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

A search of the records of 10 pediatric oncology centers revealed 102 children with more than one malignant neoplasm. In this group of 102 patients, all pediatric cancers were seen as initial lesions, but Wilms' tumor and retinoblastoma were over-represented and leukemia and brain tumors underrepresented. Survival variation as well as tumor susceptibility may be responsible for this disproportion. Osteosarcomas and chondrosarcomas were the most frequent second malignant neoplasms (SMN). Embryonal tumors were rare as SMN and adult-type tumors (carcinomas) appeared at earlier than expected ages, whether arising after irradiation or not related to that form of therapy. Radiation was associated with 69 SMN, genetic disease accounted for 27 SMN and both conditions were noted in 15 SMN. In the group of 21 patients for whom neither radiation nor a known genetic disorder could be implicated, there were three with colon carcinoma and glioma and five with leukemia or lymphoma and glioma. These combinations may reflect new tissue-specific hereditary cancer syndromes.
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PMID:Patterns of second malignant neoplasms in children. 19 10

High-dose thiotepa was given as a single agent at a total dose of 1125 mg/m2 with autologous bone marrow rescue to nine patients with recurrent/refractory/poor risk pediatric malignancies (primitive neuroepithelial tumor (PNET), two; neuroblastoma, one; Wilms' tumor, one; osteosarcoma, one; Ewing's sarcoma one, Hodgkin's disease one, high-grade glioma, two). The response rate in these heavily pretreated patients was 71% (five out of seven evaluable patients) including two complete responses (Wilms', glioma), three partial responses (osteosarcoma, Ewing's sarcoma, Hodgkin's disease), and two with stable disease (PNET, glioma). The median duration of response was 2.5 months. The extramedullary toxicity was acceptable with symptoms mainly of skin and gastrointestinal tract. The data indicate that high-dose thiotepa is effective in several types of recurrent pediatric solid tumors, and merits further evaluation in combination regimens.
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PMID:High-dose thiotepa with autologous bone marrow rescue in pediatric solid tumors. 176 72

From September 1984 to March 1989, 57 children received intraoperative radiotherapy as part of a multidisciplinary tumor treatment. Their age ranged from 2 to 18 years. Tumor types: osteosarcoma, 21; Ewing's sarcoma, 19; soft tissue sarcomas, 6; neuroblastoma, 5; Wilm's tumor, 3; Hodgkin, 1; glioma, 1, and malignant pheochromocytoma, 1. In 44 patients the disease was localized while 13 had distant metastases. Intraoperative radiotherapy was used in 48 previously untreated patients as part of a radical treatment program and in 9 cases as an effort to rescue local failures (5 in previously irradiated areas). The intraoperative radiation field included the surgically exposed tumor or tumor bed, and the single doses ranged from 10 to 20 Gy, with 6-20 MeV electrons. With a median follow up time of 25 months (4 to 51 + months) 44 out of 57 patients are alive without local recurrence and 13 have died from tumor (6 with local progression). Intraoperative radiotherapy seems to be a feasible treatment which might promote local control in pediatric tumors.
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PMID:[Intraoperative radiotherapy in the multidisciplinary treatment of malignant tumors in children. Preliminary results]. 263 10

The derivation of an IgG1k monoclonal antibody (HSAN 1.2) recognizing a cell membrane determinant on human neuroblastoma cells is reported. The determinant was found on all 17 cultured human neuroblastoma cells that were tested, but the density of the antigen varied widely on different cell lines. The antibody also bound to fresh and cultured Wilm's tumor cells, retinoblastoma cells, and one of two Ewing's sarcoma cell lines tested, it did not bind to mouse neuroblastoma cells, normal fibroblasts, blood, or bone marrow. Tumor cells that did not stain with HSAN 1.2 included glioma, medulloblastoma, melanoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, mesenchymoma, leukemia, and lymphoma cells. The distribution of the HSAN 1.2 antigen in normal tissues was confined to brain and newborn kidney. As few as 0.1% tumor cells in bone marrow aspirates were detectable by fluorescein-conjugated HSAN 1.2 antibody and flow cytometry. This antibody should be useful for the discrimination of neuroblastoma from other pediatric malignancies, for the detection of tumor cells in metastatic sites such as bone marrow, and for selective removal of neuroblastoma cells from marrow harvested for autologous transplantation.
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PMID:Monoclonal antibody recognizing a human neuroblastoma-associated antigen. 332 7

Neuroblastoma (NB) arises from primitive sympathetic neuroblasts in the adrenal gland or the sympathetic ganglion. NB in situ, sometimes observed in the adrenal glands of autopsied infants, is considered to be a premalignant lesion that may develop into NB. Little is understood about the morphological and biochemical changes that accompany this malignant progression. In this study, a unique monoclonal antibody, KP-NAC8, raised against a human NB cell line is described. This binds to NB cells but not to fetal neuroblasts. The antibody recognizes a Mr 200,000 surface protein on NB cells. KP-NAC8 binds to 15 of 17 human NB cell lines and all 26 fresh NB samples either from tumor tissues or from marrow aspirates involved with tumor. The antibody was found to cross-react with some other tumor cell lines, namely, Ewing's sarcoma (1 of 2), melanoma (1 of 4), lung cancer (3 of 3), and leukemia (2 of 14) cell lines. However, KP-NAC8 did not bind to any rhabdomyosarcoma (0 of 4), Wilms' tumor (0 of 4), retinoblastoma (0 of 2), glioma (0 of 4), and gastric cancer (0 of 2) cell lines examined. Among fetal tissues, KP-NAC8 did not react with normal neuroblasts in the adrenal glands of 5 fetuses. In a further study, the membrane phenotype of fetal adrenal neuroblasts was analyzed by a panel of 12 monoclonal antibodies including KP-NAC8. A comparison of the binding of the same panel of antibodies to fresh NB revealed that antibodies UJ13A, UJ127:11, PI153/3, anti-Thy-1, A2B5, BA-1, BA-2, HSAN1.2, and Leu-7 bound to both fetal adrenal neuroblasts and NB cells. Monoclonal antibodies OKIa-1 and J5 did not bind to either tissues. The only antibody that could distinguish fetal adrenal neuroblasts from NB cells was KP-NAC8. KP-NAC8 may, therefore, define a differentiation-related antigen that may prove helpful in understanding the biological nature of NB and NB in situ.
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PMID:Cell surface membrane antigen present on neuroblastoma cells but not fetal neuroblasts recognized by a monoclonal antibody (KP-NAC8). 356 10

Clinical and pathomorphological findings in 2 stillborn and 15 lifeborn children with primary intracranial tumors are reported. All infants died within the first year of life and the tumors were confirmed histologically. In 6 children the tumors (3 intracranial teratomas, 1 glioblastoma, 1 hemangioblastoma, 1 choroid plexus papilloma) were present at birth. All 6 were born with pathologically enlarged heads. Another child exhibited symptoms of brain tumor at the age of three weeks. The tumor was probably present at birth as well. In the remaining infants the signs and symptoms of tumor development became evident some months after birth. These tumors might have occurred postnatally. In a girl aged 9 months, a nephroblastoma of the right kidney and a malignant cerebral tumor, probably a glioma, were present. An incidental coexistence of both tumors is considered, however, a common etiology cannot be excluded. 8 of the 17 intracranial tumors were supratentorially situated. This supports the view that the proportion of supratentorial tumors is higher in early life than in older children.
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PMID:[Primary intracranial tumors as cause of death in the fetus and infant]. 632 94

The first three exons and the promoter of rat glia-derived nexin, also called protease nexin-1 (GDN/PN-1), have been identified through analysis of rat genomic clones. A 1.6 kilobase (kb) fragment containing 105 base pairs of the first exon and 5'-flanking sequences was sequenced. The 5'-flanking sequence and the first exon were found to be GC-rich, indicating that the 5' region of the rat GDN/PN-1 gene resides within a CpG island. A TATA box-like sequence, but no CAAT box, was found. The rat GDN/PN-1 promoter contains five SP1 consensus sites, four consensus sites for the MyoD1 transcription factor, and one binding site for the transcription factors NGFI-A, NGFI-C, Krox-20, and Wilms tumor factor. The presence of these consensus sequences is consistent with the known expression pattern of GDN/PN-1. Primer extension and RNase protection assays identified one transcriptional start site. The 1.6 kb promoter fragment cloned in a reporter plasmid was found to induce firefly luciferase expression in a cell-specific manner. A positive regulatory element is localized in the region -1545 to -389. In vitro CpG methylation blocked transcription from the GDN/PN-1 promoter in rat hepatoma cells but not in C6 rat glioma cells.
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PMID:Molecular organization of the rat glia-derived nexin/protease nexin-1 promoter. 826 20

Intracranial metastasis without pulmonary involvement of Wilms' tumor is very rare, and most previously reported metastatic sites have been in the cerebral parenchyma. We experienced a rare case of metastasis of Wilms' tumor in the tectal plate without pulmonary involvement. A 3-month-old boy was admitted to our hospital due to hydrocephalus. After insertion of a ventriculoperitoneal shunt, there were no neurological deficits. Five months after the operation, a mass 5 cm in diameter extending from the tectal plate into the third ventricle was found. A mass 10 cm in diameter within the retroperitoneal space, which occupied the right kidney, was also found. Both tumors were resected and diagnosed histologically as Wilms' tumor. Despite every effort including chemotherapy and radiotherapy, the patient died at 14 months old. The majority of children with hydrocephalus showing thickening of the tectal plate would most likely have tectal glioma; however, this unusual case report reminds us that metastasis of Wilms' tumor can occur in the tectal plate causing hydrocephalus.
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PMID:Intracranial metastasis of Wilms' tumor involving the tectal plate without pulmonary involvement. Case report. 1049 60

Tumour cells often exhibit erratic cell growth, as well as decreased gap junctional intercellular communication (GJIC). C6 glioma cells are characterized by low levels of gap junction mRNA and protein, and decreased amounts of GJIC when compared with astrocytes. Previous work has shown that C6 glioma cells transfected with connexin43 (C6-Cx43) exhibit decreased proliferation in vivo and in vitro, as well as genes that are differentially expressed between these cells. In this study, RNA levels of two CCN (connective tissue growth factor [CTGF], Cyr61/Cef-10, nephroblastoma overexpressed [NOV]) gene family members are shown to be upregulated in C6-Cx43 cells: Cyr61 and Nov. Cyr61 has previously been shown to increase adhesion, migration and growth in many cell types, whereas NOV has growth suppressive capacities. Cyr61 RNA expression is shown here to respond to serum in quiescent cells in an immediate early gene fashion, independent of Cx43 expression. In contrast, Nov RNA levels remain constant, reflective of transfected Cx43 expression. Furthermore, confocal microscopy indicates that NOV colocalizes with Cx43 plaques at the cell membrane. These findings provide insight into the possible role of Nov and Cyr61 in tumour cells.
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PMID:Determination of a potential role of the CCN family of growth regulators in connexin43 transfected C6 glioma cells. 1206 32

Many tumor cells exhibit aberrant gap junctional intercellular communication, which can be restored by transfection with connexin genes. We have previously discovered that overexpression of connexin43 (Cx43) in C6 glioma cells not only reduces proliferation but also leads to production of soluble growth-inhibitory factors. We identified that several members of the CCN (Cyr61/connective tissue growth factor/nephroblastoma-overexpressed) family are up-regulated following Cx43 expression, including CCN3 (NOV). We now report evidence for an association between CCN3 and Cx43. Western blot analysis demonstrated that the 48-kDa full-length CCN3 protein was present in the lysate and conditioned medium of growth-suppressed C6-Cx43 cells, as well as primary astrocytes, but not in C6 parental and human glioma cells. Immunocytochemical examination of CCN3 revealed diffuse localization in parental C6 cells, whereas transfection of C6 cells with Cx43 (C6-Cx43) or with a modified Cx43 tagged to green fluorescent protein on its C terminus (Cx43-GFP) resulted in punctate staining, suggesting that CCN3 co-localizes with Cx43 in plaques at the plasma membrane. In cells expressing a C-terminal truncation of Cx43 (Cx43Delta244-382), this co-localization was lost. Glutathione S-transferase pull-down assay and co-immunoprecipitation demonstrated that CCN3 was able to physically interact with Cx43. In contrast, CCN3 was not found to associate with Cx43Delta244-382. Similar experiments revealed that CCN3 did not co-localize or associate with other connexins, including Cx40 or Cx32. Taken together, these data support an interaction of CCN3 with the C terminus of Cx43, which could play an important role in mediating growth control induced by specific gap junction proteins.
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PMID:CCN3 (NOV) interacts with connexin43 in C6 glioma cells: possible mechanism of connexin-mediated growth suppression. 1521 31


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