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)

Radiosensitive cell lines derived from X-ray cross complementing group 5 (XRCC5), SCID mice and a human glioma cell line lack components of the DNA-dependent protein kinase, DNA-PK, suggesting that DNA-PK plays an important role in DNA double-strand break repair. Another enzyme implicated in DNA repair, poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase, is cleaved and inactivated during apoptosis, suggesting that some DNA repair proteins may be selectively targeted for destruction during apoptosis. Here we demonstrate that DNA-PKcs, the catalytic subunit of DNA-PK, is preferentially degraded after the exposure of different cell types to a variety of agents known to cause apoptosis. However, Ku, the DNA-binding component of the enzyme, remains intact. Degradation of DNA-PKcs was accompanied by loss of DNA-PK activity. One cell line resistant to etoposide-induced apoptosis failed to show degradation of DNA-PKcs. Protease inhibitor data implicated an ICE-like protease in the cleavage of DNA-PKcs, and it was subsequently shown that the cysteine protease CPP32, but not Mch2alpha, ICE or TX, cleaved purified DNA-PKcs into three fragments of comparable size with those observed in cells undergoing apoptosis. Cleavage sites in DNA-PKcs, determined by antibody mapping and microsequencing, were shown to be the same for CPP32 cleavage and for cleavage catalyzed by extracts from cells undergoing apoptosis. These observations suggest that DNA-PKcs is a critical target for proteolysis by an ICE-like protease during apoptosis.
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PMID:DNA-dependent protein kinase catalytic subunit: a target for an ICE-like protease in apoptosis. 867 Aug 24

The severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) mouse was investigated as a model system to study the growth and immunogenicity of human gliomas. Human glioma cell lines U-251MG, KNS-42, SF-188, A-172, and T-98G were injected subcutaneously into SCID mice. The cell lines U-251MG and KNS-42 grew as large, subcutaneous masses; SF-188, A-172, and T-98G did not grow. Glioma-immune system interactions were studied by the transplantation of human peripheral blood lymphocytes into tumor-bearing SCID mice. In the resultant SCID-human (SCID-hu) mice, transplanted lymphocytes infiltrated into the subcutaneously growing tumors and expressed the surface markers of human B, T, and natural killer cells. The SCID-hu mouse is a potentially powerful model to study the basic tumor biology of some human gliomas and also represents a useful screening system to evaluate experimental immunotherapies for brain tumors.
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PMID:Growth and immunogenicity of human glioma in severe combined immunodeficiency-human mice. 871 50

In contrast to reports of extensive hypoxia in human gliomas in situ measured by pO2 histography, non-invasive methods of assessing glioma oxygenation, including nitroimidazole binding, have yielded surprisingly contradictory results. In order to investigate the relationship of necrosis, hypoxia, nitroreductase activity and cellular respiration in human gliomas, subcutaneous models using the human glioma cell lines M059K, M006 and M010b were developed in the murine SCID host. Intracranial growth of the M006 line was achieved in nude rats. The nitroreductive capacity of glioma cell lines was assessed and found to be similar to transplanted tumours previously reported in the literature. This suggests that if substantial numbers of viable hypoxic cells were present in situ in gliomas, then nitroimidazole-binding techniques should be capable of identifying them. Inter-tumour variability in the amount of necrosis was seen. M006 xenografts growing in subcutaneous and intracranial sites revealed extensive necrotic regions histologically, some of which were surrounded by cells labelled heavily for [3H]misonidazole, while other areas were lightly labelled. Similar binding patterns were seen for subcutaneous M059K tumours, while subcutaneous M010b tumours display necroses of which almost all were surrounded by heavily labelled cells. The oxygen consumption rates of tumour cell lines grown in vivo, in which venous pO2 concentrations are of the order of 2-5%, were two to sevenfold less than those of the same lines grown as monolayers in vitro under oxygen concentrations of 18%. We postulate that glioma cell lines behave as 'oxygen conformers', in that their rate of oxygen consumption appears to vary with the availability of oxygen. Together with the misonidazole-binding data, the results in this glioma tumour model are consistent with coordinate inhibition or down-regulation of respiration under moderate hypoxia.
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PMID:Anomalous patterns of nitroimidazole binding adjacent to necrosis in human glioma xenografts: possible role of decreased oxygen consumption. 902 Apr 73

Transfer of the herpes simplex thymidine kinase gene (HSVtk) into tumor cells followed by the administration of ganciclovir (GCV) provides a potential strategy for the treatment of some malignancies. During GCV treatment, not only the cells that express the HSVtk gene are killed but also frequently neighboring tumor cells that are not genetically altered. This has been called the "bystander effect." Although the mechanism of the bystander effect in vivo remains elusive, our results suggest that gap junction formation between neighboring cells is an important contributing factor. The C6 rat glioma cell line, which exhibits a low level of intercellular communication by gap junctions and connexin43 (Cx43)-transfected clones of this cell line forming gap junctions from a moderate level (Cx43-12 and Cx43-14) to a high level (Cx43-13), were transduced with HSVtk. Transduced and nontransduced cells were mixed in various concentrations and then cultured in vitro or injected s.c. into C.B-17/SCID-beige mice followed by i.p. injections of GCV. Cx43-transfected clones showed a significant increase of the bystander effect compared with the less coupled C6 parental cell line. In 11 of 12 mice injected with cells of Cx43-transfected clones, no tumors were seen at the inoculation site when a mixture of 50% HSVtk-negative and HSVtk-positive cells was used. Moreover, in mice injected with cells of clone Cx43-13, which exhibits the highest intercellular communication, tumors were frequently undetectable at the inoculation site when using mixtures of 75% HSVtk-negative and 25% HSVtk-positive cells, and even mixtures containing 5% HSVtk-positive cells of Cx43-transfected clones showed tumor size reduction. All animals in control groups (n = 26) developed large tumors at every injection site. These results demonstrate that gap junctions are an important component in mediating the bystander effect in vivo.
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PMID:Gap junctions promote the bystander effect of herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase in vivo. 910 55

Scatter factor (SF), also known as hepatocyte growth factor, is angiogenic in systemic tissue, and SF titers correlate with the malignancy and metastatic phenotype of certain systemic cancers. Human gliomas express SF and its receptor c-met, but their role in the malignant progression of these tumors has not been defined. To examine this, 9L glioma cells that express c-met but not SF were transfected with human SF cDNA, and their behavior in vitro and in vivo was examined. SF gene expression was detected in conditioned medium of 9L-SF but not in control 9L-neo-transfected cell lines, by reverse transcriptase-PCR, immunoblot, ELISA, and scatter activity assays. Gliomas derived from 9L-SF and control 9L-neo cell lines implanted in the caudate/putamen of Fisher 344 rats (intracranially) and in the flanks of SCID/Beige mice (subcutaneously) were examined. Extracts from intracranial (i.c.) gliomas contained elevated levels of SF protein as determined by ELISA (1 to 5.5 ng SF/mg protein), whereas no SF was detected in control tumors. Reverse transcriptase-PCR of RNA from i.c. gliomas revealed that only 9L-SF gliomas expressed SF and both 9L-neo and 9L-SF gliomas expressed the c-met SF receptor. By postimplantation Day 14, 9L-SF i.c. gliomas were approximately 5-fold larger than 9L-neo control tumors (p < 0.001). Subcutaneous 9L-SF glioma growth was also greater than that in controls, although the differences were more variable. SF-producing i.c. gliomas contained elevated levels of 48-kd urokinase (3.5-fold) and 92-kd type IV collagenase (2.8-fold), both enzymes that correlate with the malignant progression of human gliomas (p < 0.001). SF-producing and control 9L cell lines did not differ in rates of proliferation, thymidine incorporation, or adhesion-independent growth in vitro. Conditioned medium from 9L-SF cells stimulated thymidine incorporation into microvessel brain endothelial cells 3- to 4-fold higher than did CM from 9L-neo controls (p < 0.001). Intracranial 9L-SF gliomas were more angiogenic than controls based on elevated peak (2.25-fold; p < 0.005) and mean (1.7-fold; p < 0.008) blood vessel densities. These results suggest that SF production by glioma cells enhances glioma malignancy in vivo, in part, by paracrine mechanisms involving glioma-associated angiogenesis.
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PMID:Scatter factor/hepatocyte growth factor gene transfer enhances glioma growth and angiogenesis in vivo. 911 17

Some cell lines grown for only two cell doublings as multicell spheroids develop a form of resistance to killing by ionizing radiation that has been called the "contact" effect. While our previous results have implicated a role for higher order chromatin structure in the contact effect, another possible explanation is the presence of intercellular gap junctions that might facilitate communication between cells grown as spheroids and thereby enhance the ability of cells to resist or recover from radiation damage. To examine the role of gap junctions in the contact effect, rat glioma C6 and mouse EMT6 cell lines were transfected with a gene encoding the gap junctional protein connexin43. While C6 glioma cells are deficient in gap junctional communication, cells from spheroids were nonetheless more resistant than monolayers to killing by ionizing radiation, and the contact effect was present to a similar extent in the three transfected clones. For mouse EMT6 cells, radiosensitivity was similar whether cells were grown as monolayers or spheroids. Transfection of EMT6 cells with connexin43 increased gap junctional communication but did not promote development of a contact effect. Tumor volume doubling time in SCID mice increased significantly for one transfected clone; however, doubling time in vitro was also increased relative to the EMT6 parent. We conclude that extensive gap junctional communication is not a requirement for the increased radiation resistance observed when some cell lines are grown as spheroids.
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PMID:Radiation response of connexin43-transfected cells in relation to the "contact effect". 926 Aug 89

The analysis of the role of DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PK) in DNA double-strand break repair and V(D)J recombination is based primarily on studies of murine scid, in which only the C-terminal 2% of the protein is deleted and the remaining 98% is expressed at levels that are within an order of magnitude of normal. In murine scid, signal joint formation is observed at normal levels, even though coding joint formation is reduced over three orders of magnitude. In contrast, a closely associated protein, Ku, is necessary for both coding and signal joint formation. Based on these observations, a reasonable hypothesis has been that absence of the DNA-PK protein (rather than merely its C-terminal 2% truncation) would ablate signal joint formation along with coding joint formation. In fact, a study of equine SCID, in which there is a much larger truncation of the DNA-PK protein, has suggested that signal joints do fail to form. In our current study, we have analyzed signal and coding joint formation in a malignant glioma cell line, M059J, which was previously shown to be deficient in DNA-PK. Our quantitative analysis shows that full-length protein levels are reduced at least 200-fold, to a level that is undetectable, yet signal joint formation occurs at wild-type levels. This result demonstrates that at least this form of non-homologous DNA end joining can occur in the absence of DNA-PK.
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PMID:DNA-PK is essential only for coding joint formation in V(D)J recombination. 970 2

Synthetic matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) inhibitors have activity against a variety of tumors in preclinical models but have not been studied in gliomas. We determined the effect of AG3340, a novel synthetic MMP inhibitor with Ki values against gelatinases in the low picomolar range, on the growth of a human malignant glioma cell line (U87) in SCID-NOD mice. Mice were injected s.c. with U87 cells. Tumors were allowed to grow to a size of approximately 0.5 x 0.5 cm (after about 3 weeks), and the mice were randomized to receive either: (a) 100 mg/kg AG3340 in vehicle; or (b) vehicle control (0.5% carboxymethyl cellulose, 0.1% pluronic F68), both given daily i.p. Tumor area was measured twice weekly, and animals were sacrificed when moribund, or earlier if premorbid histology was examined. In vivo inhibition of tumor growth was profound, with AG3340 decreasing tumor size by 78% compared with controls after 31 days (when controls were sacrificed; P < 0.01, Wilcoxon test). Control animals survived 31 days after the i.p. injections began, and AG3340 mice survived 71 days, representing a >2-fold increase in survival associated with tumor growth delay. Histological examination found that AG3340-treated tumors were smaller, had lower rates of proliferation, and significantly less invasion than control-treated tumors. Hepatic or pulmonary metastases were not seen in either group. In a separate experiment, the tumors were smaller and sampled after a shorter duration of treatment; the changes in proliferation were more marked and occurred earlier than differences in tumor invasion between the two groups. Furthermore, in vitro cell growth was not inhibited at AG3340 concentrations of <1 mM. AG3340 plasma concentrations in vivo, 1 h after administration, ranged from 67 to 365 nM. Thus, AG3340 produced a profound inhibition of glioma tumor growth and invasion. AG3340 markedly increased survival in this in vivo glioma model. Treatment with AG3340 may be potentially useful in patients with malignant gliomas.
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PMID:Marked inhibition of tumor growth in a malignant glioma tumor model by a novel synthetic matrix metalloproteinase inhibitor AG3340. 1021 21

Ganglioside sialic acid content was examined in the U87-MG human glioma grown as cultured cells and as a xenograft in severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) mice. The cultured cells and the xenograft possessed N-glycolylneuraminic acid (NeuGc)-containing gangliosides, despite the inability of human cells to synthesize NeuGc. Human cells express only N-acetylneuraminic acid (NeuAc)-containing gangliosides, whereas mouse cells express both NeuAc- and NeuGc-containing gangliosides. Small amounts of NeuGc ganglioside sialic acid (2-3% of total ganglioside sialic acid) were detected in the cultured cells, whereas large amounts (66% of total ganglioside sialic acid) were detected in the xenograft. The NeuGc in gangliosides of the cultured cells was derived from gangliosides in the fetal bovine serum of the culture medium, whereas that in the U87-MG xenograft was derived from gangliosides of the SCID host. The chromatographic distribution of U87-MG gangliosides differed markedly between the in vitro and in vivo growth environments. The neutral glycosphingolipids in the U87-MG cells consisted largely of glucosylceramide, galactosylceramide, and lactosylceramide, and their distribution also differed in the two growth environments. Asialo-GM1 (Gg4Cer) was not present in the cultured tumor cells but was expressed in the xenograft, suggesting an origin from infiltrating cells (macrophages) from the SCID host. The infiltration of mouse host cells and the expression of mouse sialic acid on human tumor cell glycoconjugates may alter the biochemical and immunogenic properties of xenografts.
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PMID:Expression of mouse sialic acid on gangliosides of a human glioma grown as a xenograft in SCID mice. 1038 78

A large animal tumor model for anaplastic glioma has been recently developed using immunotolerant allogeneic Beagle dogs and an established canine glioma cell line, J3T. This model offers advantages in terms of tumor morphology and similarity to human anaplastic glioma. The present study was aimed at evaluating the biological characteristics of the J3T canine glioma cell line as related to experimental gene therapy studies. Furthermore, development and morphology of canine brain tumors in a xenogeneic immunodeficient SCID mouse model was investigated. It was demonstrated that cultured J3T cells can be efficiently infected by adenovirus (AV), herpes-simplex type I (HSV), or retrovirus (RV) vectors, as well as by non-virus vectors such as cationic liposome/DNA complexes. Thus, in terms of infectability and transfectability, J3T cells seem to be closer to human glioma than the 9L rodent gliosarcoma. Cytotoxicity of selection antibiotics such as G418, puromycin, and hygromycin on J3T cells essentially resemble cytotoxicity seen with other established glioma lines, for example, 9L, U87, or U343. RV-mediated HSV-TK/GCV gene therapy demonstrated comparable LD50 for TK-expressing and control (non-expressing) J3T and 9L cells treated with Ganciclovir. Further, it was proven that J3T cells are tumorigenic and may grow heterotopically and orthotopically in a xenogeneic immunodeficient host, the SCID mouse, although morphology and growth pattern of these xenogeneic tumors differ from the demonstrated invasive phenotype in the Beagle dog.
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PMID:Characterization of a canine glioma cell line as related to established experimental brain tumor models. 1090 Dec 32


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