Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.24.3 (collagenase)
18,340 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The human colon adenocarcinoma cell line WiDr was xenografted and the tumor characterized. When athymic mice (NCR-nu) were inoculated with 10(6) cells, tumors appeared after 7-14 days with a 93-100% take rate and grew with an initial volume-doubling time of around 6 days. For optimizing the tumor disaggregation method, a comparison was made of two dissociation procedures and of different dissociation times. An enzyme cocktail (collagenase, DNase, pronase) resulted in total viable cell yields of 1-3 X 10(7) cells/g tumor tissue. Cell yield decreased with increasing tumor weight. Disaggregation with trypsin gave lower cell yields; and so, although the plating efficiencies (PEs) were higher, the enzyme cocktail was chosen for tumor disaggregation. On the basis of morphologic identification, cell suspensions prepared from WiDr tumors, by use of the enzyme cocktail for 2 hours, contained 49% malignant cells as well as a significant fraction of nonneoplastic cells. The major nonneoplastic host cell component was macrophage (33%); lymphocytes (13%) and granulocytes (5%) also were present. Host cells could be separated from neoplastic cells by centrifugal elutriation. By mixing various proportions of host and tumor cells, it was subsequently shown that the presence of host cells did not influence the malignant cell PE unless the cell suspensions contained greater than 90% host cells. Single-cell suspensions prepared from WiDr tumors, with use of the enzyme cocktail for 2 hours, were irradiated and then plated for survival (D0 = 1.5 Gy; n = 5) (D0, the 37% dose slope). A comparison was made of the sensitivity to radiation, after the different dissociation methods. The radiation sensitivities after 1.5-hour trypsinization and 2- and 6-hour enzyme cocktail administrations were similar, but after 0.5 hour of trypsin, the cells were more sensitive to radiation.
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PMID:A human colon adenocarcinoma xenograft--radiation response, cellular composition, and tumor disaggregation. 346 98

Clinically significant elevations in the expression of manganese superoxide dismutase (Sod2) are associated with an increased frequency of tumor invasion and metastasis in certain cancers. The aim of this study was to examine whether increases in Sod2 activity modulate the migratory potential of tumor cells, contributing to their enhanced metastatic behavior. Overexpression of Sod2 in HT-1080 fibrosarcoma cells significantly enhanced their migration 2-fold in a wound healing assay and their invasive potential 3-fold in a transwell invasion assay. Severity of invasion was directly correlated to Sod2 expression levels and this invasive phenotype was similarly observed in 253J bladder tumor cells, in which Sod expression resulted in a 3-fold increase in invasion compared with controls. Further, migration and invasion of the Sod2-expressing cells was inhibited following overexpression of catalase, indicating that the promigratory/invasive phenotype of Sod2-expressing cells is H(2)O(2) dependent. Sod2 overexpression was associated with a loss of vinculin-positive focal adhesions that were recovered in cells coexpressing catalase. Tail vein injections of Sod2-GFP-expressing HT-1080 cells in NCR nude mice led to the development of pulmonary metastatic nodules displaying high Sod2-GFP expression. Isolated tumors were shown to retain high Sod2 activity in culture and elevated levels of the matrix degrading protein matrix metalloproteinase-1, and a promigratory phenotype was observed in a population of cells growing out from the tumor nodule. These findings suggest that the association between increased Sod2 activity and poor prognosis in cancer can be attributed to alterations in their migratory and invasive capacity.
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PMID:Manganese superoxide dismutase enhances the invasive and migratory activity of tumor cells. 1797 67