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)

Tyrosine-specific phosphorylated proteins found exclusively on the cell surface of human astrocytomas were previously identified with murine monoclonal antibodies, designated as GA-17, GB-4 and GC-3. The purpose of this study was to further characterize the antigens and investigate the relationship between them and c-kit protooncogene product. We demonstrated that the antigens had protein kinase activity. Moreover, GA-17 reacted with c-kit protein expressed on the membrane of A172 human glioblastoma cells.
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PMID:Analysis of the close relationship between human astrocytoma-specific antigens detected by murine monoclonal antibodies and c-kit proto-oncogene product. 137 Aug 80

The regulation of c-sis oncogene expression in human glioblastoma cell line A172 has been investigated using a sensitive RNA-RNA solution hybridization method. Enhanced expression of c-sis mRNA was induced by phorbol ester (PMA) and diacylglycerol, each of which activates protein kinase C. c-sis mRNA was also induced by transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta). The response to PMA and TGF-beta was transient, and in each case the decrease in c-sis mRNA level following maximum stimulation occurred with a half-life similar to the mRNA half-life previously determined. Cycloheximide had no significant effect on the induction of c-sis mRNA by either PMA or TGF-beta. The increases in c-sis mRNA following addition of either PMA or TGF-beta correlated well with increases in c-sis transcription as observed by the nuclear run-on technique. In cells in which protein kinase C had been down-regulated, there was no inhibition of the c-sis mRNA response to TGF-beta. Furthermore in cells pretreated with TGF-beta, induction by PMA was unaffected. Thus the TGF-beta signal pathway does not involve activation of protein kinase C, and at least two initially distinct intracellular signaling routes lead to activation of c-sis gene expression in this glioblastoma cell line. The protein kinase inhibitor H7 abolished the ability of not only PMA but also of TGF-beta to induce c-sis mRNA. The ability of H7 to inhibit the TGF-beta stimulation suggests that a protein kinase other than protein kinase C is involved in the signal transduction by TGF-beta.
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PMID:Control of the expression of c-sis mRNA in human glioblastoma cells by phorbol ester and transforming growth factor beta 1. 265 88

We have compared in different human neuroblastoma cell lines and human glioblastoma cells the expression level, structure, and tyrosine-specific protein kinase activity of pp60c-src. Our results show that not all human neuroblastoma cell lines express pp60c-src molecules with amino-terminal structural alterations. In neuroblastoma cells which possess pp60c-src with altered gel migration, the diminished polyacrylamide gel mobility of pp60c-src was found not to be dependent upon amino-terminal phosphorylations since extensive treatment of these molecules with phosphatase did not significantly change their gel migration properties. Similar differences in gel migration were observed when RNA from the various neuroblastoma and glioblastoma cells was translated in vitro using either rabbit reticulocyte or wheat germ lysates. White the level of c-src mRNA in the different cells analyzed was found to be similar, the abundance of pp60c-src in these same cells was found to vary by as much as 12-fold. This suggests that the abundance of pp60c-src in human neuroendocrine tumors is regulated through post-transcriptional and/or post-translational events which may be related to the stage of neuronal differentiation of the cells. Based upon determination of pp60c-src abundance by immunoblot analysis, we demonstrate that pp60c-src molecules derived from human neuroblastoma and glioblastoma cells have very similar in vitro protein kinase activities.
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PMID:Analysis of the c-src gene product structure, abundance, and protein kinase activity in human neuroblastoma and glioblastoma cells. 314 45

The authors investigated the immunohistochemical localization of S-100 protein in normal human brain and glioblastoma tissues by the peroxidase anti-peroxidase method of Sternberger. In normal human brain the positive immunoperoxidase reaction for S-100 protein was observed in astrocytes, oligodendrocytes, ependymal cells, Bergmann's glial cells and epithelial cells of choroid plexus. No positive staining was revealed in any cortical neurons. Immunoelectron-microscopically, the electron dense positive reaction for S-100 protein was seen throughout the cytoplasm, nucleoplasm and cell processes of astrocyte as well as oligodendrocyte. The positive reaction for S-100 protein was demonstrated occasionally in association with cytoplasmic membrane or the membrane constituting cell organelles. We suspect that this observation indicates the existence of membrane-bound form of S-100 protein. In glioblastoma cells, the positive reaction for S-100 protein was relatively weak in intensity as compared with astrocytes, and the degree of positive staining varied from cell to cell. Subcellular localization of S-100 protein in glioblastoma seemed to be essentially similar to that of normal astrocyte. There are some recent reports concerning immunohistochemical localization of alpha and beta subunits of S-100 protein. As compared with these reports, the present immunohistochemical results indicate that the rabbit anti-S-100 antibody embloyed in the present study is mainly against beta subunit of S-100 protein. Although there have been many reports concerning immunohistochemical localization of S-100 protein, the biological role of S-100 protein is still speculative. Some hypotheses are advocated in connection with the possible biological role of S-100 protein. For example, the modulation of synaptic transmission by S-100 protein, the participation of S-100 protein in hormonal secretion and in transport of cations through lipid membrane, the activation of protein kinase and the promotion of disassembly of microtubules by S-100 protein are postulated. It is hard to assume the biological role of S-100 protein based on the immunohistochemical results alone. The present study clearly indicates that S-100 protein exists widely in the cytoplasm, nucleoplasm, cytoplasmic membrane, outer membranes of cell organelles and cell processes of glial cells as well as glioblastoma cells. From these results we assume that S-100 protein plays an important role of intracellular transport of cations as one of the calcium binding proteins.
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PMID:[Immunohistochemical study of S-100 protein in the normal human brain and glioblastoma]. 391 99

The biochemical characteristics of the protein kinase (PK; adenosine triphosphate-protein phosphotransferase, EC 2.7.1.37) isozymes in subcellular preparations from normal human brain cortex and glioblastoma were investigated after chromatography on diethylaminoethyl cellulose, and the following results have been obtained. Two major isozyme forms, eluted by 50 and 200 mM phosphate buffer, are present in both cytosol and membrane-derived preparations from cerebral cortex. Furthermore, these isozyme forms have properties similar to those referred to as type I and type II cyclic adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate-dependent PK. In these chromatographic isozymes, cyclic adenosine 3';5'-monophosphate is more active in stimulating the basal PK enzyme than is cyclic guanosine 3':5'-monophosphate. In glioblastoma, the PK activity from cytosol and particulate preparations is resolved by diethylaminoethyl cellulose in four peaks. In cytosol, the major portion of the enzyme is eluted with a 300 mM buffer (about 50% of the total basal PK activity) and is cyclic nucleotide dependent. On the contrary, in glioblastoma particulate, the PK enzyme is mainly eluted at 50 and 100 mM buffer; neither of these isozymes is cyclic nucleotide dependent. As for cytosol, only the particulate isozyme eluted at 300 mM buffer is strongly activated by cyclic nucleotides. Finally, in both glioblastoma subcellular preparations, only a type II cyclic adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate-dependent PK is present.
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PMID:Multiple forms of protein kinase from normal human brain and glioblastoma. 629 26

The brain creatine kinase (CKB) gene is expressed in a variety of tissues with highest expression seen in the brain. We have previously shown in primary rat brain cell cultures that CKB mRNA levels are high in oligodendrocytes and astrocytes and low in neurons (Molloy et al.: J Neurochem 59:1925-1932, 1992). In this report we show that treatment of human U87 glioblastoma cells with forskolin and IBMX, to elevate intracellular cAMP, induces expression of CKB mRNA from the transiently transfected rat CKB gene by 14-fold and also increases expression from the endogenous human CKB gene. This induction of CKB mRNA i) is due to increased transcription; ii) occurs rapidly (with maximal induction after 6 hr; iii) requires the activity of protein kinase A (PKA), but iv) does not require de novo protein synthesis and, in fact, is superinduced in the presence of cycloheximide. Given the role of oligodendrocytes in the energy-demanding process of myelination and of astrocytes in ion transport, these results have physiological significance, since they suggest that changes in cellular energy requirements in the brain during events, such as glial cell differentiation and increased neuronal activity, may in part be met by a cAMP-mediated modulation of CKB gene expression. Of particular importance is the possible modulation of CKB gene expression during myelinogenesis, since oligodendrocyte differentiation has been shown previously to be stimulated by increases in cAMP.
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PMID:Transcription of the brain creatine kinase gene in glial cells is modulated by cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase. 752 18

Possible differentiation mechanisms were investigated in a glioblastoma multiform cell line (GL15) presenting an undifferentiated phenotype with weak glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) and strong vimentin (VIM) expression. Serum-free conditions induced time-dependent increases of GFAP-mRNA and GFAP protein levels, associated with a process-bearing astrocytic morphology. Activation of protein kinase C (PKC) by tumor promoter phorbol 12-myrystate 13-acetate (PMA) induced a rapid morphological differentiation and a decrease in GFAP mRNA, whereas the GFAP level remained unchanged. Such parameters were shown to characterize a physiological differentiation stage in astroglial cultures. Treatment of process-bearing GL15 cells with dibutyryl cyclic AMP (dbcAMP), a protein kinase A (PKA) activator, induced a time-dependent decrease in the GFAP mRNA and GFAP protein levels and reverted morphological changes induced by serum-free conditions. Neither PMA nor dbcAMP influenced the VIM mRNA expression. In GL15 cells, PKC and PKA activation have opposite effects. Understanding the role of these kinases in malignant transformation and in the in vitro differentiation process is of both basic and clinical interest.
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PMID:PKA and PKC activation induces opposite glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) expression and morphology changes in a glioblastoma multiform cell line of clonal origin. 754 74

This review focuses on genes that have a proven or presumed role in the genesis of astrocytic tumors. A common theme in glioblastoma is the amplification of genes that code for growth factor receptors of the protein-tyrosine kinase family (epidermal growth factor receptor, platelet-derived growth factor receptor-alpha, met). The majority of glioblastomas also have alterations in genes that encode factors that are involved in cyclin-dependent kinase activity, which is a critical step in G1-S transition in the cell cycle. These alterations include deletions of negative regulatory elements (TP53, CDKN2, MTS2) and amplification of positive factors (MDM2, CDK4). In addition, there are loci on chromosomes 10 and 19q that seem to be involved in tumor progression.
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PMID:Molecular genetics of human glioma. 765 23

Wild-type p53 functions in the G1 DNA damage checkpoint pathway by activating gene transcription and preventing cell cycle progression. Others reported that mutation of the serine 386 codon in mouse p53 abolished its ability to suppress growth. Serine 386 of murine p53 and the homologous residue of human p53, serine 392, are phosphorylated in vivo and can be phosphorylated in vitro by casein kinase II (CKII). We constructed mutants that changed serine 392 of human p53 to alanine (p53-S392A) or aspartic acid (p53-S392D); cotransfection of both these mutants with a reporter gene carrying a p53-responsive element into the p53-null Saos-2 cell line activated transcription as well as did wild-type p53. Furthermore, both mutants blocked cell cycle progression after transient transfection in these cells. A stable derivative of the T98G human glioblastoma cell line was established that expressed p53-S392A in response to dexamethasone. Overexpression of this mutant activated transcription of the endogenous waf1 (also called cip1) and mdm2 genes to the same extent as wild-type p53 and also produced growth arrest. Finally, p53-S392A and p53-S392D suppressed foci formation by activated ras and adenovirus E1A oncogenes as efficiently as did wild-type p53. Thus, unlike mutants that altered the serine 15 phosphorylation site, elimination of the serine 392 phosphorylation site had no discernible effect on p53 function. We conclude that neither phosphorylation nor RNA attachment to serine 392 are required for human p53's ability to suppress cell growth or to activate transcription in vivo.
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PMID:The carboxy-terminal serine 392 phosphorylation site of human p53 is not required for wild-type activities. 793 49

We have investigated the status of the MTS2 gene, encoding the cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) inhibitor p15, in 32 glioblastomas. Semi-quantitative PCR identified 7 tumors in which the amplified material was 18.6% of controls and 7 in which was 48.0%, suggesting the occurrence of homozygous and hemizygous deletions, respectively. Single strand conformation polymorphism analysis identified one polymorphism but no mutations. We also expressed MTS2 and MTS1, encoding the contiguous and highly homologous CDK inhibitor p16, in U-87 human glioblastoma cells. Both genes, either separately or in combination, inhibit significantly the proliferation rate of U-87 cells but such inhibition is progressively lost. As a whole, the data assign a tumor suppressor role to p15 and confirm homozygous deletions as the favorite mechanism for the inactivation of MTS1 and MTS2 in glioblastomas.
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PMID:Deletion and transfection analysis of the p15/MTS2 gene in malignant gliomas. 852 10


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