Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.1.30.2 (
endonuclease
)
18,621
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The development of human cancer is generally thought to entail a series of events that cause a progressively more malignant phenotype. Such a hypothesis predicts that tumor cells of the ultimate stage will carry each of the events, cells of the penultimate stage will carry each of the events less the last one and so on. A dissection of the pathway from a normal cell to a fully malignant tumor may thus be viewed as the unraveling of a nested set of aberrations. In experiments designed to elucidate these events we have compared genotypic combinations at genomic loci defined by restriction
endonuclease
recognition site variation in normal and tumor tissues from patients with various forms and stages of cancer. The first step, inherited predisposition, is best described for retinoblastoma in which a recessive mutation of a locus residing in the 13q14 region of the genome is unmasked by aberrant, but specific, mitotic chromosomal segregation. Similar mechanisms involving the distal short arm of chromosome 17 are apparent in astrocytic tumors and the events are shared by cells in each malignancy state. DNA sequencing indicates that these events accomplish the homozygosis of mutant alleles of the p53 gene. Copy number amplification of the epidermal growth factor receptor gene occurs in intermediate and late-stage tumors whereas loss of heterozygosity for loci on chromosome 10 is restricted to the ultimate stage,
glioblastoma multiforme
. These results suggest a genetic approach to defining degrees of tumor progression and the locations of genes involved in the pathway as a prelude to their molecular isolation and characterization.
...
PMID:Molecular genetics of human cancer predisposition and progression. 201 Nov 37
The development of human cancer is generally thought to entail a series of events that cause a progressively more malignant phenotype. This hypothesis predicts that tumor cells of the ultimate stage will carry each of the events, cells of the penultimate stage will carry each of the events less the last one and so on. That is to say, a dissection of the pathway form a normal cell to a fully malignant tumor may be viewed as the unraveling of a nested set of aberrations. In experiments designed to elucidate these events, we have compared genotypic combinations at genomic loci defined by restriction
endonuclease
recognition site variation in normal and tumor tissues from patients with various forms and stages of cancer. The first step, inherited predisposition, is best described for retinoblastoma in which a recessive mutation of a locus residing in the 13q14 region of the genome is unmasked by aberrant, but specific, mitotic chromosomal segregation. A similar mechanism involving the distal short arm of chromosome 17 is apparent in astrocytic tumors and the event is shared by cells in each malignancy stage. This is distinct from a loss of heterozygosity for loci on chromosome 10 which is restricted to the ultimate stage,
glioblastoma multiforme
. Further, this approach has has been extended to a wide variety of human cancers and shown to be generally applicable. The results suggest a genetic approach to defining degrees of tumor progression and a means for determining the genomic locations of genes involved in the pathway as a prelude to their molecular isolation and characterization. They have provided a molecular genetic-based oncology with clinical utility in differential pathology, in disease groupings for therapeutic purposes and in prenatal identification of latent disease carriers.
...
PMID:Tumor progression stage: specific losses of heterozygosity. 248 36
The development of human cancer is generally thought to entail a series of events that cause a progressively more malignant phenotype. Such a hypothesis predicts that tumor cells of the ultimate stage will carry each of the events, cells of the penultimate stage will carry each of the events less the last one, and so on. That is to say a dissection of the pathway from a normal cell to a fully malignant tumor may be viewed as the unraveling of a nested set of aberrations. In experiments designed to elucidate these events, we have compared genotypic combinations at genomic loci defined by restriction
endonuclease
recognition site variation in normal and tumor tissues from patients with various forms and stages of cancer. The first step, inherited predisposition, is best described for retinoblastoma in which a recessive mutation of a locus residing in the 13q14 region of the genome is unmasked by aberrant, but specific, mitotic chromosomal segregation. A similar mechanism involving the distal short arm of chromosome 17 is apparent in astrocytic tumors and the event is shared by cells in each malignancy stage. This is distinct from a loss of heterozygosity for loci on chromosome 10 which is restricted to the ultimate stage,
glioblastoma multiforme
. These results suggest a genetic approach to defining degrees of tumor progression and means for determining the genomic locations of genes involved in the pathway as a prelude to their molecular isolation and characterization.
...
PMID:Mitotic abnormalities leading to cancer predisposition and progression. 255
Deoxyribonucleic acid of cells undergoing apoptosis is cleaved by a calcium-dependent
endonuclease
into oligonucleosomal-sized fragments. These fragments can be labeled using the enzyme terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase so that the cells can be visualized immunohistochemically. Few investigators have evaluated this method in disease processes of the human central nervous system. The Tdt-mediated dUTP-biotin nick end labeling (TUNEL) technique has been investigated in preliminary studies of a variety of pathologic conditions of the human brain (e.g., gliomas, traumatic brain injury, Parkinson's disease, Parkinson's-Alzheimer's complex, multisystem atrophy, striatonigral degeneration). We focus, however, on Huntington's disease (HD) because of the availability of well-characterized pathological stages for study, and also because of the neurodegenerative diseases studied to date, only Huntington's disease revealed significant and consistent labeling with this method. This implies a possibly unique nature to the mechanism of cell death in Huntington's disease compared to the other neurodegenerative diseases studied. TUNEL+ neurons were found in Grade 1-4 HD neostriatum, while labeled astrocytes were found predominantly in the Grade 1 and 2 cases studied to date. TUNEL+ cells were also found in
glioblastoma multiforme
and traumatic brain injury. We conclude that while there appear to be several limitations associated with this technique, it may be useful for identifying both apoptosis and necrosis in certain neuropathological conditions.
...
PMID:DNA end labeling (TUNEL) in Huntington's disease and other neuropathological conditions. 764 31
Glioblastoma multiforme
is the most common aggressive adult primary tumour of the central nervous system. Treatment includes surgery, radiotherapy and adjuvant temozolomide (TMZ) chemotherapy. TMZ is an alkylating agent prodrug, delivering a methyl group to purine bases of DNA (O6-guanine; N7-guanine and N3-adenine). The primary cytotoxic lesion, O6-methylguanine (O6-MeG) can be removed by methylguanine methyltransferase (MGMT; direct repair) in tumours expressing this protein, or tolerated in mismatch repair-deficient (MMR-) tumours. Thus MGMT or MMR deficiency confers resistance to TMZ. Inherent- and acquired resistance to TMZ present major obstacles to successful treatment. Strategies devised to thwart resistance and enhance response to TMZ, including inhibition of DNA repair mechanisms which contribute to TMZ resistance, are under clinical evaluation. Depletion of MGMT prior to alkylating agent chemotherapy prevents O6-MeG repair; thus, MGMT pseudosubstrates O6-benzylguanine and lomeguatrib are able to sensitise tumours to TMZ. Disruption of base excision repair (BER) results in persistence of potentially lethal N7- and N3- purine lesions contributing significantly to TMZ cytoxicity particularly when O6-MeG adducts are repaired or tolerated. Several small molecule inhibitors of poly(ADP-ribose)polymerase-1 (PARP-1), a critical BER protein are yielding promising results clinically, both in combination with TMZ and as single agent chemotherapy in patients whose tumours possess homologous recombination DNA repair defects. Another validated, but as yet preclinical protein target, mandatory to BER is abasic (AP)
endonuclease
-1 (APE-1); in preclinical tests, APE-1 inhibition potentiates TMZ activity. An alternative strategy is synthesis of a molecule, evoking an irrepairable cytotoxic O6-G lesion. Preliminary efforts to achieve this goal are described.
...
PMID:Temozolomide: mechanisms of action, repair and resistance. 2212 67