Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.7.7.49 (reverse transcriptase)
31,746 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The "virogene-oncogene" hypothesis of Huebner and Todaro and the "provirus" hypothesis of Temin implicate RNA tumor viruses in the neoplastic transformation of mammalian cells. These hypotheses have been substantiated in several animal systems including primates and, presumably, in man. Because the detection in a tissue of one or two activities allegedly related to RNA tumor virus may not be conclusive evidence for viral presence, we have developed a scheme of coordinated morphologic, biologic, and biochemical investigations of human prostatic tissues. We report here the more recent progress we have made in one of the segments of our scheme of investigations. Two, possibly three, DNA polymerase activities from human prostatic tissue have been isolated and partially purified by DEAE-cellulose and phosphocellulose chromatography. These activities have been partially characterized. Based on template preferences and non-inhibition by selective inhibitors of reverse transcriptase, neither of the major polymerase activities appears to be the reverse transcriptase-type activity.
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PMID:The search for "virogene" in human prostatic tissues: prostatic DNA polymerases. 4 15

Glioblastoma multiforme, representing about 50% of all gliomas, encompasses a group of intrinsic tumours of the brain in later years (age peak around 50 years), the morphological hallmarks of which are an ensemble of variations in tumour cell and tissue structure featuring its biological malignancy. Glioblastoma, while sometimes appearing as a distinct "primary" tumour type, is usually accepted as an extreme manifestation of anaplasia and dedifferentiation of glia, mostly astrocytic. The astrocytic nature of most glioblastomas has been confirmed by ultrastructural studies and progressive differentiation of tumours maintained in organotypic tissue culture. Reproducible experimental models are particularly induced by oncogenic RNA (oncorna) viruses. The cell kinetic parameters are similar to those of other solid malignant tumours except for a comparatively low growth fraction of glioblastoma. The frequent occurrence of giant cells as well as of regressive changes with necrosis and vascular responses are indirect (secondary) indicators of malignancy which coincide with histochemical (enzymatic anisochronia) and biochemical data (lower level of glia specific S100 protein than in differentiated gliomas). Vascular proliferation, a characteristic feature of glioblastoma, may occasionally progress to sarcomatous transformation with development of gliosarcomas (mixed glial-mesenchymal tumours). While dissemination of glioblastoma through the cerebrospinal pathways is not uncommon, extraneural distant metastatic spread is rare, and usually observed after craniotomy. The results of modern neuro-oncology support the pathogenetic view that glioblastoma results from neoplastic transformation of glial elements with continuing dedifferentiation. This transformation can be experimentally induced by various factors including oncogenic DNA (oncorna) viruses by using a reverse transcriptase, while there is indirect evidence for an oncorna-virus information in human glioblastoma. The significance of immunological factors in the pathogenesis of brain tumours and in the course of neoplastic transformation of glia is not yet understood, but both morphological and immunological data are in favour of a cell mediated immunological reaction against tumour-specific antibodies. Since immunological factors and changes in cytokinetics are apparently active after the transformed tumour cells proliferate, all available therapeutic methods, including radiation, chemotherapy, and immunotherapy of glioblastoma only influence the final stages of neoplastic development with clinical manifestation of the tumour. In spite of modern combination and multimodality therapy schemes the prognosis of glioblastoma is still poor.
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PMID:Glioblastoma multiforme: morphology and biology. 21 8

In rats, gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (gamma GT) exists as a single-copy gene, and three distinct species of RNA (types I, II, and III) that differ in their 5' untranslated regions have been identified. To compare steady-state levels of these gamma GT RNAs in rat tissues, hepatic carcinomas, and cultured cells, we used RNA dot-blot hybridization and a reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) technique with oligonucleotides specifically designed for each type of RNA. Fetal liver, hepatic carcinomas, rasT24-transformed rat liver epithelial (RLE) cells and pancreas make only type III RNA. Liver and untransformed RLE cells do not make detectable levels of gamma GT RNA. We found that both fetal and adult kidneys synthesize all three types of RNA, indicating that increases in gamma GT RNA known to occur after birth do not result from recruitment of additional RNA species. When we increased the sensitivity of the assay approximately 1000 fold by sequencing the RT-PCR product directly after an additional round of amplification, we found that very low levels of types I and II RNA were present in fetal liver, rasT24-transformed RLE cells, and pancreas, and that adult liver and untransformed RLE cells synthesized very low levels of all three RNA species. Rat-1 fibroblasts did not make levels of gamma GT RNA detectable by this method. These results demonstrate that different gamma GT RNA species are regulated differently during development and neoplastic transformation and that there is a commitment in some cell types to very-low-level expression of gamma GT RNAs.
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PMID:The same gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase RNA species is expressed in fetal liver, hepatic carcinomas, and rasT24-transformed rat liver epithelial cells. 134 50

Human papillomaviruses (HPV) are associated with papillomatosis of the larynx, trachea, and bronchi in decreasing order of frequency, and these papillomatosis lesions may become malignant. When the patients are not selected for a history of papillomatosis, the frequency of HPV in bronchogenic carcinoma tissue is 1-5%. In order to develop a model for investigating the role of HPV in human bronchogenic carcinogenesis, normal human bronchial epithelial cells were transfected with cloned full-length HPV16 or HPV18. Two HPV18-transformed cell lines (BEP1 and BEP2) and one HPV16-transformed cell line (BEP3) were established. These nontumorigenic epithelial cell lines have: (a) attained over 100 population doublings in vitro; (b) mutually exclusive human marker chromosomes; (c) HPV DNA in forms that are consistent with chromosomal integration by Southern analysis; (d) HPV E6, E7, and E6* mRNA transcripts by Northern and reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction analysis; and (e) diminished confluence-induced squamous differentiation. These cell lines should be useful for studying mechanisms involved in proliferation, differentiation, and neoplastic transformation of human bronchial epithelial cells.
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PMID:Immortalization of normal human bronchial epithelial cells by human papillomaviruses 16 or 18. 171 49

Newborn sheep inoculated with phytohemagglutinin (PHA)-treated short-term, cultures of lymphocytes from cattle infected with bovine leukemia virus (BLV) or with a BLV- infected long-term culture of bovine leukemic lymphocytes became persistently infected with BLV. Fifty percent or more of the sheep died with histologically confirmed lymphosarcomas. Cytogenetic studies of representative cases demonstrated that the tumors did not result from the progressive growth of neoplastic lymphocytes in the inoculum but rather from the neoplastic transformation of the recipients lymphoid cells. Neither BLV infection nor lymphosarcoma was observed in control uninoculated sheep or in sheep given injections of PHA-treated cultures of lymphocytes from BLV-free cows. The virus recovered from the tumorous sheep was indistinguishable from BLV morphologically, antigenically, and biologically, and its reverse transcriptase had the same cation preference and immunologic properties as the BLV enzyme. Persistent BLV infection and lymphosarcoma were also observed in a group of sheep inoculated neonatally with BLV-containing cell-free culture supernatants. These results extend previous observations on the high susceptibility of sheep to BLV infection and provide definitive evidence that BLV is a tumor-inducing virus.
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PMID:Induction of lymphosarcoma in sheep by bovine leukemia virus. 617 Jul 71

Neoplastic transformation of fetal lamb kidney (FLK) cells by bovine leukemia virus (BLV) is reported. Morphological transformation was observed in FLK cells within a few weeks of BLV inoculation. BLV-transformed FLK cells had the following properties generally associated with viral transformation: (1) altered morphology; (2) increased growth rate; (3) colony formation in soft agar medium; (4) formation of large cell aggregates and growth in this aggregate form above an agar base; and (5) tumorigenicity in nude mice. The transformed cells contained BLV-specific p24 and gp51 antigens and were virus producers. BLV was detected in transformed cells by syncytial assay. The transformed cells yielded high-titered viral reverse transcriptase activity and viral particles. The transformed cells contained marker chromosomes (M1, M2, M3, M4 and M7) and a large submetacentric chromosome, but control cells did not. Thus, we demonstrated the neoplastic transformation of FLK cells by BLV.
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PMID:Neoplastic transformation of fetal lamb kidney cells by bovine leukemia virus. 630 52

The precise cellular origin and the pathogenetic mechanism(s) leading to the neoplastic transformation of anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL) and the Reed-Sternberg cell of Hodgkin's disease (HD) remains largely uncertain. Classical cytogenetic analysis has shown a unique translocation involving bands 2p23 and 5q35 bands in a variable number of ALCLs. It has been recently shown that the nucleophosmin/B23 (NPM) gene (5q35) and a novel anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK; 2p23) are the fused genes of t(2;5). To investigate the presence and the precise frequency of NPM-ALK gene products among ALCL and HD cases, a large and well-characterized panel of ALCL (n = 49) and HD (n = 72) cases was studied using multiple strategies including reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), Southern blot analysis, and immunohistochemistry. Overall, 6 (3 T and 3 null) of 49 ALCL and 3 (2 nodular sclerosis and 1 mixed cellularity) of 72 HD showed the presence of NPM-ALK transcripts by RT-PCR. NPM-ALK gene rearrangements were detected in all RT-PCR, NPM-ALK-positive ALCL by Southern blot analysis. Furthermore, in all the available cases we were able to show the presence of ALK-related protein using a specific polyclonal antiserum recognizing the cytoplasmic domain of ALK by immunohistochemistry. Our data show that NPM-ALK gene transcripts are identified in a subpopulation of ALCL, almost exclusively in T or null cell in origin, and in rare cases of HD. These findings show that some HD may be closely related to ALCL, giving us new insights on the pathogenesis and possibly biologic evolution of HD.
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PMID:Molecular characterization of the t(2;5) (p23; q35) translocation in anaplastic large cell lymphoma (Ki-1) and Hodgkin's disease. 856 33

Damselfish neurofibromatosis (DNF) is a naturally occurring, neoplastic disease affecting bicolor damselfish (Pomacentrus partitus) living on coral reefs in southern Florida, USA. The disease consists of multiple neurofibromas, neurofibrosarcomas and chromatophoromas and has been proposed as an animal model for neurofibromatosis type 1 in humans. DNF is transmissible by injection of crude tumour homogenates, cell-free filtrates of homogenates or cells from tumour cell lines. An analysis of tumorigenic cell lines derived from fish with spontaneous or experimentally induced DNF revealed virus particles budding from cells and present in conditioned media. The 90-110 nm particles resembled type C retroviruses. This virus exhibited a buoyant density of 1.14-1.17 g/cm2 in sucrose, at least six virus proteins of 15 to 80 kDa and reverse transcriptase (RT) activity. RT activity was maximized with a poly(rC).oligo(dG) template.primer combination and Mn2+ at a concentration of 0.5-1.0 mM. The optimum temperature for RT was determined to be 20 degrees C, a finding consistent with the ambient temperatures encountered by this species. This retrovirus, tentatively named damselfish neurofibromatosis virus (DNFV) may be the aetiological agent of DNF. Whether DNFV or another, as yet unidentified, virus is the cause of DNF, this agent may be unique in virus oncogenesis; neoplastic transformation of the cell types involved in DNF, Schwann cells and chromatophores, has not been documented in any other transmissible tumour.
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PMID:A retrovirus isolated from cell lines derived from neurofibromas in bicolor damselfish (Pomacentrus partitus). 868 5

The story of tumor immunology includes periods of hope followed by ones of disenchantment as far as clinical applications are concerned. In antiquity, cancer was considered "contrary to Nature", a concept which was confirmed by Ehrlich at the beginning of our century when the layed down the foundations of immunology. The latter was defined as the defence against all "non-self" intruders, including cancer, as opposed to the protection of "self". This concept was further accentuated by the theory immune surveillance proposed by Burnet in 1969 which implicated a destruction of nascent neoplastic cells by T lymphocytes. To increase host defence was the basis of tumor immunotherapy with BCG, levamisol and other adjuvants. The appearance of the nude mouse, athymic, and yet free of spontaneous tumors, led to a new paradigm, the network theory proposed by Jerne. This was based on immunological homeostasis implicating that both "self" and "non-self" can be rejected and tolerated. Cancer gradually ceased to be considered as "contrary to Nature". As for the proposed viral etiology of cancer which was the basis of the National Cancer Act signed by Nixon in 1971, this led to various breakthroughs and Nobel Prizes (Table 1), to discoveries such as reverse transcriptase, cellular oncogenes, tumor suppressor genes, which gave a new explanation for neoplastic transformation. The latter can now be considered as the consequence of a cascade of molecular events which include oncogene expression, anti-oncogene deletion, etc... converting, step by step, for instance, a polyp into a colon cancer and its metastases. The availability of monoclonal antibodies capable of attacking tumor cells did not lead to the expected success because of the complexity of the immune system. Attempts at a better understanding of the latter have led to a subdivision of the T lymphocyte CD4 population into Th1 and Th2. Th1 favor rejection (tumoral, fetal or of transplants) through the elaboration of IL-2, IFN and TNF while Th2 led to tolerance or acceptation through the production of IL-4, IL-5 and IL-10: both functions neutralize each other establishing a "normal" equilibrium Th1 vs Th2. This could explain the state of "tumor dormancy" or tumors in situ which are apparently quite frequent. That any immunological stimulation would cause these dormant tumors to proliferate is the basis of the immunostimulation theory proposed by Prehn and supported by the clinical observations of Stewart. This new concept has led some authors to propose that instead of destroying the tumor cells an attempt be made to maintain them in a state of dormancy in congenial company with normal cells.
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PMID:[A retrospective view of tumor immunology]. 922 70

Neurotrophins are known to influence Schwann cells during development and to promote peripheral nerve regeneration after axonal damage. In neoplastic conditions. Schwann cells from experimentally-induced schwannomas appear to retain their responsiveness to nerve growth factor (NGF), although the role of neurotrophins in the neoplastic process in poorly understood. In this study, human neoplastic Schwann cells (five cases of acoustic schwannoma and two cases of malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumours [MPNST]) were investigated for the expression in situ of molecules of the neurotrophin system. In particular, we studied the 75 kDa low-affinity receptor (p75) and the mRNA for its ligands, NGF and neurotrophin-3 (NT-3). By immunohistochemistry, the p75 receptor was found to be the present at high levels in Schwann cells from acoustic schwannomas, whereas it was very weak or absent in MPNST. Messenger RNA for NGF and NT-3 was detected by reverse transcriptase in situ polymerase chain reaction technique and showed the same fluctuation of p75, being up-regulated in acoustic schwannomas and very weak or absent in MPNST. In normal non-neoplastic tissue, no detectable amounts of either ligand or receptor were observed. Our results indicate that changes in the expression of neurotrophins and their p75 receptor occurred during the neoplastic transformation of Schwann cells. In benign schwannomas, such changes are likely to reflect the loss of axonal contact, while in MPNST they may be related to a complete derangement of cell machinery in the tumour cells.
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PMID:Human neoplastic Schwann cells: changes in the expression of neurotrophins and their low-affinity receptor p75. 936 63


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