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)

Morphology and growth characteristics of an osteosarcoma and a glioblastoma are described after direct transplantation in nude (thymusless) mice. In osteosarcoma neither characteristic had changed after 14 months' observation. In contrast, some of the glioblastoma transplants (22 months' observation) showed dedifferentiation of morphology and grew faster than others derived from the same biopsy. The possible reasons for the different growth pattern of the two tumors are discussed.
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PMID:[Human non-epithelial tumors in "nude" mice: morphology and growth characteristics]. 106 70

Integrins are heterodimeric transmembrane proteins with large ectodomains and a short cytoplasmic tail inside the cell. They mediate cell adhesion to extracellular matrix proteins and to the surfaces of other cells. In many cases the sequence recognised by the integrins in the extracellular matrix proteins is the tripeptide Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD). Short synthetic peptides containing this sequence can inhibit invasion in vitro and tumour dissemination in vivo. Thus, the alpha 5 beta 1 fibronectin binding integrin appears to be the key integrin in the invasion of at least melanoma, osteosarcoma and glioblastoma cells. Modulation of the level and activities of this integrin can suppress invasion, whereas the alpha v beta 3 vitronectin binding integrin appears to be associated with increased invasiveness. There is increasing evidence that some of these effects are mediated through signals elicited by the binding of integrins to their target proteins. This possibility has generated a great deal of interest in the cytoplasmic molecules that might mediate the integrin-associated signalling.
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PMID:The Walter Herbert Lecture. Control of cell motility and tumour invasion by extracellular matrix interactions. 150 96

Between 1965 and 1988, at the Children's Hospital of Buenos Aires, 22 children developed two successive malignant tumors of different histology. The first tumor was diagnosed between 3 months and 12 years of age: 13 retinoblastoma, 2 rhabdomyosarcoma, 2 non-Hodgkin lymphoma, 2 Hodgkin disease, 1 brain stem glioma, 1 endodermal sinus tumor and 1 Ewing sarcoma. Familial cancer was registered in 6 patients. Children were treated with surgery, intensive chemo and radiotherapy. The second malignancy developed after 2 to 13 years: 10 osteosarcoma, 2 Ewing sarcoma, 2 rhabdomyosarcoma, 2 glioblastoma, 1 medulloblastoma, 1 synoviosarcoma, 1 fibrosarcoma, 1 thyroid carcinoma, 1 acute lymphoblastic leukemia and 1 acute myeloblastic leukemia. In 17 patients, the tumor developed in irradiated field. There was no evidence of the first tumor and only 1 patient was still under chemotherapy. Oncologic treatment was frustrating for these second tumors and 18 children died. Three are alive with no evidence of disease at 2 years, 2 years and 4 months and 3 years after diagnosis. One patient was lost to follow-up. It if postulated that second malignant tumors are consecutive to genetic predisposition and/or to the oncogenic effect of chemo and radiotherapy. The intensity of each treatment modality must be reduced as much as possible to obtain survival while limiting the secondary effects.
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PMID:[Second malignant tumor in children. Report of 22 cases]. 210 57

Based on the two mutation hypothesis in the development of retinoblastoma, loss of heterozygosity (LOH) of specific chromosome has been implicated in the presence of tumor suppressor gene. Studies on the LOH in different types of tumors revealed that LOH of each chromosome might play a different role in the multistep process of carcinogenesis: LOH of some chromosomes may play an etiological role in the development of some tumors, while that of other chromosomes or the same chromosome in other tumors, may play a role in the progression of tumors. LOH of chromosome 13 is an example for the former cases, and the latter cases involve LOH of chromosome 17 in colorectal carcinoma and osteosarcoma, chromosome 10 in glioblastoma, chromosome 1 in neuroblastoma and malignant melanoma, and chromosome 11 in breast carcinoma. These studies indicates that the progressive or concerted LOH could be a measure of the highly malignant or metastatic potentiality. However, it should be borne in mind that, especially in polyploid tumors, LOH also occurs as a random event following the polyploidization-segregation process.
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PMID:[Loss of heterozygosity in the progression of tumors]. 267 92

In this paper we review the current data on the role of potentially lethal damage (PLD) recovery in human tumour cell lines, both in vitro and in vivo. In the case of cell lines studied in vitro, the mean recovery ratios found were higher for cells derived from tumours of low curability (glioblastoma, hypernephroma, osteosarcoma, melanoma) than for cells derived from tumours of high curability (breast carcinoma, neuroblastoma). Experiments were performed in vivo only with tumours of low and intermediate curability (melanoma, adenocarcinoma of the colon, pancreatic tumour). Although fragmentary and obtained only with established cell lines, these results argue in favour of the occurrence of PLD repair in human tumour, the amplitude of this repair being, in certain cases, sufficient to explain the incurability of a tumour by radiation therapy.
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PMID:Potentially lethal damage repair as a possible determinant of human tumour radiosensitivity. 650 62

We have studied the repair of X-ray-induced, potentially lethal damage (PLD) in 9 human tumour lines derived from tumours of varying radiocurability. Cells derived from 3 tumours considered non-radiocurable (1 osteosarcoma, 2 melanoma) repaired significantly more X-ray PLD than cells from 3 tumours considered radiocurable (2 breast, 1 neuroblastoma). The remaining tumour lines were intermediate in their ability for repair, and included cells from another osteosarcoma, a hypernephroma and a glioblastoma. We conclude that the repair of X-ray PLD may be an important cellular determinant of clinical radiocurability.
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PMID:Cellular repair factors influencing radiocurability of human malignant tumours. 705 52

Human HT1080 fibrosarcoma cells, subclone H4, express little or no Egr-1 (Zif/268, Krox 24), an early growth response gene encoding a transcription factor. Phorbol ester (but not serum) treatment only can elicit a small increase in Egr-1 expression in H4, in contrast to the normally rapid, high transient expression of Egr-1 observed after the addition of a wide range of stimulating agents to normal or immortalized cell lines. Because several human tumor cell lines express little Egr-1, we tested the hypothesis that this loss was causal to transformation. We report here that the expression of exogenous mouse Egr-1 in H4 cells inhibits transformed growth in a dose-dependent manner and significantly suppresses tumorigenicity in athymic mice. By overexpression of the fragment in Egr-1 that is responsible for its DNA-binding activity, the zinc-finger domain, we show that this domain has a similar activity. Moreover, the expression of antisense mRNA encoding the DNA-binding domain increases the transformed character of the H4 cells. One possible conclusion is that endogenous Egr-1-like genes perform growth-regulatory functions. Other human tumor lines are also growth suppressed by Egr-1 overexpression including ZR-75-1 breast carcinoma, U251 glioblastoma, and to a lesser extent, SAOS-2 osteosarcoma cells. These results are surprising in light of the "early growth response" character of Egr-1 but extend our earlier report of suppression of growth in v-sis-transformed NIH3T3 cells.
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PMID:Egr-1 negatively regulates human tumor cell growth via the DNA-binding domain. 758 51

Topoisomerase I (topo I) gene expression and cell sensitivity to camptothecin were investigated in seven human cancer cell lines not selected in vitro for drug resistance. The cell lines were of different tumor origin, and included two ovarian carcinomas (A2780 and IGROV-1), a cervix squamous cell carcinoma (A431), an osteosarcoma (U2-OS), a glioblastoma (GBM) and two different clones of a malignant melanoma (665/2/60 and 665/2/21). Topo I gene expression was evaluated by Northern blotting analysis and cell sensitivity to camptothecin was determined using the colony-forming assay after a 1 h exposure to the drug. A wide range of drug sensitivity levels was found among the examined cell lines. Cell doubling times and distribution in cell cycle phases were not correlated with camptothecin cytotoxicity. In particular, the percent of untreated cells in S phase was not predictive of the drug sensitivity. No correlation was found between level of topo I gene expression and cell response to camptothecin. These results indicate that the level of topo I expression is not the only critical determinant of cell sensitivity to camptothecin in unselected human cancer cell lines. Therefore, topo I gene expression may not be a useful predictive parameter of tumor response.
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PMID:Topoisomerase I gene expression and cell sensitivity to camptothecin in human cell lines of different tumor types. 788 2

The retinoblastoma protein family has been implicated in growth control and modulation of the activity of genes involved in cell proliferation, such as B-myb. Recent evidence indicates that the product of the B-myb gene is necessary for the growth and survival of several human and murine cell lines. Upon overexpression, B-myb induces deregulated cell growth of certain cell lines. Here we show that B-myb overexpression is able to induce DNA synthesis in p107 growth-arrested human osteosarcoma cells (SAOS2). p107 might exert its growth-suppressive activity by regulating B-myb gene transcription. Indeed, p107 down-modulated B-myb promoter activity and drastically decreased E2F-mediated transactivation. Finally, B-myb was able to stimulate DNA synthesis of both stably and transiently transfected human glioblastoma cells (T98G). Altogether, these data provide definitive evidence that the human B-myb protein is involved in growth control of human cells, and that p107 has a significant role in regulating B-myb gene activity.
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PMID:B-myb promotes S phase and is a downstream target of the negative regulator p107 in human cells. 862 1

Primary intracranial osteosarcoma not originating in the skull is a distinctly rare tumour, as is post-irradiation sarcoma of short latency. The authors report the case of a 56 year old caucasian male who underwent resection of a glioblastoma of the left temporal region and was subsequently administered partial field external beam radiation therapy (XRT) to a total dose of 5940 cGy. Seven months following the completion of XRT, an enhancing region adjacent to the surgical site was noted on followup magnetic resonance images (MRI), one which increased in size on serial studies. Initial biopsy of the dural lesion adjacent to the temporal resection site revealed a sarcoma with a suggestion of osseous differentiation. Subsequent reoperation with resection of the lesion showed it to be a primary meningeal tumour, and histological evaluation of the lesion demonstrated an osteosarcoma. Immunohistochemical staining for p53 protein performed on both the original glioblastoma and the subsequently resected osteosarcoma showed widespread nuclear positivity. The clinical, radiographic and pathologic features of this unusual case are discussed. Meningeal osteosarcoma should be included among the rare secondary sarcomas of the meninges which may be associated with malignant glioma.
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PMID:Osteosarcoma of the meninges in association with glioblastoma. 926 63


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