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)

Von Recklinghausen neurofibromatosis (NF1) is a common autosomal dominant disorder mapped to 17q11.2 and typically characterized by the occurrence of neural crest-derived tumors. The gene has recently been cloned using reverse genetics or "positional cloning" approaches. Its function, however, remains unknown. We have performed cytogenetic and molecular analyses on 9 malignant tumors from NF1 patients to look for loss of alleles or chromosome rearrangements involving chromosome 17 to test the hypothesis that the NF1 gene acts as a recessive "tumor suppressor" gene. Loss of alleles on this chromosome was detected for 3 of 9 malignant tumors. Two peripheral nerve sheath tumors showed allele loss at informative loci on both the long and short arms of chromosome 17. In contrast, a glioblastoma with focal gliosarcoma showed loss of heterozygosity on the short arm of chromosome 17 only, and not at loci on the long arm. One nerve sheath tumor was previously shown by direct sequence analysis to have a point mutation at the TP53 locus at 17p13. These data support a role for the TP53 gene or other genes on the short arm of chromosome 17 in at least some malignancies in NF1. Six other neurofibrosarcomas showed no allele loss at informative loci on chromosome 17. Cytogenetic analysis was performed on 7 tumors, including 2 with allele loss. The two tumors with allele loss showed abnormal karyotypes while all others were normal. Southern blot and pulsed-field gel analysis using probes within or closely linked to the NF1 locus detected no gross deletions or rearrangements in the tumors studied.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Molecular and cytogenetic analysis of tumors in von Recklinghausen neurofibromatosis. 190 41

Two kinds of novel neural trophic factors were currently detected in von Recklinghausen neurofibroma (NF1) extracts. One of the two was a growth factor, neuroblastoma growth factor (Mr less than 5 kDa), which promotes the proliferation of human neuroblastoma cell and survival and neurite-extension of rat cortical neurons, but differently from nerve growth factor (NGF) or NGF-like factors. The other one was a glial growth inhibitor (Mr = 100 kDa), which suppresses the growth of glioma cell lines, astrocytoma, glioblastoma, oligodendroglioma and Schwannoma. These factors do not appear to be previously identified cytokines or growth factors such as interleukins, granulocyte colony-stimulating factor, NGF and fibroblast growth factor. There was also detectable ciliary neurotrophic factor-like activity in the extracts. The primary cause of high contents of these factors in NF1 is not known, but may relate to fundamental mechanisms controlling growth and differentiation of neurons and glias during development of nervous system.
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PMID:von Recklinghausen neurofibroma produces neuronal and glial growth-modulating factors. 193 68

In 1,491 autopsy cases with CNS tumors observed at the Pathological Institute of the Medical Academy of Erfurt in the period from 1953 to 1976 (54,946 autopsies) 72 cases (4.8%) with neurinomas were found. They comprise 67 solitary neurinomas, 1 bilateral acoustic neurinoma without other signs of neurofibromatosis, and 4 cases of neurofibromatosis with neurinomas of the CNS. Among the 68 cases with CNS neurinomas (neurofibromatoses excluded) 87% were acoustic neurinomas, 12% spinal tumors, and 1 case was located in the trigeminal nerve. In 60 (88%) of these 68 cases, the neurinoma was operated upon or clinically diagnosed, resp. The diameter of 18 (26%) neurinomas of the autopsy material was larger than 5 cm. Patients in the 6th decennium predominated in this series. The sex distribution revealed a preponderance of females over males (3:1). In 3 cases further CNS tumors (ependymoma, glioblastoma, meningioma) were found. Additionally, 3 cases had carcinomas of different localization (Table 5). Following tumors were seen in 9 cases of Morbus Recklinghausen with CNS involvement: 4 cases with multiple neurinomas, 3 meningiomas, 1 astrocytoma, 2 glioses and 1 angiomatous malformation (Table 6). Among 1,670 CNS tumors in biopsy material, 144 (8.6%) were neurinomas. 60% of them were located in the nervus acusticus, 40% spinally, mainly in the thoracic region. The 6th decennium was most affected, and females were more frequent than males (2:1) in our material. Nearly all CNS neurinomas were benign. Only 1 spinal tumors was classified as a malignant neurinoma. 2 of the 9 cases with Morbus Recklinghausen had malignant neurogenic tumors (neurofibrosarcomas).
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PMID:[Tumors of the central nervous system in biopsy and autopsy material. 7th communication: neurinomas and neurofibromatoses with CNS involvement]. 641 Jun 15