Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0017636 (glioblastoma)
18,345 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Intracranial germinoma has a relatively good prognosis when treated with radiotherapy and chemotherapy, whereas glioblastoma has a poor prognosis irrespective of these treatments. Cell proliferation and cell death are opposing processes in tumor growth, with tumor progression reflecting the balance between proliferating and apoptotic cells. We investigated cell proliferation and cell death using MIB-1 staining and nick-end labeling in 13 germinomas in comparison with 11 glioblastomas. Expression of BAX and Bcl-2, which regulate apoptosis, were studied by immunohistochemistry. Although germinomas showed strong MIB-1 immunostaining similar to that seen in glioblastomas, germinomas included significantly more apoptotic cells. The ratio of apoptotic ratio to MIB-1 labeling index for germinomas was 72.9 +/- 36.9 (mean +/- SD), a higher, statistically significant ratio as compared with glioblastomas (14.5 +/- 11.2; P < 0.01). Furthermore, germinomas showed greater expression of BAX than did glioblastomas, while the expression of Bcl-2 was weak in both tumor types. A comparison of these apoptotic-related proteins showed that immunoreactivity for BAX was relatively higher in germinomas than in glioblastomas (P < 0.01), corresponding well to numerous apoptotic cells identified in germinoma tissues. These findings may account for the prognostic difference between germinoma and glioblastoma in the face of a similar proliferation potential according to MIB-1 immunostaining. The balance between cell proliferation and death should be considered when predicting outcomes in patients with intracranial tumors.
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PMID:A comparative study of apoptosis and proliferation in germinoma and glioblastoma. 1130 26

Twelve patients with brain tumors and progressive edema caused by tumor progression or radiochemotherapy-related leukoencephalopathy were treated with H15, a phytotherapeutic anti-inflammatory agent. Edema was reduced in two of seven patients with glioblastoma with tumor progression and in three of five patients with treatment-related leukoencephalopathy. All patients with leukoencephalopathy improved clinically for several months.
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PMID:Response of radiochemotherapy-associated cerebral edema to a phytotherapeutic agent, H15. 1134 92

The prognosis for patients with malignant brainstem tumors is poor. The authors report on a 6-year-old girl with a biopsy proven pontine glioblastoma, who, after initial chemo-radiotherapy and tumor progression, experienced a prolonged second response to a salvage therapy consisting of cisplatin, etoposide, and ifosfamide. The patient recovered from her life-threatening condition with almost complete resolution of all neurologic deficits paralleled by a dramatic shrinkage of the tumor documented by magnetic resonance imaging.
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PMID:Prolonged second response to cisplatin, etoposide, and ifosfamide in a child with a recurrent brainstem glioblastoma. 1140 Jun 49

The compound bis(4,7-dimethyl-1,10-phenanthroline) sulfatooxovanadium(IV) (METVAN [VO(SO4)(Me2-Phen)2]), exhibits potent cytotoxicity against human cancer cells at low micromolar concentrations. At concentrations > or = 1 microM, METVAN treatment was associated with a nearly complete loss of the adhesive, migratory, and invasive properties of the treated tumor cell populations. METVAN did not cause acute or subacute toxicity in mice at dose levels ranging from 12.5 mg/kg to 100 mg/kg. Therapeutic plasma concentrations > or = 5 microM were rapidly achieved and maintained in mice for at least 24 h after i.p. bolus injection of a single 10 mg/kg nontoxic dose of METVAN. At this dose level, the maximum plasma METVAN concentration was 37.0 microM, which was achieved with a t(max) of 21.4 min. Plasma samples (diluted 1:16) from METVAN-treated mice killed 85% of human breast cancer cells in vitro. METVAN was slowly eliminated with an apparent plasma t(1/2) of 17.5 h and systemic clearance of 42.1 ml/h/kg. In accordance with its potent in vitro activity and favorable in vivo pharmacokinetics, METVAN exhibited significant antitumor activity and delayed tumor progression in CB.17 severe combined immunodeficient (SCID) mouse xenograft models of human glioblastoma and breast cancer. In these experiments, METVAN was administered in daily injections of a single nontoxic 10 mg/kg i.p. dose on 5 consecutive days per week for 4 consecutive weeks beginning the day after the s.c. inoculation of U87 glioblastoma or MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells. At 40 days after the inoculation of tumor cells, the U87 tumor xenografts in the vehicle-treated control SCID mice were much larger than those of the mice treated with METVAN (4560 +/- 654 mm(3) versus 1688 +/- 571 mm(3); P = 0.003). Similarly, the MDA-MB-231 tumors in SCID mice treated with METVAN were much smaller 40 days after tumor cell inoculation than those of the vehicle-treated control SCID mice (174 +/- 29 mm(3) versus 487 +/- 82 mm(3); P = 0.002). The favorable in vivo pharmacodynamic features and antitumor activity of METVAN warrants further development of this novel oxovanadium compound as a potential new anticancer agent.
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PMID:In vivo antitumor activity of bis(4,7-dimethyl-1,10-phenanthroline) sulfatooxovanadium(IV) (METVAN [VO(SO4)(Me2-Phen)2]). 1144 32

Tissue factor pathway inhibitor-2 (TFPI-2) is a 32 kDa serine protease inhibitor found at high levels in extracellular matrix. Recombinant human TFPI-2 has recently been shown to be a strong inhibitor of trypsin, plasmin, plasma kallikrein, and factor XIa amidolytic activity. Earlier studies in our laboratory showed that the expression of TFPI-2 is lost during tumor progression in human gliomas. We stably transfected this protease inhibitor in multiform glioblastoma cell line (SNB-19) and in low-grade glioma cell line (Hs683) in sense and antisense orientation respectively. This confirmed that the upregulation/down-regulation of TFPI-2 plays a significant role in the invasive behavior of human gliomas both in vitro and in vivo models. Collectively, these results suggested an idea to determine whether TFPI-2 is necessary for cell survival and inhibition of tumor formation in nude mice, due to apoptosis of intracerebrally injected SNB-19 cells. In the present study we determined p-ERK levels and found that they are decreased in TFPI-2 over-expressed clones (SNB-19) and increased in TFPI-2 down-regulated clones (Hs683). We also checked the levels of BAX/BCl-2, caspases (for e.g., 9, 7, 3, 8), PARP, cytochrome-c and Apaf-1. Moreover, the increase of apoptosis in vitro is associated with increased and decreased expression of apoptotic protein BAX in sense clones (SNB-19) and antisense clones (Hs683) respectively, when compared to controls and vice versa with Bcl-2 the anti-apoptotic protein. Caspases (9, 7 and 3), cytochrome-c, Apaf-1 and PARP levels are increased in SNB-19 and decreased in Hs683. Caspase 8 was not expressed in either cell line. Caspases 9 and 3 activity assay revealed higher activity in sense clones (SNB-19) but lesser in antisense clones (Hs683) compared to controls. This is the first report of TFPI-2 playing a novel role in cell survival in human gliomas.
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PMID:A novel role of tissue factor pathway inhibitor-2 in apoptosis of malignant human gliomas. 1149 41

Our previous study showed that high-grade astrocytomas often expressed high interleukin (IL)-1beta production. Coexpression of IL-1beta and IL-6 has been found in a number of glioma samples and glioma cell lines. To characterize the expression of IL-6 in the human glioma microenvironment, we investigated surgically excised human gliomas, human glioblastoma xenografts, and human glioblastoma cell lines using the reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), immunohistochemistry (IHC), and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). In the 29 primary gliomas, transcripts of IL-6 were less frequently detectable (55.6%) than those of IL-1beta (72.4%) or those of IL-10, IL-8, or IL-1alpha (>80% each). As for IL-6 gene expression, little or no transcription was observed in low-grade astrocytomas, oligodendroglial tumors, and 1 ependymoma. Strong IL-6 gene expression was found in only 5 of 9 glioblastomas. Immunohistochemically, IL-6 antigen was localized in the tumor cells and macrophages in 4 of 7 glioblastomas. In 3 glioblastomas transplanted into nude mice, both IL-1beta and IL-6 were detected only in 1, but othercytokines (IL-8, IL-10, and IL-1alpha) were detected in all 3 xenografts by RT-PCR. Two cell lines both showed IL-6 expression at the mRNA level, and in a cell line with a high level of IL-6 and IL-1beta transcripts, significant production of IL-6 was observed by IHC and ELISA. We concluded that IL-6 produced in tumor tissue may be involved in tumor progression in some glioblastomas, but not in low-grade astrocytomas and oligodendroglial tumors, and that IL-6 gene expression is closely correlated with IL-1beta expression in biopsy tissue, xenografts, and cultures of human gliomas.
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PMID:Analysis of interleukin-6 gene expression in primary human gliomas, glioblastoma xenografts, and glioblastoma cell lines. 1151 69

Angiogenesis, the formation of new blood vessels out of pre-existing capillaries, is essential for tumor progression. Many factors have been identified that are able to inhibit angiogenesis. Here, we report the construction of a tricistronic retroviral vector encoding two inhibitors of angiogenesis expressed in mammals: the N-terminal fragment of rat prolactin (16KrPRL) and a secreted form of human platelet factor 4 (sPF4). When transduced by this retroviral vector, a rat glioblastoma cell line loses its ability of promoting endothelial cell locomotion, the initial step of angiogenesis, and the formation of an endothelial cell tube network. In spite of this encouraging in vitro result, however, the anti-angiogenic vector cannot block glioblastoma progression in animal models. These results suggest that therapeutic strategies aiming to block tumor progression through the inhibition of tumor-associated angiogenesis, should not only provide large numbers of angiogenesis inhibitors, but also target the angiogenic factors produced by tumor cells. Moreover, the data described herein may confirm recent findings from other groups which indicate that in order to successfully counteract tumor progression, drugs inhibiting new blood vessel formation should be employed in combination with traditional anti-tumor strategies, such as chemotherapy or radiotherapy.
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PMID:A tricistronic retroviral vector expressing natural antiangiogenic factors inhibits angiogenesis in vitro, but is not able to block tumor progression in vivo. 1189 69

The extracellular matrix protein tenascin-C is expressed in processes like embryogenesis and wound healing and in neoplasia. Tenascin-C expression in gliomas has been described previously; however, the relation to clinical data remains inconsistent. Generally, analysis of tenascin-C function is difficult due to different alternatively spliced isoforms. Our studies focus on changes in tenascin-C expression in human gliomas, correlating these changes with tumor progression and elucidating the functional role of the glioma cell-specific tenascin-C isoform pool. Eighty-six glioma tissues of different World Health Organization (WHO) grades were analyzed immunohistochemically for tenascin-C expression. The influence of the specific tenascin-C isoforms produced by glioblastoma cells on proliferation and migration was examined in vitro using blocking antibodies recognizing all isoforms. In general, tenascin-C expression increased with tumor malignancy. Perivascular staining of tenascin-C around tumor-supplying blood vessels was observed in all glioblastoma tissues, whereas in WHO II and III gliomas, perivascular tenascin-C staining appeared less frequently. The appearance of perivascular tenascin-C correlated significantly with a shorter disease-free time. Analysis of proliferation and migration in the presence of blocking antibodies revealed an inhibition of proliferation by around 30% in all 3 glioblastoma cell cultures, as well as a decrease in migration of 30.6-46.7%. Thus we conclude that the endogenous pool of tenascin-C isoforms in gliomas supports both tumor cell proliferation and tumor cell migration. In addition, our data on the perivascular staining of tenascin-C in WHO II and III gliomas and its correlation with a shorter disease-free time suggest that tenascin-C may be a new and potent prognostic marker for an earlier tumor recurrence.
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PMID:Clinical impact and functional aspects of tenascin-C expression during glioma progression. 1192 May 87

The gene most commonly altered in human glioblastomas is the epidermalgrowth factor receptor (EGFR). We profiled transcripts induced by mutantEGFR to better understand its role in tumor progression. The pattern found suggested enhanced tumor invasion. The highly induced genes included extracellular matrix components, metalloproteases, and a serine protease. We confirmed that mutant EGFR did make glioblastoma cells both more motile and invasive using in vitro assays. Furthermore, inhibitors of EGFR (OSI-774 and Tyrphostin AG1478) selectively down-regulated these molecular effectors in glioblastoma cells, eliminating enhanced invasion.
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PMID:Mutant epidermal growth factor receptor up-regulates molecular effectors of tumor invasion. 1206 69

We previously showed that enhanced expression of MMP-9, an endopeptidase that digests basement-membrane type IV collagen, is related to tumor progression in vitro and in vivo; antisense-MMP-9 stably transfected clones were less invasive than untransfected parental cells and did not form tumors in nude mice. In this study, we examined the role of ERK-1 in the regulation of MMP-9 production and the invasive behavior of the human glioblastoma cell line SNB19, in which ERK1 is constitutively activated. SNB19 cells were stably transfected with mt-ERK, a vector encoding ERK-1 cDNA in which the conserved lysine at codon 71 was changed to arginine, thus impairing the catalytic efficiency of this enzyme. Gelatin zymography showed reduced levels of MMP-9 in the mt-ERK-transfected cell lines relative to those in vector-transfected and parental control cells. Reductions in MMP-9 protein mRNA levels were also detected in the mt-ERK-transfected cells by Western and Northern blotting. The mt-ERK-transfected cells were much less invasive than parental or vector control cells in a Matrigel invasion assay and in a spheroid coculture assay. Thus an ERK-dependent signaling pathway seems to regulate MMP-9 mediated glioma invasion in SNB19 cells; interfering with this pathway could be developed into a therapeutic approach, which aims at a reduction of cancer cell invasion.
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PMID:Downregulation of MMP-9 in ERK-mutated stable transfectants inhibits glioma invasion in vitro. 1216 59


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