showed an increase of cellularity with positive GFAP and
EGFR
expression, increase of proliferate index, vascular hyperplasia with glomeruloid structures and necrosis. Molecular analysis showed
EGFR
amplification. No mutations of the TP53 or amplification of MDM2 and CDK4 were detected. Neither homozygous deletion of the 9p21 locus genes nor aberrant methylation were found. The cytogenetic study showed a clonal karyotype. The metaphases presented, among other anomalies, a small ring chromosome and double-minutes chromosomes. Using FISH and CGH techniques, it was found that the ring chromosome was a partial trisomy of chromosome 7, and the region implicated corresponded to 7p13-q21. Partial trisomies in glioblastoma could play an important role in defining those regions where genes implicated in this tumor process may be found. We studied the possible correlation of these findings with the tumoral phenotype.
...
PMID:Primary glioblastoma with EGFR amplification and a ring chromosome 7 in a young patient. 1686 1
Glioblastoma
is a severe type of primary brain tumor, and its highly invasive character is considered to be a major therapeutic obstacle. Several recent studies have reported that ionizing radiation (IR) enhances the invasion of tumor cells, but the mechanisms for this effect are not well understood. In this study, we investigated the possible signaling mechanisms involved in IR-induced invasion of glioma cells. IR increased the matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-2 promoter activity, mRNA transcription, and protein secretion along with the invasiveness of glioma cells lacking functional PTEN (U87, U251, U373, and C6) but not those harboring wild-type (WT)-PTEN (LN18 and LN428). IR activated phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K), Akt, and mammalian target of rapamycin, and blockade of these kinases by specific inhibitors (LY294002, Akt inhibitor IV, and rapamycin, respectively) and transfection of dominant-negative (DN) mutants (DN-p85 and DN-Akt) or WT-PTEN suppressed the IR-induced MMP-2 secretion in U251 and U373 cells. In addition, inhibitors of epidermal growth factor receptor (
EGFR
; AG490 and AG1478), Src (PP2), and p38 (SB203580),
EGFR
neutralizing antibody, and transfection of DN-Src and DN-p38 significantly blocked IR-induced Akt phosphorylation and MMP-2 secretion. IR-induced activation of
EGFR
was suppressed by PP2, whereas LY294002 and SB203580 did not affect the activations of p38 and PI3K, respectively. Finally, these kinase inhibitors significantly reduced the IR-induced invasiveness of these cells on Matrigel. Taken together, our findings suggest that IR induces Src-dependent
EGFR
activation, which triggers the p38/Akt and PI3K/Akt signaling pathways, leading to increased MMP-2 expression and heightened invasiveness of PTEN mutant glioma cells.
...
PMID:Ionizing radiation enhances matrix metalloproteinase-2 secretion and invasion of glioma cells through Src/epidermal growth factor receptor-mediated p38/Akt and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/Akt signaling pathways. 1695 Nov 63
Glioblastoma
, the most malignant form of brain cancer, is responsible for 23% of primary brain tumors and has extremely poor outcome. Confounding the clinical management of glioblastomas is the extreme local invasiveness of these cancer cells. The mechanisms that govern invasion are poorly understood. To gain insight into glioblastoma invasion, we conducted experiments on the patterns of growth and dispersion of U87 glioblastoma tumor spheroids in a three-dimensional collagen gel. We studied two different cell lines, one with a mutation to the
EGFR
(U87DeltaEGFR) that is associated with increased malignancy, and one with an endogenous (wild-type) receptor (U87WT). We developed a continuum mathematical model of the dispersion behaviors with the aim of identifying and characterizing discrete cellular mechanisms underlying invasive cell motility. The mathematical model quantitatively reproduces the experimental data, and indicates that the U87WT invasive cells have a stronger directional motility bias away from the spheroid center as well as a faster rate of cell shedding compared to the U87DeltaEGFR cells. The model suggests that differences in tumor cell dispersion may be due to differences in the chemical factors produced by cells, differences in how the two cell lines remodel the gel, or different cell-cell adhesion characteristics.
...
PMID:A mathematical model of glioblastoma tumor spheroid invasion in a three-dimensional in vitro experiment. 1704 Sep 92
Glioblastoma
is the most frequent and most malignant human brain tumor. The prognosis remains very poor, with most patients dying within 1 year after diagnosis. Primary and secondary glioblastoma constitute distinct disease subtypes, affecting patients of different age and developing through different genetic pathways. The majority of cases (>90%) are primary glioblastomas that develop rapidly de novo, without clinical or histological evidence of a less malignant precursor lesion. They affect mainly the elderly and are genetically characterized by loss of heterozygosity 10q (70% of cases),
EGFR
amplification (36%), p16(INK4a) deletion (31%), and PTEN mutations (25%). Secondary glioblastomas develop through progression from low-grade diffuse astrocytoma or anaplastic astrocytoma and manifest in younger patients. In the pathway to secondary glioblastoma, TP53 mutations are the most frequent and earliest detectable genetic alteration, already present in 60% of precursor low-grade astrocytomas. The mutation pattern is characterized by frequent G:C-->A:T mutations at CpG sites. During progression to glioblastoma, additional mutations accumulate, including loss of heterozygosity 10q25-qter ( approximately 70%), which is the most frequent genetic alteration in both primary and secondary glioblastomas. Primary and secondary glioblastomas also differ significantly in their pattern of promoter methylation and in expression profiles at RNA and protein levels. This has significant implications, particularly for the development of novel, targeted therapies, as discussed in this review.
...
PMID:Genetic pathways to primary and secondary glioblastoma. 1745 51
Congenital central nervous system (CNS) tumors are uncommon, accounting for 1% of all childhood brain tumors. They present clinically either at birth or within the first 3 months.
Glioblastoma
(
GBM
) only rarely occurs congenitally and has not been fully characterized. We examined clinicopathologic features and genetic alterations of six congenital GBMs. Tumors were seen by neuroimaging as large, complex cerebral hemispheric masses. All showed classic
GBM
histopathology, including diffuse infiltration, dense cellularity, GFAP-positivity, high mitotic activity, endothelial proliferation and pseudopalisading necrosis. Neurosurgical procedures and adjuvant therapies varied. Survivals ranged from 4 days to 7.5 years; two of the three long-term survivors received chemotherapy, whereas the three short-term survivors did not. Paraffin-embedded tissue sections were used for FISH analysis of
EGFR
, chromosomes 9p21 (p16/CDKN2A) and 10q ( PTEN/DMBT1); sequencing of PTEN and TP53; and immunohistochemistry for
EGFR
and p53. We uncovered 10q deletions in two cases. No
EGFR
amplifications, 9p21 deletions, or mutations of TP53 or PTEN were noted; however, nuclear p53 immunoreactivity was strong in 5/6 cases. Tumors were either minimally immunoreactive (n = 3) or negative (n = 3) for
EGFR
. We conclude that congenital GBMs show highly variable survivals. They are genetically distinct from their adult counterparts and show a low frequency of known genetic alterations. Nonetheless, the strong nuclear expression of p53 in these and other pediatric GBMs could indicate that p53 dysregulation is important to tumorigenesis.
...
PMID:Congenital glioblastoma: a clinicopathologic and genetic analysis. 1746 90
Glioblastoma
is the most malignant and frequent of the glial tumors. A minor fraction of glioblastoma may contain areas showing oligodendroglioma-like tumor cell differentiation. Several authors have described such tumors as glioblastoma with oligodendroglial component (GBMO). GBMO may represent the ultimate level of malignancy in the oligodendroglial lineage. The oligodendroglial component and combined loss of chromosomal arm 1p and 19q in glioblastoma indicate increased survival. In our study, we analyzed 1p and 19q status in a series of 12 glioblastoma and 8 oligodendroglial tumors using fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) on paraffin-embedded tissues. In each case, hybridization status was classified as deletion, imbalance, polysomy, amplification, or normal pattern. Other genetic alterations such as CDKN2A (p16), RB, and
EGFR
were also assessed. On histological review, 2 of 12 glioblastoma (16.7%) were classified as GBMO. Chromosome 1p/19q deletion was detected in 3 of 12 glioblastomas (25%). In contrast, all 8 oligodendroglial tumors showed 1p/19q deletion. All GBMO had 19q deletion with imbalance, whereas 1 of 10 ordinary glioblastoma (10%) demonstrated 19q deletion with imbalance. All but 1 ordinary glioblastoma (90%) showed CDKN2A (p16) deletion, but no GBMO displayed this alteration. Our results indicate that GBMO may be a distinct subtype of glioblastoma harboring a characteristic molecular profile. FISH on paraffin-embedded specimens is a useful method for subclassification of glioblastoma.
...
PMID:FISH 1p/19q deletion/imbalance for molecular subclassification of glioblastoma. 1809 37
Glioblastoma
is a malignant astrocytic tumor with a median survival of about 12 months for which new therapeutic strategies are required. We therefore examined the cytotoxicity of anticancer drugs with different mechanisms of action on two human glioblastoma cell lines expressing various levels of
EGFR
(epidermal growth factor receptor). Apoptosis induced by these anticancer agents was evaluated by flow cytometry. The cytotoxicity of alkylating drugs followed a dose-effect curve and cytotoxicity index values were lower with carboplatin than with BCNU and temozolomide. Anti-
EGFR
gefitinib (10 microM) cytotoxicity on DBTRG.05-MG expressing high levels of
EGFR
was significantly higher than on U87-MG expressing low levels of
EGFR
. Carboplatin and temozolomide cytotoxicity was potentiated with the addition of gefitinib on DBTRG.05-MG. Among the anticancer agents tested, the proteasome inhibitor bortezomib was the most cytotoxic with very low IC50 on the two cell lines. Moreover, all anticancer drugs tested induced apoptosis in a concentration-dependent manner. Bortezomib proved to be a more potent inductor of apoptosis than gefitinib and alkylating agents. These results show the efficacy of bortezomib and of the association between conventional chemotherapy and gefitinib on glioblastoma cells and therefore suggest the interest of these molecules in the treatment of glioblastoma.
...
PMID:Cytotoxic and apoptotic effects of bortezomib and gefitinib compared to alkylating agents on human glioblastoma cells. 1877 Oct 84
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