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Query: UMLS:C0017638 (
glioma
)
30,880
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
It has been hypothesized that transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta) may prevent immune-mediated
glioma
cell elimination; however, previous work has also indicated that increased TGF-beta may lead to reduced proliferation, induction of apoptosis, and enhancement of Fas-induced apoptosis. We have investigated the role of TGF-beta in the progression of malignant
glioma
using an immunocompetent murine model. SMA 560 malignant
glioma
cells were stably transfected with constructs that resulted in over- or underproduction of active TGF-beta1. Using these cell lines, we have shown that (a) TGF-beta1 inhibits induction of antitumor cytotoxicity when the tumor cells are given s.c. but not when they are given intracranially; (b) Fas/
APO-1
is expressed on SMA 560 cells in vitro and in vivo, SMA 560 cells are susceptible to TGF-beta1- and Fas-induced apoptosis in vitro, and TGF-beta1 and Fas act synergistically to induce
glioma
cell death; (c) increased levels of endogenous TGF-beta1 production by SMA 560 cells lead to increased sensitivity to Fas-mediated apoptosis; (d) overproduction of endogenous TGF-beta1 reduces the rate of s.c. SMA 560 tumor growth and also reduces the tumorigenicity of tumors located in the central nervous system, with opposite effects observed with underproduction of TGF-beta1 using antisense cell lines; and (e) the observed changes in growth parameters in vivo were associated with increased rates of apoptosis in TGF-beta1-overproducing cells. Taken together, these results indicate that, despite decreased induction of CTL responses, the dominant net effect of TGF-beta1 on the growth of the SMA 560 murine high-grade
glioma
in vivo is growth inhibition. This contrasts with results seen with non-central nervous system malignant tumors in immunocompetent animals, in which TGF-beta1 production provides a major growth advantage.
...
PMID:Endogenous expression of transforming growth factor beta1 inhibits growth and tumorigenicity and enhances Fas-mediated apoptosis in a murine high-grade glioma model. 944 9
Several distinct intracellular pathways have been recently shown to be activated during CD95/Fas/
APO-1
-mediated apoptosis. Here, we demonstrate that CD95 ligation induces a rapid and transient tyrosine phosphorylation and activation of phosphoinositide-3-kinase (PI-3-K) in Jurkat T lymphocytes or CD95-sensitive
glioma
cells. Experiments using p56lck-deficient or p56lck-reconstituted Jurkat clones and the tyrosine kinase inhibitor herbimycin A revealed that tyrosine phosphorylation and activation of PI-3-K by CD95 depends on expression of Src-like tyrosine kinases, in particular p56lck. PI-3-K stimulation seems to be critical for CD95 receptor signalling since, first, inhibition of PI-3-K prevents CD95-mediated apoptosis and, second, CD95 receptor ligation fails to induce tyrosine phosphorylation or activation of PI-3-K in CD95-resistant
glioma
cells. Thus, PI-3-K activation may be an early signalling event during CD95-induced apoptosis, and failure to stimulate PI-3-K may predict tumor cell resistance to CD95-triggered apoptosis.
...
PMID:Cellular stimulation via CD95 involves activation of phospho-inositide-3-kinase. 944 3
The anti-tumour alkaloid taxol shows strong cytotoxic and antiproliferative activity in two human malignant
glioma
cell lines, T98G and LN-229. CD95 (Fas/
APO-1
) ligand is a novel cytotoxic cytokine of the tumour necrosis factor (TNF) family that exerts prominent antiglioma activity. At clinically relevant taxol concentrations of 5-100 nM, taxol and CD95 ligand showed significant synergistic cytotoxicity and growth inhibition. High concentrations of taxol induced G/M cell cycle arrest in both cell lines. The synergy of taxol and CD95 ligand was independent of cell cycle effects of taxol as synergy was achieved at much lower taxol concentrations than G2/M arrest and as cell cycle effects of taxol were unaffected by co-exposure to CD95 ligand. Similarly, high concentrations of taxol were required to induce p53 activity in the p53 wild-type cell line LN-229. This effect was not modulated by CD95 ligand, suggesting that synergy is also independent of p53 activation. However, taxol induced a mobility shift of the bcl-2 protein on immunoblot analysis, indicative of bcl-2 phosphorylation. Bcl-2 phosphorylation on serine was confirmed by immunoprecipitation and phosphoserine immunoblot analysis. Considering (1) that phosphorylation of bcl-2 interferes with its heterodimerization with bax and (2) the inhibition of CD95-mediated apoptosis by bcl-2, we propose that taxol sensitizes malignant
glioma
cells to CD95 ligand by increasing the functional bax/bcl-2 rheostat in favour of bax and thus cell death.
...
PMID:Taxol-mediated augmentation of CD95 ligand-induced apoptosis of human malignant glioma cells: association with bcl-2 phosphorylation but neither activation of p53 nor G2/M cell cycle arrest. 947 35
CD95 (Fas/
APO-1
) and its ligand (CD95L) belong to a growing cytokine and cytokine receptor family that includes nerve growth factor (NGF) and tumor necrosis factor (TNF) and their corresponding receptors. CD95 expression increases during malignant progression from low-grade to anaplastic astrocytoma and is most prominent in perinecrotic areas of glioblastoma. There is, however, no evidence that CD95 expression in malignant gliomas is triggered by hypoxia or ischemia. Agonistic antibodies to CD95, or the natural ligand, CD95L, induce apoptosis in human malignant
glioma
cells in vitro.
Glioma
cell sensitivity to CD95-mediated apoptosis is regulated by CD95 expression at the cell surface and by the levels of intracellular apoptosis-regulatory proteins, including bcl-2 family members. Several cytotoxic drugs synergize with CD95L to kill
glioma
cells. For as yet unknown reasons,
glioma
cells may co-express CD95 and CD95L in vitro without undergoing suicide or fratricide. Yet, they kill T cells via CD95/CD95L interactions and are sensitive to exogenously added CD95L. Since CD95L is expressed in gliomas in vivo, too, forced induction of CD95 expression might promote therapeutic apoptosis in these tumors. That
glioma
cells differ from nontransformed T cells in their sensitivity to CD95 antibodies or recombinant ligand, may allow the development of selective CD95 agonists with high antitumor activity that spare normal brain tissue. A family of death ligand/receptor pairs related to CD95L/CD95, including APO2L (TRAIL) and its multiple receptors is beginning to emerge. Although several issues regarding
glioma
cell sensitivity to CD95L/CD95-mediated apoptosis await elucidation, CD95 is a promising target for the treatment of malignant
glioma
.
...
PMID:CD95 ligand: lethal weapon against malignant glioma? 954 87
Glioblastomas may develop rapidly without clinical and histopathological evidence of a less malignant precursor lesion (de novo or primary glioblastoma) or through progression from low-grade or anaplastic astrocytoma (secondary glioblastoma). Primary glioblastomas typically show overexpression of EGFR, but rarely p53 mutations, while secondary glioblastomas frequently carry a p53 mutation, but usually lack overexpression of EGFR, suggesting that these glioblastoma subtypes develop through distinct genetic pathways. In the present study, we assessed the expression of Fas/
APO-1
(CD95), an apoptosis-mediating cell membrane protein, and its relation to necrosis phenotype in primary and secondary glioblastomas. Large areas of ischemic necroses were observed in all 18 primary glioblastomas, but were significantly less frequent in secondary glioblastomas (10 of 19, 53%; p = 0.0004). Fas expression was predominantly observed in
glioma
cells surrounding large areas of necrosis and was thus significantly more frequent in primary glioblastomas (18 of 18, 100%) than in secondary glioblastomas (4 of 19, 21%; p < 0.0001), suggesting that these clinically and genetically defined subtypes of glioblastoma differ in the extent and mechanism of necrogenesis. Necrosis and microvascular proliferation are histologic hallmarks of the glioblastoma. Following incubation of glioblastoma cell lines under hypoxic/anoxic conditions for 24-48 hours, Fas mRNA levels remained unchanged, whereas VEGF expression was markedly upregulated. This suggests that in contrast to VEGF Fas expression is not induced by ischemia/hypoxia. Analysis of Fas mRNA levels in a glioblastoma cell line containing a p53 mutation and an inducible wild-type p53 gene showed little difference under induced and noninduced conditions, suggesting that in glioblastomas, Fas expression is not directly linked to the p53 status.
...
PMID:Necrogenesis and Fas/APO-1 (CD95) expression in primary (de novo) and secondary glioblastomas. 960 Feb 16
APO2L (TRAIL) is a novel CD95L (Fas/
APO-1
-L) homologous cytotoxic cytokine that interacts with various receptors which transmit (DR4, DR5) or inhibit (DcR1, DcR2) an apoptotic signal. Here, we report that human
glioma
cell lines preferentially express mRNAs for agonistic death receptors DR4 (8/12) and DR5 (11/12) rather than the death-inhibitory decoy receptors DcR1 (4/12) and DcR2 (2/12). Ten of 12 cell lines are susceptible to APO2L-induced apoptosis. The resistant cell lines, U138MG and U373MG, are cross-resistant to CD95L-induced apoptosis. Similar to CD95L-induced apoptosis, APO2L-induced apoptosis is inhibited by ectopic expression of the caspase inhibitor, crm-A, or of bcl-2, or by coexposure to the corticosteroid, dexamethasone, or the lipoxygenase inhibitor, nordihydroguaretic acid. There is no correlation between p53 genetic status of the cell lines and their susceptibility to APO2L-induced apoptosis, but the latter is moderately enhanced by ectopic expression of wild-type p53. APO2L targeting may be a promising approach for selectively targeting apoptosis to human malignant
glioma
cells.
...
PMID:APO2 ligand: a novel lethal weapon against malignant glioma? 961 12
Fas (also known as CD95/
APO-1
) is a cell surface receptor and member of the tumor necrosis factor receptor superfamily which mediates apoptosis in sensitive cells upon oligomerization by specific antibodies or by its ligand (FasL). Recently, human
glioma
cell lines were found to be susceptible to Fas-mediated apoptosis triggered by alpha-Fas antibodies. However, whether the Fas system can also be targeted in ex vivo high grade gliomas is at present unknown. In the present investigation, alpha-Fas antibodies and FasL were tested in short-term monolayer cultures or in colony forming assays established from freshly resected tumors of patients with anaplastic astrocytomas (WHO grade III) and glioblastoma multiforme (WHO grade IV). Anti-Fas antibodies induced only moderate apoptosis in four of the 19 tested
glioma
cell cultures. This contrasts FasL which induced apoptosis in all of the 19 tumor cell cultures analyzed. Mean cytotoxicity of
glioma
cell cultures treated for 48 h with alpha-Fas antibodies or FasL was 9.6% and 44.3%, respectively. Irrespective of whether alpha-Fas antibodies or FasL were used, pretreatment with recombinant hu (rhu) IFN-gamma and rhuTNF-alpha for 48 h did not sensitize
glioma
cells to Fas-mediated cytotoxicity. The long-term effect by FasL on tumor colony formation was more striking. FasL treatment resulted in more than 90% inhibition of clonal tumor cell growth of all the eight high grade gliomas analyzed. These results suggest that Fas targeting by FasL but not by alpha-Fas antibodies may provide a promising approach for locoregional
glioma
treatment.
...
PMID:Ex vivo malignant glioma cells are sensitive to Fas (CD95/APO-1) ligand-mediated apoptosis. 967 Aug 51
Fas/
APO-1
(CD95), a cell surface cytokine receptor, triggers apoptotic cell death by specific agonist antibody, suggesting that Fas/
APO-1
may be a promising target for treatment of tumors. In this study, we show that treatment with anti-Fas antibody effectively induced apoptosis in malignant
glioma
cell lines with high expression of Fas/
APO-1
(n = 3). Malignant glioma cells with low or undetectable expression of Fas/
APO-1
(n = 6), however, were resistant to Fas/
APO-1
-dependent cytotoxicity. The purpose of this study, therefore, was to determine whether resistant tumors could be made susceptible to apoptosis. FADD/MORT1 constitutes a novel protein that associates specifically with the cytoplasmic death domain of Fas/
APO-1
and induces apoptosis. We investigated whether overexpression of FADD would induce apoptosis in malignant
glioma
cells without activating Fas/
APO-1
. Results indicated that about 85% of malignant
glioma
cells, regardless of Fas/
APO-1
expression levels, underwent apoptosis after transient transfection with FADD expression vector. To further improve gene transfer of FADD into malignant
glioma
cells, we constructed a retroviral vector containing the FADD gene. The retroviral transfer of FADD gene significantly enhanced the transduction efficiency and effectively inhibited both in vitro and in vivo survival of malignant
glioma
cells through induction of apoptosis. These findings suggest that the FADD gene is a novel and useful tool for the treatment of malignant gliomas.
...
PMID:FADD gene therapy for malignant gliomas in vitro and in vivo. 969 50
Astrocytic tumors frequently express Fas/
APO-1
(Fas), in sharp contrast to surrounding normal brain cells, providing a potential window through which selective killing of tumor cells could be pursued. To assess this possibility, we transduced Fas into U251, a
glioma
cell line resistant to anti-Fas antibody-mediated apoptosis, and obtained transfectants with high levels of Fas expression. Anti-Fas antibody showed significantly enhanced cytotoxicity for the transfectants, suggesting that U251 cells maintained an intercellular cascade of Fas-mediated apoptosis. When U251 transfectants with high-level Fas expression were transduced with Fas ligand-encoding gene via retrovirus, they were unaffected by exposure to anti-Fas antibody or Fas ligand adenovirus (Adeno-FL). Thus, retroviral induction of Fas ligand into the
glioma
cells with high levels of Fas led to the selection of cells that were resistant to Fas-dependent apoptosis. These resistant U251 transfectants were susceptible to FADD adenovirus (Adeno-FADD)-induced apoptosis, indicating that a cascade of death signals was blocked at the steps between Fas ligand and FADD. As for adenoviral transduction of Fas ligand into gliomas, gliomas with a relatively high level of expression of Fas were remarkably sensitive to Adeno-FL-induced apoptosis. Besides, Adeno-FADD induced pronounced apoptosis in all
glioma
cells. Our data suggest the possibility of using adenovirus-mediated transduction of Fas ligand and FADD genes as a therapeutic approach to target gliomas.
...
PMID:Apoptosis by retrovirus- and adenovirus-mediated gene transfer of Fas ligand to glioma cells: implications for gene therapy. 975 26
To study the morphological changes of anti-Fas antibody-mediated apoptosis in living U251-SP human
glioma
cells, we employed video-enhanced contrast differential interference contrast (VEC-DIC) microscopy. In our previous study, we investigated the susceptibility of human
glioma
cell lines to anti-Fas Immunoglobulin M (IgM) antibody. U251-SP cells express
Fas antigen
on their surface. The cells exposed to anti-Fas antibody underwent apoptotic cell death, as reported previously. In this study, morphological changes of apoptosis characterized by bleb formation, shrinkage of cells, and nuclear condensation were observed under VEC-DIC microscopy in U251-SP human
glioma
cells treated with anti-Fas antibody. These results demonstrate the usefulness of VEC-DIC microscopy to study the process of apoptotic cell death.
...
PMID:Video-enhanced microscopic visualization of apoptotic cell death caused by anti-Fas antibody in living human glioma cells. 987 59
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