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)

Glioblastoma is a lethal neoplasm resistant to conventional radiotherapy and chemotherapy. Natural born killer (NBK), also known as Bcl-2-interacting killer (BIK), is a death-promoting Bcl-2 family protein sharing with Bcl-2 only the Bcl homology 3 (BH3) domain. We here report that an adenoviral vector encoding NBK (Ad-NBK) uniformly induces cell death in 12 human malignant glioma cell lines. Ad-NBK-induced cell death involves neither quantitative mitochondrial cytochrome c release nor caspase 8, 9, 7, or 3 processing and is unaffected by the viral caspase inhibitor, cytokine response modifier A (CRM-A), or selective caspase 8 or 9 inhibitors. In contrast, Ad-NBK-induced cell death is inhibited by the broad-range caspase inhibitor, zVAD-fmk, or by adenoviral gene transfer of the X-linked inhibitor of apoptosis protein (XIAP). Further, Ad-NBK-induced cell death is inhibited by Bcl-2 or Bcl-xL gene transfer. Interestingly, Bcl-2- and Bcl-xL-transfected glioma cells, which are partially protected from Ad-NBK-induced cell death, accumulate much higher levels of NBK than are ever observed in control-infected cells. This indicates that complex formation with Bcl-2 or Bcl-xL sequesters NBK in an inactive form and that free NBK, rather than an NBK-mediated depletion of free antiapoptotic Bcl-2 family proteins, is the proximate mediator of Ad-NBK-induced cell death. Conversely, proteasome inhibition-mediated accumulation of NBK strongly enhances Ad-NBK-induced cell death. Finally, Ad-NBK-infected LN-229 glioma cells are not tumorigenic in nude mice. Thus Ad-NBK triggers an XIAP- and zVAD-fmk-sensitive cell death pathway in glioma cells with potential therapeutic value, provided that NBK expression can be selectively targeted to cancer cells.
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PMID:Adenoviral natural born killer gene therapy for malignant glioma. 1295 95

Glioblastoma is one of the most malignant tumors in humans. This tumor is thought to develop as a result of the accumulation of genetic abnormalities, mainly focused on the loss of heterozygosity on chromosome 10. O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase (MGMT), which is one of the most important DNA repair proteins, has also been reported that enzymatic activity, as well as the methylation status of the promoter region of the MGMT gene, contributes to the therapeutic response of alkylating agents. We previously found three allelic variants in the MGMT gene and assayed the characteristics of these polymorphic proteins. We designed a case-control study to investigate the role of MGMT genotypic risk factors for primary brain tumors. We compared the distributions of MGMT genotypes in primary brain tumors and normal controls. The frequencies of MGMT genotypes in examined primary brain tumors were not different from normal subjects. However, the combined heterozygote of V1 and a wild allele (V1/W) was frequently detected in de novo glioblastoma group with significant difference. Interestingly, among glial tumors, the V1/W genotype was dominantly detected in the patients with de novo glioblastoma. This study suggests that the V1/W genotype of the MGMT gene may contribute to the de novo occurrence of glioblastoma.
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PMID:A genotype of the polymorphic DNA repair gene MGMT is associated with de novo glioblastoma. 1466 34

Glioblastoma is a therapeutic challenge as a highly infiltrative, proliferative, and resistant tumor. Among novel therapeutic approaches, proteasome inhibition is very promising in controlling cell cycle and inducing apoptosis. This study investigated the effect of ritonavir, a protease inhibitor of the HIV and a proteasome modulator, on glioma cells. The hypothesis was that proteasome modulation, mainly by only inhibiting proteasome chymotrypsin-like activity, could be sufficient to control tumor progression. The experiments were done on a human glioblastoma-derived GL15 cell line and a rat nitrosourea-induced gliosarcoma 9L cell line. Culturing conditions included monolayer cultures, transplantations into brain slices, and transplantations into rat striata. The study demonstrates that ritonavir, by inhibiting the chymotrypsin-like activity of the proteasome, has cytostatic and cytotoxic effects on glioma cells, and can induce resistances in vitro. Ritonavir was unable to control tumor growth in vivo, likely because the therapeutic dose was not reached in the tumor in vivo. Nevertheless, ritonavir might also be beneficial, by decreasing tumor infiltration, in the reduction of the deleterious peritumor edema in glioblastoma.
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PMID:Effects of the proteasome inhibitor ritonavir on glioma growth in vitro and in vivo. 1498 53

The concentrations of endogenous amino acids and choline in the extracellular fluid of human cerebral gliomas have been measured, for the first time, by in vivo microdialysis. Glioblastoma growth was associated with increased concentrations of choline, GABA, isoleucine, leucine, lysine, phenylalanine, taurine, tyrosine, and valine. There was no difference between grade III and grade IV tumors in the concentrations of phenylalanine, isoleucine, tyrosine, valine, and lysine, whereas the concentrations of choline, aspartate, taurine, GABA, leucine, and glutamate were significantly different in the two tumor-grade subgroups. In contrast to the other compounds, the concentration of glutamate was decreased in glioma. The parenchyma adjacent to the tumor showed significant changes only in the extracellular concentration of glutamate, isoleucine, and valine. The concentrations of choline and the amino acids, glutamate, leucine, taurine, and tyrosine showed significant positive correlations with the degree of cell proliferation. Epilepsy, which is relatively common in subjects with gliomas, was shown to be a significant confounding variable when the extracellular concentrations of aspartate, glutamate and GABA were considered.
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PMID:Extracellular levels of amino acids and choline in human high grade gliomas: an intraoperative microdialysis study. 1499 93

Glioblastoma is the most malignant form of primary brain tumor in adults, with no effective therapy and a low survival rate. TRAIL is a member of the TNF family, which selectively induces apoptosis in certain neoplastic cells, but not normal cells. In this study, we investigated the sensitivity of 7 human glioblastoma cell lines to TRAIL and the expression in them of TRAIL receptors. TRAIL exhibited significant cytotoxicity in 5 of 7 glioma cell lines. These glioblastoma cell lines expressed TRAIL-R2, but not TRAIL-R1, R3, or R4. However, no correlation was observed between the TRAIL sensitivity and the TRAIL-R2 expression level, suggesting that there is an additional determinant of TRAIL sensitivity. Treatments with NF-kappaB inhibitors, such as LLnL, MG132, and SN50, significantly increased the sensitivity of glioma cells to TRAIL. These results suggested that activation of NF-kappaB is a protective mechanism against TRAIL-induced cell death in some glioma cells, and thus NF-kappaB inhibitors may be useful to improve the clinical treatment of glioblastoma with TRAIL.
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PMID:Sensitization of human glioblastomas to tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) by NF-kappaB inhibitors. 1550 53

Glioblastoma, the most aggressive primary brain tumor in humans, exhibits a large degree of molecular heterogeneity. Understanding the molecular pathology of a tumor and its linkage to behavior is an important foundation for developing and evaluating approaches to clinical management. Here we integrate array-comparative genomic hybridization and array-based gene expression profiles to identify relationships between DNA copy number aberrations, gene expression alterations, and survival in 34 patients with glioblastoma. Unsupervised clustering on either profile resulted in similar groups of patients, and groups defined by either method were associated with survival. The high concordance between these separate molecular classifications suggested a strong association between alterations on the DNA and RNA levels. We therefore investigated relationships between DNA copy number and gene expression changes. Loss of chromosome 10, a predominant genetic change, was associated not only with changes in the expression of genes located on chromosome 10 but also with genome-wide differences in gene expression. We found that CHI3L1/YKL-40 was significantly associated with both chromosome 10 copy number loss and poorer survival. Immortalized human astrocytes stably transfected with CHI3L1/YKL-40 exhibited changes in gene expression similar to patterns observed in human tumors and conferred radioresistance and increased invasion in vitro. Taken together, the results indicate that integrating DNA and mRNA-based tumor profiles offers the potential for a clinically relevant classification more robust than either method alone and provides a basis for identifying genes important in glioma pathogenesis.
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PMID:Integrated array-comparative genomic hybridization and expression array profiles identify clinically relevant molecular subtypes of glioblastoma. 1575 62

Glioblastoma is an aggressive brain tumor with a dismal prognosis. Gene therapy may offer a new option for the treatment of these patients. Several gene therapy approaches have shown anti-tumor efficiency in experimental studies, and the first clinical trials for the treatment of malignant glioma were conducted in the 1990s. HSV-tk gene therapy has been the pioneering and most commonly used approach, but oncolytic conditionally replicating adenoviruses and herpes simplex virus mutant vectors, p53, interleukins, interferons, and antisense oligonucleotides have also been used. During the past few years, adenoviruses have become the most popular gene transfer vectors, and some recent randomized, controlled trials have shown significant anti-tumor efficacy in clinical use. However, efficient gene delivery into the brain still presents a major problem, and there is a lack of definitive phase III trials, which would avoid potential problems associated with a small number of patients, inadvertent patient selection, and overinterpretation of results based on a few long-time survivors. For clinical efficacy, median survival is one of the most rigorous endpoints. It is used here to evaluate the usefulness of various treatment approaches and current clinical status of gene therapy for malignant glioma.
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PMID:Gene therapy for malignant glioma: current clinical status. 1609 72

Glioblastoma is a fatal brain tumor that becomes highly vascularized by secreting proangiogenic factors and depends on continued angiogenesis to increase in size. Consequently, a successful antiangiogenic therapy should provide long-term inhibition of tumor-induced angiogenesis, suggesting long-term gene transfer as a therapeutic strategy. In this study a soluble vascular endothelial growth factor receptor (sFlt-1) and an angiostatin-endostatin fusion gene (statin-AE) were codelivered to human glioblastoma xenografts by nonviral gene transfer using the Sleeping Beauty (SB) transposon. In subcutaneously implanted xenografts, co-injection of both transgenes showed marked anti-tumor activity as demonstrated by reduction of tumor vessel density, inhibition or abolition of glioma growth, and increase in animal survival (P = 0.003). Using luciferase-stable engrafted intracranial gliomas, the anti-tumor effect of convection-enhanced delivery of plasmid DNA into the tumor was assessed by luciferase in vivo imaging. Sustained tumor regression of intracranial gliomas was achieved only when statin-AE and sFlt-1 transposons were coadministered with SB-transposase-encoding DNA to facilitate long-term expression. We show that SB can be used to increase animal survival significantly (P = 0.008) by combinatorial antiangiogenic gene transfer in an intracranial glioma model.
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PMID:Combinatorial antiangiogenic gene therapy by nonviral gene transfer using the sleeping beauty transposon causes tumor regression and improves survival in mice bearing intracranial human glioblastoma. 1615 Jun 49

Glioblastoma multifome is the most common and most aggressive primary brain tumor with no current curative therapy. We found expression of the bZip transcription factor ATF5 in all 29 human glioblastomas and eight human and rat glioma cell lines assessed. ATF5 is not detectably expressed by mature brain neurons and astrocytes, but is expressed by reactive astrocytes. Interference with ATF5 function or expression in all glioma cell lines tested causes marked apoptotic cell death. In contrast, such manipulations do not affect survival of ATF5-expressing cultured astrocytes or of several other cell types that express this protein. In a proof-of-principle experiment, retroviral delivery of a function-blocking mutant form of ATF5 into a rat glioma model evokes death of the infected tumor cells, but not of infected brain cells outside the tumors. The widespread expression of ATF5 in glioblastomas and the selective effect of interference with ATF5 function/expression on their survival suggest that ATF5 may be an attractive target for therapeutic intervention in such tumors.
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PMID:Selective destruction of glioblastoma cells by interference with the activity or expression of ATF5. 1617 Mar 40

Glioblastoma (GBM) is a highly malignant glioma, which has the propensity to infiltrate throughout the brain in contrast to pilocytic astrocytoma (PA) of the posterior fossa, which does not spread and can be cured by surgery. We have used Suppression Subtractive Hybridization to define markers that better delineate the molecular basis of brain invasion and distinguish these tumor groups. We have identified 106 genes expressed in PA versus GBM and 80 genes expressed in GBM versus PA. Subsequent analysis identified a subset of 20 transcripts showing a common differential expression pattern for the two groups. GBM differs from PA by the expression of five genes involved in invasion and angiogenesis: fibronectin, osteopontin, chitinase-3-like-1 (YKL-40), keratoepithelin and fibromodulin. PA differs from GBM by the expression of genes related to metabolism (apolipoprotein D), proteolysis (protease-serine-11), receptor and signal transduction (PLEKHB1 for Pleckstrin-Homology-domain-containing-protein-family-B-member-1), transcription/translation (eukaryotic-translation-elongation-factor-1-alpha1) processes and cell adhesion (SPOCK1 for SPARC/Osteonectin-CWCV-kazal-like-domains-proteoglycan). The expression of these genes was confirmed by real-time quantitative RT-PCR and immunohistochemistry. This study highlights the crucial role of brain invasion in GBM and identifies specific molecules involved in this process. In addition, it offers a restricted list of markers that accurately distinguish PA from GBM.
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PMID:Identification of genes differentially expressed in glioblastoma versus pilocytic astrocytoma using Suppression Subtractive Hybridization. 1631 30


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