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)

Fas/APO-1 (CD95)-mediated apoptosis is one of the major mechanisms of programmed cell death. We have previously shown by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction that Fas is frequently expressed in malignant gliomas [Tachibana et al. (1995) Cancer Res 55: 5528-5530]. In this study, we assessed Fas expression in astrocytomas using a polyclonal anti-Fas antibody. Immunoreactivity to Fas was detected in 1 out of 9 (11%) low-grade astrocytomas (WHO grade II), 2 of 11 (18%) anaplastic astrocytomas (WHO grade III) and in 13 of 15 (87%) glioblastomas (WHO grade IV). In glioblastomas, Fas expression was almost exclusively observed in glioma cells surrounding foci of necrosis. In these perinecrotic areas, there was also an accumulation of glioma cells undergoing apoptosis, as detected by in situ nick-end labeling. This suggests that Fas-mediated apoptosis may play a role in the pathogenesis of necrosis which constitutes a histological hallmark of glioblastoma multiforme.
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PMID:Preferential expression of Fas/APO1 (CD95) and apoptotic cell death in perinecrotic cells of glioblastoma multiforme. 892 52

Malignant glioma cells are susceptible to CD95(Fas/APO-)-mediated apoptosis triggered by agonistic antibody. Here we examined the proapoptotic effects of the natural CD95 ligand, a cytotoxic cytokine homologous to tumor necrosis factor, on malignant glioma cell lines LN-229, LN-308 and T98G. We assessed whether glioma cell killing is synergistically enhanced by cotreatment with CD95 ligand and chemotherapeutic agents, including doxorubicin, carmustine, vincristine, etoposide, teniposide, 5-fluorouracil and cytarabine. Synergy was examined at low concentrations of cytotoxic drugs and CD95 ligand with a defined effect level (IC15). Short-term-cytotoxicity assays showed prominent killing of the glioma cells by CD95 ligand but not by the drugs at relevant concentrations. CD95 ligand induced apoptosis in the acute toxicity paradigm was augmented by doxorubicin and vincristine. Growth-inhibition assays revealed prominent synergy between CD95 ligand and all drugs examined. The best synergy was obtained with CD95 ligand and doxorubicin, vincristine or teniposide. The strong synergistic antiproliferative effects were observed at much lower concentrations of CD95 ligand and cytotoxic drugs than the moderate synergistic acute cytotoxic effects. All cell lines examined express the Bcl-2 protein. LN-229 has partial wild-type p53 activity. T98G has mutant p53, LN-308 has a deleted p53 gene and lacks p53 protein expression. Thus, synergistic effects of CD95 ligand and cytotoxic drugs were observed in cell lines exhibiting two features thought to play a role in the chemoresistance of human malignant glioma cells: loss of wild-type p53 activity and acquisition of bcl-2 expression. Ectopic expression of murine bcl-2 conferred partial protection from CD95 ligand and drugs when administered alone but did not interfere with the mechanisms underlying the synergistic effects of CD95 ligand and chemotherapeutic drugs.
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PMID:Immunochemotherapy of malignant glioma: synergistic activity of CD95 ligand and chemotherapeutics. 911 85

CD95 ligand is a cytotoxic cytokine that induces apoptosis. Here we report that CD95-mediated apoptosis of human malignant glioma cells is associated with arachidonic acid (AA) release. Inhibitors of phospholipase A2, phospholipase C or diacylglycerol lipase have minor effects on AA release and fail to modulate apoptosis. Formation of two AA metabolites generated during CD95-dependent apoptosis is attenuated by the lipoxygenase inhibitor, nordihydroguaretic acid (NDGA). NDGA also blocks CD95 ligand-induced apoptosis. This effect is independent of antioxidant properties of NDGA. Lipoxygenase may thus play a critical role in CD95 ligand-induced apoptosis of human malignant glioma cells.
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PMID:Lipoxygenase inhibitors block CD95 ligand-mediated apoptosis of human malignant glioma cells. 919 95

Fas/APO-1 (CD95) is a cell surface receptor that mediates apoptosis when it reacts with Fas ligand (FasL) or Fas antibody. We previously reported that Fas expression is predominantly induced in perinecrotic glioma cells, suggesting that Fas induction is associated with apoptosis and necrosis formation, a histological hallmark of glioblastomas. In this study, we assessed the expression of FasL in 10 glioblastoma cell lines and in 14 astrocytic brain tumors (three low-grade astrocytomas and 11 glioblastomas). Reverse transcriptase (RT)-PCR revealed that all glioblastoma cell lines and primary astrocytic brain tumors express FasL. Immunohistochemically, FasL was predominantly expressed on the plasma membrane of glioma cells. These results suggest that FasL expression is common in human astrocytic brain tumors and may cause apoptosis of glioma cells if Fas expression is induced.
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PMID:Fas ligand expression in glioblastoma cell lines and primary astrocytic brain tumors. 921 71

Mature T cells are susceptible to activation-induced cell death in the periphery. Activation-induced cell death is thought to involve CD95/CD95 ligand interactions in vivo. Here we report that stimulated, CD45RO+ human T cell lines specific for myelin basic protein or tetanus toxoid from multiple sclerosis patients and healthy individuals resist apoptosis induced by soluble recombinant CD95 ligand in vitro. In contrast, the same CD95 ligand effectively kills Jurkat T lymphoma and human malignant glioma cells. The resistance of the T cell lines is not due to a lack of CD95 expression at the cell surface and is not overcome by coexposure to CD95 ligand and inhibitors of RNA or protein synthesis. The expression level of BCL-2 is lower in Jurkat than in Ag-specific T cells. After exposure to soluble CD95 ligand, Jurkat T cells, but not Ag-specific T cells, exhibit loss of BCL-2 and BCL-X expression whereas BAX expression is not affected. Surprisingly, Ag-specific T cells are rather sensitive to CD95 ligand expressed at the cell surface of N2A neuroblastoma cells. Accessory molecules expressed by the CD95 ligand-expressing effector cell are dispensable for apoptosis since the T cells are equally sensitive to agonistic APO-1 Ab. Further studies are required to determine whether resistance to soluble CD95 ligand-mediated apoptosis is a possible escape mechanism for T cells from peripheral deletion that may have relevance for autoimmune disorders.
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PMID:Human autoreactive and foreign antigen-specific T cells resist apoptosis induced by soluble recombinant CD95 ligand. 927 96

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.
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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.
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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

Teniposide (VM26) enhanced the anti-glioma activity of the cytotoxic cytokine, CD95 ligand. Synergy was observed at concentrations of teniposide that were insufficient for cleavable DNA topoisomerase II complex formation. CD95 ligand did not modulate the formation or removal of such complexes after teniposide treatment. These processes were also unaffected by ectopic expression of bcl-2. Teniposide enhanced CD95 expression in a glioma cell line with wild-type p53 (LN-229) but not in two p53 mutant cell lines (T98G, LN-308). Forced expression of a transdominant negative p53 mutant prevented the teniposide induced augmentation of CD95 expression in LN-229 cells but did not prevent the synergy of CD95 ligand and teniposide. Teniposide did not alter CD95 ligand expression, and forced expression of CD95 did not modulate sensitivity to VM26. Thus, teniposide-induced DNA lesions and alterations in CD95 or CD95 ligand are not necessary for teniposide-induced sensitization of human malignant glioma cells to CD95-mediated apoptosis.
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PMID:Synergy of CD95 ligand and teniposide: no role of cleavable complex formation and enhanced CD95 expression. 954 55

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.
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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.
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PMID:Necrogenesis and Fas/APO-1 (CD95) expression in primary (de novo) and secondary glioblastomas. 960 Feb 16


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