Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0017638 (glioma)
30,880 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Between 1982 and 1988, 174 brains were systematically collected from consecutive, autopsied AIDS patients in a Parisian general hospital without neurology and psychiatry departments. The data obtained under these conditions provide reliable information on the frequency of central nervous system (CNS) involvement in a non-selected population of AIDS patients, most of whom were homosexuals (75.9%). One or several lesions were observed in 148 cases (85%). HIV encephalitis and/or leucoencephalopathy with multinucleated giant cells was found in 33 cases (18.9%). Opportunistic infections were identified in 91 patients (52.3%): toxoplasmosis (65 cases; 37.3%), cytomegalovirus encephalitis (25 cases; 14.3%), cryptococcosis (9 cases; 5.8%), progressive multifocal leukoencephalitis (5 cases; 2.8%), candidosis (1 case) and tuberculosis (1 case). Neoplasias were observed in 23 patients: primary (16 cases; 17.9%) or secondary malignant non Hodgkin's large B-cell lymphoma (3 cas; 1.1%), Kaposi's sarcoma (1 case) and glioma (3 cases; 1.1%). Non-specific lesions (vasculitic, hemorrhagic, metabolic and especially microglial nodules) were common. During the 6 years of study, the rate of CNS involvement was constant. The number of toxoplasmosis cases per year was stable, however, evolutive forms were more prevalent between 1982 and 1986, whereas treated inactive lesions were seen most frequently thereafter. The opportunistic complications were often associated and it should be noted that HIV encephalitis was associated with one of several such infections in 85% of the patients. This high rate of association suggests that these opportunistic infections may play a role in the pathogenesis of HIV encephalitis.
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PMID:[Neuropathology of the brain in 174 patients who died of AIDS in a Paris hospital 1982-1988]. 131 51

Using homologous probes for the cloning of related genes within the family of guanine nucleotide-binding protein-coupled receptors, we have cloned the gene for the rhesus macaque D1 dopamine receptor. By using the rat D1 receptor coding sequence as a probe under high stringency conditions, the rhesus D1 receptor gene was isolated from a lambda EMBL3 rhesus genomic DNA library. The rhesus D1 dopamine receptor gene is intronless and encodes a 446-amino acid protein that contains two consensus sites for asparagine-linked glycosylation (Asn-5 and Asn-176) and two consensus sites for cAMP-dependent protein kinase phosphorylation (Thr-136 and Thr-268). The primary amino acid sequence of the rhesus D1 dopamine receptor shows an extremely high degree of similarity (99.6%) to the human D1 receptor. Genomic DNA analyses conducted with high and reduced stringency hybridizations indicate that the rhesus macaque D1 receptor is a member of a large multigene family. Like the human D1 receptor mRNA, the rhesus D1 receptor mRNA is approximately 4 kilobases in size and is localized predominantly in the caudate, with lesser amounts in the hippocampus and cortex. The rhesus D1 receptor coding region was inserted into the cytomegalovirus promoter-driven expression vector pcDNA-1, and the recombinant (pcDNA-D1) was cotransfected with the selectable marker pRSVneo, conferring G418 resistance, into D1 receptor-deficient C6 glioma cells. Analyses of the selected transfectant demonstrate the expression of a high affinity, functional D1 dopamine receptor. The D1 receptor radioligand [3H]SCH 23390 bound transfectant membranes with an affinity (Kd), of 0.3 nM; the D2-selective ligand spiperone, the dopamine receptor ligand clozapine, and the serotonin receptor antagonist ketanserin bound with considerably lower affinities (102, 80, and 95 nM, respectively). Both dopamine and the D1-selective agonist SKF 38393 inhibited the binding of [3H]SCH 23390 to transfectant cell membranes; the binding of these agonists was sensitive to GTP. Dopamine potently stimulated the accumulation of cAMP in transfected C6 cells, whereas SKF 38393 was a partial agonist in these cells. Also, the density of recombinant D1 receptors on the transfectant cells was decreased 40% upon treatment with 10 microM dopamine, indicating that occupation of recombinant D1 receptors by agonists alters surface expression of the receptors.
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PMID:Molecular cloning and expression of the rhesus macaque D1 dopamine receptor gene. 153 68

Association of glioma with AIDS is unusual. Cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection of glioma has not been documented in AIDS or non-AIDS patients. We present the case of a 37-year-old homosexual, HIV positive man who had a history of pneumocystis pneumonia and died of disseminated CMV infection and an anaplastic astrocytoma (5 x 5 x 4 cm) of the left temporal lobe. Part of the tumor was severely infected by CMV as demonstrated by immunohistochemical stain. Intranuclear and intracytoplasmic CMV inclusions were present in the cytomegalic cells whose astrocytic nature was identified by immunostain for GFAP. CMV-bearing cells were scattered throughout the astrocytoma but were rarely seen outside the tumor. CMV-bearing endothelial cells were seen in several capillaries within the tumor. Microglial nodules were scattered within the tumor and some contained CMV-infected cells. Many multinucleated giant cells (MNGC) with circularly arranged small nuclei were present in the infected area of the tumor and some showed fusion with cytomegalic cells. MNGC were absent outside the tumor. CMV ependymitis was not seen. The findings suggest that a) astrocytoma cells are permissive to CMV infection, b) that they may be more susceptible to CMV infection and replication than normal brain tissue, and c) the hyperplastic endothelia and abnormal blood brain barrier of the astrocytoma may facilitate the entry of CMV itno the tumor.
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PMID:Cytomegalovirus infection of cerebral astrocytoma in an AIDS patient. 165 Mar 2

The interaction between herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) and type 2 (HSV-2) and two neural cell lines, mouse neuroblastoma (N1E-115) and rat glioma (C6-BU-1), was investigated. N1E-115 cells were permissive to both types of HSV. In C6-BU-1 cells, on the other hand, all the HSV-1 strains tested so far showed persistent infection, and the infectious virus of HSV-2 strains disappeared spontaneously. The HSV-2-infected C6-BU-1 cells were positive for HSV-2-specific DNA sequences, virus-specific RNA, HSV-2-specific antigens and thymidine kinase activity, when no infectious virus was detected. The HSV-2 was reactivated from those C6-BU-1 cells by superinfection with murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV), but not with UV-irradiated MCMV or human cytomegalovirus. The reactivated HSV-2 was identical to the parental virus, when examined by restriction endonuclease cleavage analysis.
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PMID:Interaction of herpes simplex virus type 2 with a rat glioma cell line. 285 Apr 49

The susceptibility of human central nervous system cell lines to human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) and the fate of infected cultures were studied. Significant amounts of infectious progeny virus were produced in 118MGC glioma and IMR-32 neuroblastoma, but not in KGC oligodendroglioma cells when the cultures were infected with wild-type virus (HCMVwt) at an m.o.i. of 10 p.f.u. per cell. Further passage of infected 118MGC cells resulted in the establishment of a long-term persistent infection. This infection, designated 118MGC/Towne, continuously produced infectious virus (HCMVpi) with titres ranging from 10(2) to 10(5) p.f.u./10(6) cells up to 360 days post-infection (corresponding to 50 subcultures). Since no temperature-sensitive mutants, defective interfering particles or interferon-like activity were found in the 118MGC/Towne cultures, maintenance of the persistent infection seemed to be due to a balance between the release of infectious virus and the growth of uninfected cells. The HCMVpi produced in long-term persistently infected cultures was shown to be different from the HCMVwt originally used to infect by the following characteristics: HCMVpi replicated slowly and yielded lower amounts of progeny virus than HCMVwt; HCMVpi induced a 73,000 mol. wt. immediate early protein that was not synthesized in HCMVwt-infected cells; HCMVpi had a different DNA structure from that of HCMVwt. These results suggest that HCMVpi is a slower growing variant of HCMVwt and probably plays an important role in the maintenance of the persistent infection.
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PMID:Human cytomegalovirus persistent infection in a human central nervous system cell line: production of a variant virus with different growth characteristics. 302 42

A new in vitro model of normal human brain has been developed in which fetal human brain cells form three-dimensional aggregates that can be maintained for up to 60 days in culture. Cells appear fully differentiated at the time of initiation in culture; the predominant cells identified were astrocytes, neurons, and oligodendrocytes with myelin, with occasional ependymal cells and macrophages. The specific arrangement and numbers of neural cells within aggregates differed among brain specimens. Cell kinetics studies detected DNA synthesis throughout the culture interval. Aggregates cocultured with a human malignant glioma cell line (U251-MG) were progressively invaded by tumor cells. In aggregates infected with human cytomegalovirus (CMV), intracellular viral replication and morphologic changes characteristic of human brain infection with this pathogen were seen. This model of brain aggregates should prove valuable for multidisciplinary studies in human neurobiology, particularly in the fields of developmental neurobiology, neuro-oncogenesis, tumor cell invasion, and species-specific viral infection of the central nervous system.
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PMID:A normal human brain cell aggregate model for neurobiological studies. 321 35

The Myc family proteins represented by c-Myc are thought to play a crucial role in cellular proliferation, differentiation, transformation, and apoptosis. In this study, we demonstrated the novel role for a Myc family protein in elicitation of immunogenic phenotypes in tumor cells. Injection of rat 9L or C6 glioma cells, together with the s-myc gene linked to the cytomegalovirus promoter, completely prevented formation of both brain tumors and s.c. tumors derived from the parental glioma cells. However, introduction of the s-myc gene had no inhibitory effect on development of B104-derived neuroblastoma. In addition, unlike the s-myc gene, injection of the c-myc or wild type p53 (wt-p53) gene together with glioma cells did not modulate the tumor immunogenicity and resulted in formation of gliomas in the animals. These findings suggest that s-Myc expression may stimulate the presentation of a tumor antigen common to 9L and C6 cells to T lymphocytes and augment the activity of the host immune system, resulting in prevention of glioma formation in vivo. This success in tumor eradication indicates the possibility of application of the s-myc gene for gene therapy of human brain tumors.
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PMID:Modulation of tumor immunogenicity of rat glioma cells by s-Myc expression: eradication of rat gliomas in vivo. 784 17

Conventional radiolabeled antibody targeting utilized in radioimmunotherapy has resulted in limited success clinically due in part to inadequate tumor localization resulting from low expression of human tumor-associated antigens on target cells. We hypothesized that one could improve upon these limitations by genetically inducing tumor cells to express high levels of a new membrane-associated receptor with high affinity for a radioligand. As a preliminary strategy, we induced a human glioma cell line (D54 MG) to express human carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) in vitro. To accomplish this, we constructed a recombinant adenoviral vector encoding the CEA cDNA inserted downstream of a cytomegalovirus (CMV) promoter (AdCMVCEA). D54 MG cells were transfected with AdCMVCEA or an adenoviral vector encoding lacZ reporter gene as a control (AdCMVlacZ). LS174T human colon cancer cells, known to express CEA constitutively, served as positive controls. Immunofluorescence and immunohistochemistry assays employing unlabeled anti-CEA COL-1 monoclonal antibody demonstrated expression of CEA antigen on the cell surface of transduced D54 MG cells in culture. In addition, assays utilizing 125I-labeled COL-1 indicated high binding to transduced D54 MG cells expressing CEA (4.7 +/- 0.5 x 10(5) COL-1 molecules bound per cell) as compared with minimal binding to nontransduced D54 MG cells. LS174T cells demonstrated only 2.7 +/- 0.5 x 10(6) COL-1 molecules bound per cell. Thus, AdCMVCEA was able to induce levels of cell surface CEA in target cells at a higher level than CEA-overexpressing tumor cells (P < 0.01). The efficacy of transduction of recombinant AdCMVCEA by direct intratumoral injection into D54 MG xenografts was investigated by immunohistochemical analysis, immunofluorescence and by measuring 131I-labeled COL-1 uptake through external scintigraphic imaging and biodistribution studies. Expression of CEA in the tumor xenografts by, and radiolabeled antibody tumor targeting to, AdCMVCEA transduced D54 MG xenografts was comparable to that seen with LS174T xenografts. Results of these studies indicate the potential of adenovirus-mediated delivery of targets to improve radiopharmaceutical tumor localization.
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PMID:Enhancement of radiolabeled antibody binding and tumor localization through adenoviral transduction of the human carcinoembryonic antigen gene. 881 43

In this study, we investigated whether the regulation and the copy number of the herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase (HSVtk) gene increased the sensitization to ganciclovir (GCV) of glioma cell lines (Rat C6 and human U118-MG) using liposome-mediated gene transfer. Three recombinant plasmids carrying the HSVtk gene driven by the thymidine kinase promoter in single (pAGo) and double copy (pYED) or by the human cytomegalovirus promoter (pCMVtk) were used for the transfection. The DNA delivery was optimized by screening a panel of cationic liposomes using Lac-Z and luciferase as reporter genes. The efficiency of transfection reached 33% to 36% in vitro but only 18.6% in vivo after an intratumoral injection of DNA-liposome complexes. Moreover, after transfection of the three plasmids, the cell-killing effect of GCV was evaluated. A significant enhancement (four- to fivefold) of the cell sensitivity to GCV was shown in pCMVtk and pYED as compared with pAGo-transfected cells in both cell lines. According to the plasmid, the effect of the HSVtk/GCV system was confirmed by in vivo experiments and was objectified by a higher tumor weight reduction with pCMVtk (49%) than pAGo (27%). From these results, we conclude that (1) the gene transfer can be achieved by cationic liposomes both in vitro and in vivo and that (2) using this type of vector, the antitumor effect of the HSVtk/GCV system could be potentiated by the up-regulation of HSVtk gene duplication.
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PMID:Liposomal delivery of the herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase gene in glioma: improvement of cell sensitization to ganciclovir. 898 41

Because accurate regulation of toxin gene expression is critical for safe and effective gene therapy applications, the authors have examined the regulation of diphtheria toxin A (DTA) fragment expression in human glioma cell lines using two transcriptional control systems derived from Escherichia coli: the tetracycline (Tet) system and the lactose (Lac) system. The Tet system includes a tetracycline-controlled transactivator (tTA), a tTA-responsive minimum human cytomegalovirus (hCMV) promoter controlling the expression of the DTA gene, and tetracycline as an allosteric inhibitor. The Lac system includes the lac repressor (lacR), a lacR-regulated Rous sarcoma virus-long terminal repeat (RSV-LTR) promoter controlling the expression of the DTA gene, and isopropyl-thio-beta-D-galactoside (IPTG) as an allosteric inducer. Expression plasmids encoding either tTA or lacR were transfected into U-87MG and U-343MG glioma cells along with the responsive DTA plasmid. Cell killing was monitored by the ability of the toxin to abolish protein synthesis and was quantitated using a luciferase reporter gene. In the Tet system, tumor cell killing could be regulated by tetracycline up to 120-fold. In contrast, only a twofold IPTG-dependent regulation was obtained using the Lac system because of an incomplete repression of DTA expression in the uninduced state. Replacement of the RSV-LTR promoter with the heavy metal-inducible mouse metallothionein-1 promoter in the lacR-responsive unit, as well as the generation of a clonal glioma cell line expressing lacR, did not significantly enhance regulation of DTA in the Lac system. In conclusion, this study demonstrates that the Tet system is of potential use in gene therapy applications in which regulated expression of a therapeutic gene is an important issue.
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PMID:Regulated expression of the diphtheria toxin A gene in human glioma cells using prokaryotic transcriptional control elements. 920 71


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