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Query: UMLS:C0017636 (
glioblastoma
)
18,345
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Overexpression of the erbB family of receptor tyrosine kinases has been implicated in a variety of tumors including breast, lung, prostate, and brain. Most solid tumors express one or more of these receptors, which can often be related to tumor aggressiveness and poor patient prognosis. CI-1033, a pan-erbB tyrosine kinase inhibitor, is a clinically promising agent that is active against all four members of the erbB receptor tyrosine kinase family. In vitro studies of human cancer cell lines indicate that CI-1033 results in prompt, potent, and sustained inhibition of tyrosine kinase activity. This inhibition is highly selective for erbB1 (
epidermal growth factor receptor
), erbB2, erbB3, and erbB4 without inhibiting tyrosine kinase activity of receptors such as platelet-derived growth factor receptor, fibroblast growth factor receptor, and insulin receptor, even at high concentrations. Treatment of athymic nude mice bearing xenografts of human A431 epidermoid carcinoma, H125 non-small cell lung carcinoma, and SF-767
glioblastoma
results in highly significant suppression of tumor growth. The major toxicity in animals is diarrhea, which is more severe at higher doses. In animal models, all side effects are reversible on cessation of treatment. Thus, CI-1033, which is currently undergoing phase I clinical trials, holds significant potential for use in a broad range of solid tumors.
...
PMID:CI-1033, a pan-erbB tyrosine kinase inhibitor. 1170 99
Antisense oligonucleotides (oligos) complementary to mRNA encoding transforming growth factor-alpha (TGF-alpha) and its target, the
epidermal growth factor receptor
(
EGFR
), are efficacious against human prostate and breast cancers carried in athymic nude mice.
Glioblastomas
, also regulated by
EGFR
expression, would appear to be similarly susceptible, and we now employ them against the T98G tumor model. T98G cells were distributed into wells and allowed to adhere prior to addition of oligos (12.5 microM) directed against TGF-alpha and/or
EGFR
for 6 d of treatment before thymidine radiolabeling. Supplemental media and oligos (25 microM final concentration) were added after d 3. Statistically significant inhibition by oligos directed against TGF-alpha,
EGFR
, and their combination was 13.8%, 26.3%, and 18.1%, respectively. In a subsequent experiment cells were incubated with increasing amounts of each oligo and their combination for 3 d prior to radiolabeling. Statistically significant inhibition of growth for either oligo at every concentration was found. Cells incubated with 6.25, 12.5, 25, and 50 microM antisense directed against TGF-alpha had a mean inhibition of 29.3%, 33.3%, 21.7%, and 46.6%, respectively. Cells similarly treated with oligos against
EGFR
had a mean inhibition of 77.9%, 80.3%, 82.0%, and 83.7%, respectively, and cells incubated with 6.25, 12.5, 25 and 50 microM of each oligo had a mean inhibition of 74.7%, 70.6%, 70.8%, and 76.3%, respectively. Lastly, in a paired experiment, cells treated with 0, 0.39, 0.78, 1.56, 3.125, and 6.25 microM of oligos, either specifically directed against
EGFR
or a random control, for 3 d were evaluated for both thymidine incorporation and
EGFR
expression. Statistically significant inhibition of 3H-thymidine incorporation was seen in cells with the oligo specifically directed against
EGFR
at 3.125 microM and 6.25 microM when compared to non-oligo containing controls. This was accompanied by a comparable significantly decreased expression of a low-MW reactive derivative of
EGFR
at 3.125 microM and 6.25 microM in Western blots, and of a high-MW reactive
EGFR
at 6.25 microM. The significant effect against high-MW
EGFR
was observed vs both the non-oligo containing control and the random sequence. Oligo concentrations between 0.78 and 1.5 microM also resulted in decreased expression of the low-MW form, but not significant differences in thymidine radiolabeling. In recovery experiments, cells treated initially with greater oligo concentrations required significantly increased time to recover, particularly in cells treated with
EGFR
directed oligos. Intracellular uptake and nuclear localization was demonstrated with FITC tagged oligos. In summary, even at relatively low oligo concentrations and short exposure, oligos against TGF-alpha, and particularly
EGFR
, significantly inhibit in vitro growth of the T98G
glioblastoma
, possibly mediated by decreased
EGFR
expression.
...
PMID:Treatment of the T98G glioblastoma cell line with antisense oligonucleotides directed toward mRNA encoding transforming growth factor-alpha and the epidermal growth factor receptor. 1177 57
Cumulative information available about the organization of amplified chromosomal regions in human tumors suggests that the amplification repeat units, or amplicons, can be of a simple or complex nature. For the former, amplified regions generally retain their native chromosomal configuration and involve a single amplification target sequence. For complex amplicons, amplified DNAs usually undergo substantial reorganization relative to the normal chromosomal regions from which they evolve, and the regions subject to amplification may contain multiple target sequences. Previous efforts to characterize the 7p11.2
epidermal growth factor receptor
) amplicon in
glioblastoma
have relied primarily on the use of markers positioned by linkage analysis and/or radiation hybrid mapping, both of which are known to have the potential for being inaccurate when attempting to order loci over relatively short (<1 Mb) chromosomal regions. Due to the limited resolution of genetic maps that have been established through the use of these approaches, we have constructed a 2-Mb bacterial and P1-derived artificial chromosome (BAC-PAC) contig for the EGFR region and have applied markers positioned on its associated physical map to the analysis of 7p11.2 amplifications in a series of glioblastomas. Our data indicate that EGFR is the sole amplification target within the mapped region, although there are several additional 7p11.2 genes that can be coamplified and overexpressed with EGFR. Furthermore, these results are consistent with EGFR amplicons retaining the same organization as the native chromosome 7p11.2 region from which they are derived.
...
PMID:A chromosomal region 7p11.2 transcript map: its development and application to the study of EGFR amplicons in glioblastoma. 1191 99
Tumors of glial origin such as glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) comprise the majority of human brain tumors. Patients with GBM have a very poor survival rate, with an average life expectancy of <1 year. We asked whether we could identify a survival pathway in high-grade glioma and oligodendroglioma cells that when suppressed, would induce apoptosis of these tumor cells but not of normal human adult astrocytes. To identify these pathways, we selectively suppressed the activity of a number of proteins (Ras, Rac1, Akt1, RhoA, c-jun, and MEK1/2) hypothesized to play roles in cell survival. We found that suppression of Rac1, a small GTP-binding protein, inhibited survival and produced apoptosis in three human glioma cell lines (U87, U343, and U373). Serum induced the activity of Rac1 and the activity or phosphorylation state of p21-activated kinase 1 and c-Jun NH(2)-terminal kinase (JNK), two intracellular targets of Rac1. Suppression of Rac1 also induced apoptosis in 19 of 21 short-term cultures of human primary cells from grades II and III oligodendroglioma and grade IV
glioblastoma
that varied in p53,
epidermal growth factor receptor
,
epidermal growth factor receptor
vIII, MDM2, and p16/p19 mutational or amplification status. In contrast, inhibition of Rac1 activity did not induce apoptosis of normal primary human adult astrocytes. In both established glioma cell lines and primary glioma cells, apoptosis induced by the inhibition of Rac was partially rescued by activated mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase 1, an activator of JNK, suggesting that JNK functions downstream of Rac1 in glioma cells. These results indicate that Rac1 regulates a major survival pathway in most glioma cells, and that suppression of Rac1 activity stimulates the death of virtually all glioma cells, regardless of their mutational status. Agents that suppress Rac1 activity may therefore be useful therapeutic treatments for malignant gliomas.
...
PMID:Suppression of Rac activity induces apoptosis of human glioma cells but not normal human astrocytes. 1192 35
Epidermal growth factor receptor is overexpressed and/or amplified in up to 50% of glioblastomas, suggesting an important role of this gene in glial tumorigenesis and progression. In the present study we demonstrated that
epidermal growth factor receptor
is involved in regulation of telomerase activity in
glioblastoma
. Antisense-
epidermal growth factor receptor
approach was used to inhibit
epidermal growth factor receptor
expression of
glioblastoma
U87MG cells. Telomerase activity in antisense-
epidermal growth factor receptor
cells decreased by up to 54 folds compared with control cells. Moreover, the telomere lengths of antisense-
epidermal growth factor receptor
cells were shortened. In addition, the tumorigenicity of antisense-
epidermal growth factor receptor
cells was significantly inhibited. Taken together, there were strong correlations between tumorigenicity and
epidermal growth factor receptor
expression levels, and between tumorigenicity and telomerase activity. These results provide evidence that
epidermal growth factor receptor
plays an important role in the regulation of telomerase activity of glioma cells. Our findings provide new insights into both the biological functions of
epidermal growth factor receptor
and the regulation of telomerase activity. The inhibition of telomerase activity triggered by antisense-
epidermal growth factor receptor
treatment may reflect yet another mechanism of antisense-
epidermal growth factor receptor
approach in tumour suppression.
...
PMID:Antisense epidermal growth factor receptor RNA transfection in human glioblastoma cells down-regulates telomerase activity and telomere length. 1195 93
Resistance to conventional adjuvant therapies (i.e., chemotherapy and radiation) has been well documented in malignant gliomas. Unlike many other tumor types, combined modality therapy involving radiation and chemotherapy has failed to appreciably enhance outcome for
glioblastoma
patients compared with radiation alone. In vitro, we have observed an actual antagonistic effect between sequential administration of radiation and 1,3-bis(2-chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea (BCNU) chemotherapy in three primary human
glioblastoma
cell lines (referred as the GBME3-5 cell lines), which also happen to demonstrate strong expression of the
epidermal growth factor receptor
(
EGFR
). Upon inhibition of
EGFR
with the
EGFR
tyrosine kinase inhibitor, AG1478, it was found that this cross-resistance between sequential administration of radiation and BCNU was abrogated. To dissect which of these pathways may be responsible for the observed antagonism, known
EGFR
-regulated downstream signaling pathways including RAS, phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3-K), mitogen-activated protein kinase (p44/p42), and protein kinase C were inactivated with both pharmacological inhibitors and transient transfection experiments with dominant-negative and constitutively active constructs in the presence of exogenous EGF stimulation. It was found that BCNU inhibited radiation-induced apoptosis through
EGFR
-mediated activation of PI3-K/AKT via RAS. On the other hand, radiation was found to inhibit BCNU-induced apoptosis through
EGFR
-mediated activation of both PI3-K and mitogen-activated protein kinase (p44/p42) pathways, also via RAS. Inhibition of either
EGFR
or RAS activity appears to not only abrogate the observed antagonism between sequentially administered radiation and chemotherapy but actually results in a greater enhancement of apoptosis in the setting of combined modality therapy than when administered with either radiation or chemotherapy as single agents. Therefore, these findings suggest that strategies to inactivate
EGFR
or RAS signaling may be critical to improving not only the efficacy of single-agent therapy but also of combined modality therapy in gliomas.
...
PMID:The epidermal growth factor receptor pathway mediates resistance to sequential administration of radiation and chemotherapy in primary human glioblastoma cells in a RAS-dependent manner. 1215 34
Activated double-stranded RNA (dsRNA-dependent protein kinase PKR is a potent growth inhibitory protein that is primarily activated in virally infected cells, inducing cell death. Here we investigate whether selective activation of PKR can be used to kill cancer cells that express mutated genes containing deletions or chromosomal translocations. We show that antisense (AS) RNA complementary to fragments flanking the deletion or translocation can produce a dsRNA molecule of sufficient length to activate PKR and induce cell death following hybridization with mutated but not wild-type mRNA. Using the U87MG Delta
EGFR
cell line, which expresses a truncated form of
epidermal growth factor receptor
(
EGFR
), Delta(2-7)
EGFR
, we found that expression of a 39-nucleotide (nt) AS RNA complementary to the unique exon 1 to 8 junction caused selective death of cells harboring the truncated
EGFR
both in vitro and in vivo but did not affect cells expressing wild-type
EGFR
. A lentiviral vector expressing the 39-nt AS sequence strongly inhibited
glioblastoma
growth in mouse brain when injected after tumor cell implantation. This PKR-mediated killing strategy may be useful in treating many cancers that express a unique RNA species.
...
PMID:Inhibition of glioma growth by tumor-specific activation of double-stranded RNA-dependent protein kinase PKR. 1220 8
Gliomatosis cerebri is a rare, diffusely growing neuroepithelial tumor characterized by extensive brain infiltration involving more than two cerebral lobes. Among 13 patients with gliomatosis cerebri (median age, 46 years), biopsies showed features of diffuse astrocytoma (n = 4), oligoastrocytoma (n = 1), anaplastic astrocytoma (n = 5), anaplastic oligoastrocytoma (n = 1), or
glioblastoma
(n = 2). Molecular genetic investigation showed TP53 mutations in three of seven tumors and both PTEN mutation and
epidermal growth factor receptor
overexpression in one tumor. Amplification of CDK4 or MDM2 or homozygous deletion of CDKN2A was not detected. Three of 10 patients receiving radiotherapy showed a partial response (one patient) or had stable disease (two patients) lasting for more than 1 year. Four of six patients treated with procarbazine, carmustine, vincristine chemotherapy demonstrated partial remission (one patient), minor response (two patients), or stable disease (one patient). Median survival time from diagnosis was 14 months (range, 4-91+ months). Infratentorial involvement was associated with shorter survival. We conclude that (1) the molecular genetic alterations in gliomatosis cerebri resemble those in diffuse astrocytomas; (2) the prognosis of gliomatosis cerebri is variable but for at least 50% of patients as poor as for
glioblastoma
; and (3) some patients respond to radiotherapy and/or procarbazine, carmustine, vincristine chemotherapy.
...
PMID:Gliomatosis cerebri: molecular pathology and clinical course. 1232 66
Alterations of the
epidermal growth factor receptor
(
EGFR
) gene are common in some forms of cancer and the most frequent is a deletion of exons 2-7. We have previously shown that this mutant receptor, called DeltaEGFR, confers enhanced tumorigenicity to
glioblastoma
cells through elevated proliferation and reduced apoptotic rates of the tumor cells in vivo. To understand the molecular mechanisms that underlie DeltaEGFR-enhanced proliferation, we examined the gene products that control cell cycle progression. We found that levels of the cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) inhibitor, p27, were lower in U87MG.DeltaEGFR tumors than in parental U87MG or control U87MG.DK tumors. Consequently, CDK2-cyclin A activity was also elevated, concomitant with the RB protein hyperphosphorylation. In addition, activated phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3-K) and phosphorylated Akt levels were also elevated in the U87MG.DeltaEGFR tumors. U87MG.DeltaEGFR cells failed to arrest in G(1) in response to serum starvation in vitro and while maintaining high levels of PI3-K activity and hyperphosphorylated RB. Treatment of U87MG.DeltaEGFR cells with LY294002, a PI3-K inhibitor, caused reduced levels of phosphorylated Akt and concomitantly up-regulated levels of p27. Expression of a kinase dead dominant-negative Akt mutant in the U87MG.DeltaEGFR cells similarly resulted in up-regulation of p27 and down-regulation of tumorigenicity in vivo. These results suggest that the constitutively active DeltaEGFR can enhance cell proliferation in part by down-regulation of p27 through activation of the PI3-K/Akt pathway. This pathway may represent another therapeutic target for treatment of those aggressive glioblastomas expressing DeltaEGFR.
...
PMID:Mutant epidermal growth factor receptor signaling down-regulates p27 through activation of the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/Akt pathway in glioblastomas. 1243 78
Various genomic alterations have been detected in
glioblastoma
. Chromosome 7p, with the
epidermal growth factor receptor
locus, together with chromosome 10q, with the phosphatase and tensin homologue deleted in chromosome 10 and deleted in malignant brain tumors-1 loci, and chromosome 9p, with the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor 2A locus, are among the most frequently damaged chromosomal regions in
glioblastoma
. In this study, we evaluated the genetic status of 32 glioblastomas by comparative genomic hybridization; the sensitivity of comparative genomic hybridization versus differential polymerase chain reaction to detect deletions at the phosphatase and tensin homologue deleted in chromosome 10, deleted in malignant brain tumors-1, and cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor 2A loci and amplifications at the cyclin-dependent kinase 4 locus; the frequency of genetic lesions (gain or loss) at 16 different selected loci (including oncogenes, tumor-suppressor genes, and proliferation markers) mapping on 13 different chromosomes; and the possible existence of a statistical association between any pair of molecular markers studied, to subdivide the
glioblastoma
entity molecularly. Comparative genomic hybridization showed that the most frequent region of gain was chromosome 7p, whereas the most frequent losses occurred on chromosomes 10q and 13q. The only statistically significant association was found for 7p gain and 10q loss.
...
PMID:Chromosomal abnormalities in human glioblastomas: gain in chromosome 7p correlating with loss in chromosome 10q. 1250 74
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