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)

Rhabdoid phenotypic change has been described in a number of different neoplasms from diverse organ sites. These tumors share common light and electron-microscopic features, display a polyphenotypic immunohistochemical profile and often show cytogenetic abnormalities of chromosome 22. In the central nervous system (CNS), most rhabdoid tumors occur in the posterior fossa of very young children and are associated with a primitive neuroectodermal tumor (PNET) component and are designated atypical teratoid/rhabdoid tumors. Infrequently, other rhabdoid tumors of the CNS have been described, including rhabdoid meningiomas and malignant rhabdoid tumors of uncertain histogenesis. Several examples of conventional gliomas displaying significant areas with rhabdoid morphology were also presented in an abstract by Kepes and Moral [1991], although never published in final manuscript form. We now detail the case of an 18-year-old male with an aggressive, supratentorial CNS rhabdoid tumor that was associated with an epithelioid glioblastoma and apparently arose from areas of low-grade glioma. The rhabdoid tumor component was present in the original tumor but became more predominant with each of 3 successive resections. No areas of PNET were identified. Electron microscopy and immunohistochemistry showed features classic for rhabdoid tumors and cytogenetic studies demonstrated multiple tumor clones with monosomy 22. This case documents progressive rhabdoid transformation of a glioma, expands the spectrum of CNS tumor types that can display a rhabdoid phenotype and highlights the diagnostic and therapeutic challenges with this type of tumor.
...
PMID:Rhabdoid glioblastoma. 1175 80

Ependymomas are glial tumors of the brain and spinal cord. The most frequent genetic change in sporadic ependymomas is monosomy 22, suggesting the presence of an ependymoma tumor suppressor gene on chromosome 22. Thirty-three pairs of matched normal and tumor specimens from ependymoma patients were genotyped using 12 polymorphic microsatellite markers spanning the long arm of chromosome 22. Allelic deletion was found in 12 of 33 tumors (36.4%). Eight tumors showed partial deletions and 4 tumors exhibited loss of the entire arm of 22q. We identified two common regions of deletion: one at 22q11.21-12.2 flanked by markers D22S420 and D22S300, and a second candidate region at 22q13.1-13.3 between D22S274 and D22S1149. The size of each region was 21.1 and 2.4 cM, respectively. Thus, our results suggest that one or more tumor suppressor genes associated with ependymoma may be present on chromosome 22. Comparison of these results with clinicopathological data indicate that allelic losses on 22q tend to occur more frequently in intracranial anaplastic ependymomas in children and intraspinal ependymomas in adults.
...
PMID:Loss of heterozygosity on chromosome 22 in human ependymomas. 1190 62

Gliomas are common and frequently malignant tumors of the central nervous system. Recurrent allelic losses of chromosome 22 have been reported in gliomas, indicating tumor-suppressor genes at this location. However, the target genes are still unknown. We applied a high resolution tiling-path chromosome 22 array to a series of 50 glioblastoma samples, with the aim of investigating the underlying abnormalities in both constitutional and tumor-derived DNA. We detected hemizygous deletions in 28% of the tumors (14 of 50), with monosomy 22 (10 of 50) being the predominant pattern. The distribution of overlapping hemizygous deletions delineated two putative tumor-suppressor loci (11.1 and 3.08 Mb in size) across 22q. Most strikingly, we identified two distinct loci affected by regional gains. Both alterations were of germ-line origin and were unique to samples from patients affected with tumors. Analysis of these two amplified regions revealed the presence of two interesting candidate genes: TOP3B and TAFA5. The TOP3B gene encodes a protein that seems to function in the unlinking of parental strands at the final stage of DNA replication and/or in the dissociation of structures in mitotic cells that could lead to recombination. The TAFA5 gene belongs to a novel family of proteins with similarity to chemokines and brain-specific expression. The role of the identified candidate loci should be studied further. Our results demonstrated the power of array-CGH to determine DNA copy number alterations in the context of germ-line- and tumor-specific aberrations.
...
PMID:Chromosome 22 tiling-path array-CGH analysis identifies germ-line- and tumor-specific aberrations in patients with glioblastoma multiforme. 1594 96

In the CNS, primary tumors with rhabdoid components are classified as atypical teratoid/rhabdoid tumor, rhabdoid meningioma or rhabdoid glioblastoma. The authors present a young adult patient with supratentorial rhabdoid tumor incidentally found after head trauma as a small pre-existing lesion in the parahippocampal gyrus. MRI demonstrated an area of hypointensity on T1-weighted images and hyperintensity on T2-weighted and fluid attenuated inversion recovery images. A serial MR scan revealed no change 3 months after the initial examination but drastic changes at 6 months. As the tumor and accompanying intratumoral hemorrhage enlarged rapidly, resection of the tumor was performed. Histopathology revealed that the main component of the tumor was typical rhabdoid cells with some necrotic areas. There were also pathological features consistent with oligoastrocytoma. The specimen had neither vascular proliferation usually seen in high-grade glioma nor the meningothelial pattern that suggests meningioma. Immunohistochemical findings revealed that cells were strongly positive for vimentin, epithelial membrane antigen and INI-1 antibody throughout the specimen. Further, monosomy 22 was detected by fluorescence in situ hybridization. The tumor was finally thought to be an unclassifiable primitive rhabdoid tumor with oligoastrocytoma that arose in the CNS. The patient died within 5 months of detection of the tumor, regardless of surgical resection, radiotherapy and chemotherapy.
...
PMID:Primary rhabdoid tumor with low grade glioma component of the central nervous system in a young adult. 2276 44