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Query: UMLS:C0017636 (
glioblastoma
)
18,345
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Antitumor and radiosensitizing effects of (E)-2'-deoxy-2'-(fluoromethylene) cytidine (FMdC), a novel inhibitor of ribonucleotide reductase, were evaluated on nude mice bearing s.c. human C33-A
cervix cancer
and U-87 MG
glioblastoma
xenografts. FMdC given once daily has a dose-dependent antitumor effect. The maximum tolerated dose in the mice was reached with 10 daily i.p. administrations of 10 mg/kg over 12 days. In the case of radiotherapy (RT) alone (10 fractions over 12 days), the radiation dose required to produce local tumor control in 50% of the treated C33-A xenografts was 51.0 Gy. When combined with FMdC, the radiation dose required to produce local tumor control was reduced to 41.4 and 38.2 Gy, at respective doses of 5 and 10 mg/kg given i.p. 1 h before each irradiation. The corresponding enhancement ratios (ERs) were 1.2 and 1.3, respectively. In U-87 MG xenografts, when 5-20 mg/kg FMdC combined with 30 or 40 Gy of RT, the combination treatment produced a significantly increased growth delay as compared with RT alone (P < or =0.002). The ERs of 5, 10, and 20 mg/kg FMdC at a dose of 30 Gy were 2.0, 1.4, and 1.8, respectively. At the 40-Gy level, ERs of 10 and 20 mg/kg FMdC were 1.4 and 1.7. When FMdC was combined with 50 Gy of RT, an increased long-term remission rate of 80-88.9% was observed, as compared with 25% for RT alone (P <0.05). FMdC produced moderate myelosuppression in the mice bearing
cervix cancer
, whereas leukocytosis occurred in the mice bearing
glioblastoma
at a low dose. Slightly increased skin toxicity (only with U-87 MG tumor) was observed, as compared with RT alone. In conclusion, FMdC is a potent cytotoxic agent and able to modify the radiation response of C33-A and U-87 MG xenografts.
...
PMID:(E)-2'-deoxy-2'-(fluoromethylene) cytidine potentiates radioresponse of two human solid tumor xenografts. 985 73
Secreted glycoprotein WNTs play important roles in carcinogenesis and development. We have previously reported molecular cloning of WNT-2B/WNT-13. Here, we have isolated a novel WNT-2B isoform (WNT-2B2), in addition to the original WNT-2B isoform (WNT-2B1). WNT-2B1 and WNT-2B2 are completely different in the 5'-UTR and in the N-terminal part of the coding region. The N-terminal hydrophobic domain is contained in WNT-2B1, but not in WNT-2B2. WNT-2B1 and WNT-2B2 share the WNT-core domain, and show 87.0% amino-acid identity. We have determined the structure of the WNT-2B gene. The WNT-2B1 mRNA consists of exons 1, 2, and 4-7, while the WNT-2B2 mRNA consists of exons 3-7. WNT-2B2 was expressed in fetal brain, fetal lung, fetal kidney, caudate nucleus, testis,
glioblastoma
cell lines A172, SW1783, gastric cancer cell lines MKN28, MKN74, and
cervical cancer
cell line HeLa S3. WNT-2B1 expression level was relatively higher in fetal brain and fetal lung than in other tissues or cell lines expressing WNT-2B2. These results indicate that the WNT-2B1 and WNT-2B2 mRNAs are transcribed due to alternative splicing with distinct expression profile. This is the first report on the WNT isoforms derived from the same gene due to alternative splicing.
...
PMID:Alternative splicing of the WNT-2B/WNT-13 gene. 1094 66
Urotensin II is the most potent vasoconstrictor peptide identified so far. Expression of urotensin II and urotensin II receptor mRNAs was studied in various human tumor cell lines by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (PCR) method. Secretion of urotensin II by these tumor cells was studied by radioimmunoassay. The tumor cell lines studied were T98G
glioblastoma
cells, IMR-32 neuroblastoma cells, NB69 neuroblastoma cells, BeWo choriocarcinoma cells, SW-13 adrenocortical carcinoma cells, DLD-1 colorectal adenocarcinoma cells and HeLa
cervical cancer
cells. Urotensin II mRNA was expressed in 6 tumor cell lines except for NB69 neuroblastoma cells. Urotensin II receptor mRNA was expressed in all 7 tumor cell lines. A significant amount of urotensin II-like immunoreactivity was detected only in the culture medium of SW-13 adrenocortical carcinoma cells by radioimmunoassay. Sephadex G-50 column chromatography showed that the urotensin II-like immunoreactivity in the culture medium extract was eluted earlier than synthetic human urotensin II, suggesting that SW-13 cells secreted higher molecular weight materials, perhaps partially processed forms of the urotensin II precursor. Reverse phase high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) showed three immunoreactive peaks, one of which was eluted in the position of urotensin II. The present study has shown for the first time expression of urotensin II and urotensin II receptor mRNAs in various tumor cell lines and the secretion of urotensin II-like immunoreactivity by SW-13 adrenocortical carcinoma cells.
...
PMID:Expression of urotensin II and urotensin II receptor mRNAs in various human tumor cell lines and secretion of urotensin II-like immunoreactivity by SW-13 adrenocortical carcinoma cells. 1144 48
WNT signaling pathway is implicated in embryogenesis as well as in carcinogenesis. We have previously cloned and characterized Frizzled-1 (FZD1), FZD2, FZD3, FZD4, FZD5, FZD6, FZD7, FZD8, and FZD10, encoding seven-transmembrane-type WNT receptors. Here, expression of FZD10 mRNA in various types of human cancer and effects of FZD10 mRNA microinjection into Xenopus early embryos were investigated. Northern blot analyses revealed relatively high-level expression of 4.0-kb FZD10 mRNA in
cervical cancer
cell lines HeLa S3, SKG-I, SKG-IIIa, and in a
glioblastoma
cell line A-172. Matched tumor/normal expression array analysis revealed significant up-regulation of FZD10 mRNA in 2 cases of primary colon cancer. Function of FZD10 was next investigated by using Xenopus axis duplication assay, in which positive regulators of the WNT - beta-catenin - TCF signaling pathway induce axis duplication. Injection of wild-type FZD10 mRNA into the ventral marginal zone of 4-cell-stage Xenopus embryos induced partial axis duplication in 40% of embryos. Ventral injection of Thr579Ala FZD10 mRNA or Val581Leu FZD10 mRNA with mutations in the C-terminal Ser/Thr-X-Val motif also induced partial axis duplication in about 40% of embryos. Furthermore, ventral injection of FZD10 mRNA significantly augmented the potential of co-injected Xenopus wnt-8 (Xwnt-8) mRNA to induce complete axis duplication. These results suggest that up-regulation of FZD10 mRNA in several types of human cells might lead to carcinogenesis through activation of the beta-catenin - TCF signaling pathway synergistically with some class of WNTs.
...
PMID:Frizzled-10, up-regulated in primary colorectal cancer, is a positive regulator of the WNT - beta-catenin - TCF signaling pathway. 1178 18
The coxsackie adenovirus receptor (CAR) has become of interest for gene therapy due to its crucial function in adenoviral cell entry. In clinical trials with adenoviral vectors, dexamethasone is applied to reduce side effects such as inflammatory reactions or emesis. By using a beta-galactosidase-expressing adenovirus (AdGal), we observed that dexamethasone treatment resulted in decreased adenoviral gene transfer into human cancer cells. Expression of CAR and integrin alpha5beta1 was transcriptionally downregulated by dexamethasone as shown for HeLa
cervical cancer
cells and U87MG
glioblastoma
cells. TNFalpha increased CAR expression in HeLa and ovarian cancer cells but decreased CAR expression in U87MG cells. In all tested cancer cell lines, TNFalpha induced a significant increase in the expression of adenovirus-binding integrins alpha5beta1, alphavbeta3 and alphavbeta5. Pretreatment with TNFalpha increased AdGal gene transfer into cancer cells and enhanced the cytotoxic effect of a p53-expressing adenovirus. In contrast, TGFbeta reduced CAR expression level and adenoviral gene transfer into OV-UL-2 ovarian cancer cells. Confocal immunofluorescence analysis revealed localization of CAR at cell-cell adhesions in several human cancer cell lines and disruption of cell-cell contacts increased adenoviral gene transfer into human cancer cells. In clinical cancer gene therapy, efficiency of adenoviral gene delivery could be altered by cell adhesion, TNFalpha, TGFbeta, and dexamethasone.
...
PMID:CAR is a cell-cell adhesion protein in human cancer cells and is expressionally modulated by dexamethasone, TNFalpha, and TGFbeta. 1257 26
Efaproxiral [RSR 13, GSJ 61, JP 4, KDD 86, RS 4] is a synthetic, small-molecule, radiation-sensitising agent being developed by Allos Therapeutics primarily for the treatment of cancer. It works by binding and allosterically stabilising deoxyhaemoglobin in hypoxic regions of tumour tissue. This increases oxygen uptake of the tumour tissue and restores its sensitivity to radiation therapy, making therapy potentially more successful. This first-of-its-class compound is particularly applicable for the treatment of certain tumour types that lack oxygen, such as brain metastases. In contrast to conventional chemotherapeutic agents or radiation sensitisers, there is no requirement for efaproxiral to be administered directly into tumours or to cross the blood-brain barrier for it to display efficacy. Efaproxiral is under review for approval in the US and EU as an adjunct to whole-brain radiation therapy (WBRT) for the treatment of brain metastases originating from breast cancer. It is also under clinical evaluation for a variety of other cancers, including
glioblastoma
, non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and
cervical cancer
. Allos is seeking partnership opportunities for efaproxiral's development and marketing. The company has indicated that the development of efaproxiral would be in cooperation with a corporate partner, according to its 2003 Annual Report. In 1994, Allos Therapeutics acquired exclusive worldwide rights to intellectual property relating to efaproxiral from the Center for Innovative Technology (CIT). Allos has entered into arrangements with two contract manufacturers for the supply of efaproxiral, and a third manufacturer for the supply of the formulated drug product. Hovione FarmaCiencia is the primary supplier of efaproxiral, and is contracted to manufacture sufficient quantities on a commercial scale. In addition, a second manufacturer, Raylo Chemicals, is also producing quantities of efaproxiral. In December 2003, Allos entered into a long-term development and supply agreement with Baxter Healthcare who will formulate the efaproxiral into an injection. Allos is also seeking to establish an alternate supplier of efaproxiral injection. Allos submitted a rolling NDA to the US FDA consisting of three data components. Submission began in the third quarter of 2003 and was completed by the fourth quarter of 2003. The first part of the application containing non-clinical information was submitted on 5 August 2003. The second part of the NDA containing information about efaproxiral's chemistry, manufacture and controls (CMC) was submitted in October 2003. Allos submitted its final component of the rolling NDA in December 2003. In February 2004, Allos announced that the FDA had accepted the company's NDA under priority review status. The FDA granted efaproxiral orphan drug status in August 2004 as an adjunct to WBRT for the treatment of brain metastases among breast cancer patients. Efaproxiral also received fast-track status in November 2000 for the same indication in the US. In February 2004, Allos initiated a phase III trial, called ENRICH (Enhancing Whole Brain Radiation Therapy In Patients with Breast Cancer and Hypoxic Brain Metastases) to investigate efaproxiral as an adjunct to WBRT for the treatment of brain metastases. Median survival time is the primary endpoint of the study. The National Breast Cancer Coalition (NBCC) is collaborating with the company to support trial enrolment and to gain additional insight about ways to improve radiation treatment in this patient population. The ENRICH trial protocol was approved by the FDA under a Special Protocol Assessment process; as part of the protocol, two interim analyses for safety and efficacy will be performed.This multicentre, randomised, open-label study has a target enrolment of approximately 360 patients at >100 medical centres across the US, Canada, Europe and South America. Allos announced in September 2004 that recruitment of clinical sites for the trial is ongoing across the US and Canada. Completion of trial enrolment in North America is anticipated in December 2005. Subsequently, Allos announced in January 2005 that recruitment into the ENRICH trial has commenced and is ongoing in Europe; enrolment at European sites is expected to conclude by the third quarter of 2006. Allos Therapeutics announced in June 2004 that it had filed an MAA with the EMEA for marketing of exaproxiral as an adjunct to WBRT for treatment of patients with brain metastases originating from breast cancer. The application is based on positive data from a pivotal phase III (REACH, RT-009) trial in this indication. The completed REACH trial investigated efaproxiral among patients with brain metastases undergoing WBRT. The trial was conducted at multiple sites in 11 countries, including the US, Canada, Europe and Australia. In August 2002 Allos completed the enrolment of 538 patients in the study. Initially only 408 patients were to be enrolled, but the company increased the size of the trial to conduct an appropriately powered subgroup analysis in patients with brain metastases from breast and NSCLC. The study was designed to demonstrate a 35% increase in median survival in the subgroup of patients compared with standard WBRT alone. The primary endpoint was survival. Allos began screening US patients for a phase III trial in NSCLC in early 2003. However, in May 2003, the company announced that as part of its revised operating plan it had suspended the screening of patients for this trial. The trial, which was known as ELITE (Enhanced Lung cancer treatment with Induction chemotherapy and Thoracic radiation and Efaproxiral), was comparing induction chemotherapy followed by thoracic radiation therapy with supplemental oxygen, with or without efaproxiral. The trial was enrolling patients with locally advanced, unresectable NSCLC. ELITE was planned to enrol up to 600 patients across North America and Western and Eastern Europe. Phase II trials in patients with inoperable NSCLC have been conducted in the US and Canada. Patient enrolment in one of these studies was completed in August 2000, with a total of 52 patients enrolled. This was an open-label, multicentre study of induction therapy with paclitaxel plus carboplatin followed by chest irradiation and efaproxiral in patients with locally advanced NSCLC. Positive results from this study were reported at the annual meeting of the European Society for Therapeutics Radiology and Oncology in September 2002. Efaproxiral has completed phase I trials as a treatment of surgical hypoxia in elective surgery patients receiving general anaesthesia. However, no recent development has been reported for these indications. In 1994, Allos signed an agreement with CIT for the exclusive worldwide rights to 17 US patents, a European patent covering the UK, France, Italy and Germany plus two pending patents in these territories, two issued patents in Japan, and a pending patent in Canada. These patents cover methods of allosterically modifying haemoglobin with efaproxiral and other compounds, the binding site of efaproxiral and therapy in certain indications including cancer, ischaemia and hypoxia. In addition to the licensed patents from CIT, Allos exclusively owns two patent families with pending applications directed to a formulation of efaproxiral and to methods of its use in BLOD MRI (blood oxygenation level-dependent magnetic resonance imaging) applications. These patents are pending in the US, Canada and Europe, and include an international patent application. In a May 2002 interview with the Wall Street Transcript, the CEO of Allos estimated the overall market for radiation therapy to be approximately 750 000 patients/year. Of this, brain metastases, NSCLC and
glioblastoma
therapy accounts for about 170 000, 140 000 and 6000 patients, respectively. Allos intend to use a speciality sales force to market efaproxiral directly to radiation therapists in North America. To penetrate the non-oncology market in the US, the company will seek partnership with one or more pharmaceutical companies with direct sales forces and with established distribution systems. Allos is also hoping to secure an oncology marketing partner for non-North American territories. At the time, the company had been issued 21 patents in the US, Canada, Europe and Japan.
...
PMID:Efaproxiral: GSJ 61, JP 4, KDD 86, RS 4, RSR 13. 1586 22
In this paper, we will outline the current understanding of cell cycle modulation and induction of apoptosis in cancer cells by natural and synthetic bile acid. Bile acid homeostasis is tightly regulated in health, and their cellular and tissue concentrations are restricted. However, when pathophysiological processes impair their biliary secretion, hepatocytes are exposed to elevated concentrations of bile acids which trigger cell death. In this context, we developed several newly synthesized bile acid derivatives. These synthetic bile acids modulated the cell cycle and induced apoptosis in several human cancer cells similar to natural bile acids. In human breast and prostate cancer cells with different tumor suppressor p53 status, synthetic bile acid-induced growth inhibition and apoptosis were associated with up-regulation of Bax and p21(WAF1/CIP1) via a p53-independent pathway. In Jurkat human T cell leukemia cells, the synthetic bile acids induced apoptosis through caspase activation. In addition to this, the synthetic bile acids induced apoptosis in a JNK dependent manner in SiHa human
cervical cancer
cells, via induction of Bax and activation of caspases in PC3 prostate cancer cells and induction of G1 phase arrest in the cell cycle in HT29 colon cancer cells. Moreover, they induced apoptosis in four human
glioblastoma
multiform cell lines (i.e., U-118MG, U-87MG, T98G, and U-373MG) and one human TE671 medulloblastoma cells. In addition to this, a chenodeoxycholic acid derivative, called HS-1200, significantly decreased the growth of TE671 medulloblastoma tumor size and increased life span in non-obese diabetic and severe combined immunodeficient (NOD/SCID) mice. Therefore, these new synthetic bile acids, which are novel apoptosis mediators, might be applicable to the treatment of various human cancer cells.
...
PMID:Modulation of the cell cycle and induction of apoptosis in human cancer cells by synthetic bile acids. 1716 73
Glioblastoma multiforme is the most aggressive form of human brain tumor, which has no effective cure. Previously, we have demonstrated that overexpression of the C-terminal fragment of the human telomerase reverse transcriptase (hTERTC27) inhibits the growth and tumorigenicity of human
cervical cancer
HeLa cells. In this study, the therapeutic effect and molecular mechanisms of hTERTC27-mediated cancer gene therapy were further explored in vivo in established human
glioblastoma
xenografts in nude mice. We showed that intratumoral injection of adeno-associated virus carrying hTERTC27 (rAAV-hTERTC27) is highly effective in reducing the growth of the subcutaneously transplanted
glioblastoma
tumors. Histological analyses showed that rAAV-hTERTC27 treatment leads to profound necrosis, apoptosis, infiltration of polymorphonuclear neutrophils and reduced microvessel density in the tumor samples. To study the molecular mechanism of rAAV-hTERTC27-mediated antitumor effects, we analyzed the global gene expression profiles of the rAAV-hTERTC27-treated tumor tissues and cell line as compared with that of the control rAAV-green fluorescent protein-treated samples by DNA microarray. Our results suggest that hTERTC27 exerts its effect through complex mechanisms, which involve genes regulating apoptosis, cell adhesion, cell cycle, immune responses, metabolism, signal transduction, transport, transcription and telomere maintenance.
...
PMID:A novel glioblastoma cancer gene therapy using AAV-mediated long-term expression of human TERT C-terminal polypeptide. 1738 79
Auron-Misheil-Therapy (AMT) consisting of aqueous camomile extract supplemented with calcium, vitamins, the antihistamine chlorpheniramine and human insulin is under development as anti-cancer treatment. AMT was preclinically investigated in tumour cell lines and tumour xenografts to guide clinical phase I/II studies. AMT was tested against 56 human tumour cell lines, in a clonogenic assay in 98 patient-derived xenografts and in in vivo studies. AMT showed in vitro cytotoxic activity with highest susceptibility in
cervical cancer
,
glioblastoma
and colon cancers. In the clonogenic assay, anti- cancer activity of AMT was most active in cervical and uterine tumours, in colon cancer,
glioblastoma
, leukaemia, melanoma and pancreatic cancer. In vivo, AMT showed slight activity in tumour xenograft models of colon and mammary cancer. It also showed immune stimulatory effects by induction of IL-6- and TNF-alpha secretion in human PBMCs. The immune stimulatory potential of AMT, together with slight anti-tumour efficacy observed in the present study, indicates a role of AMT in tumour therapy.
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PMID:AMT: preclinical pharmacology studies. 1936 Mar 46
A series of new naphthalimide derivatives were synthesized and studied. Three of the materials (SM1, SM2, and SM3) possess methacrylate(s) moieties as pH sensor monomers, enabling these compounds to be polymerized with other monomers for thin film preparation for extracellular pH sensing. Herein, poly(2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate)-co-poly(acrylamide) (PHEMA-co-PAM) was chosen as the polymer matrix. Structure influences on pH responses and pK(a) values were studied. The film P3 composed of the sensing moiety SM3 has a pK(a) close to the usual biological environmental pH of approximately 7. It was used as an extracellular pH sensor to monitor pH change during the metabolism of prokaryotic Escherichia coli (E. coil). On the other hand, the three sensor monomers are new intracellular biomarkers to sense lysosomes of eukaryotic cells since (1) their pK(a) values are in a range of 5.9-6.8; (2) their emission intensities at acidic conditions (such as at pH 5) are much stronger than those at a neutral condition of pH 7; (3) lysosomes range in size from 0.1 to 1.2 mum in diameter with pH ranging from 4.5 to 5.0, which is much more acidic than the pH value of the cytoplasm (usually with a pH value of approximately 7.2); and (4) the acidity of lysosomes enables a protonation of the amino groups of the pH probes making the sensors emit brightly in acidic organelles by inhibiting the photo-induced electron transfer from the amino groups to the fluorophores. Lysosome sensing was demonstrated using live human brain
glioblastoma
U87MG cell line, human
cervical cancer
HeLa cell line, and human esophagus premalignant CP-A and CP-D cell lines by observations of small acidic spherical organelles (lysosomes) and significant colocalizations (82-95%) of the sensors with a commercially available lysosome-selective staining probe LysoTracker Red under confocal fluorescence microscopy.
...
PMID:A series of naphthalimide derivatives as intra and extracellular pH sensors. 2061 51
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