Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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Enzyme
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Query: UMLS:C0017638 (
glioma
)
30,880
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We developed a culture system for the rapid generation of CD4+ T cells that have both helper and killer functions. CD4+ T cells isolated from human PBL did not proliferate or develop significant cytotoxicity when treated with rIL-2 because of the lack of p75 IL-2R expression. However, culture of isolated CD4+ T cells with immobilized anti-CD3 mAb plus rIL-2 resulted in a marked proliferation (500-fold increase in 14 days) of CD4+ T cells. The proliferating CD4+ T cells produced IL-2 (92 U/ml) and showed strong cytotoxicity against OKT3 hybridoma cells and Daudi, K562, and U937 tumor cells in an anti-CD3 mAb-dependent manner. The CD4+ T cells contained significant amounts of cytolytic granule-related proteins such as
serine esterase
and perforin. Activated CD4+ helper/killer cells can be generated from both healthy donors and tumor patients and can be propagated in vitro for 14 to 35 days by biweekly restimulation with immobilized anti-CD3 mAb plus rIL-2. This culture yielded about 20,000-fold increase in cell number after a 21-day culture. Bispecific antibody containing anti-CD3 and anti-
glioma
Fab components enhanced the cytotoxicity of activated CD4+ helper/killer cells against IMR32
glioma
cells. Moreover, the activated CD4+ helper/killer cells showed both helper and antitumor activity in vivo and prevented growth of anti-CD3 hybridoma cells in nude mice whether or not IL-2 was administered. These results indicate that anti-CD3 mAb plus IL-2-activated CD4+ helper/killer cells may provide an effective strategy for adoptive tumor immunotherapy of cancer.
...
PMID:Generation propagation, and targeting of human CD4+ helper/killer T cells induced by anti-CD3 monoclonal antibody plus recombinant IL-2. An efficient strategy for adoptive tumor immunotherapy. 134 87
The nature of vascular permeability factor (VPF) activity derived from serum-free conditioned medium containing cultured human malignant
glial tumors
has been further investigated. A 1000-fold purification was accomplished by sequential heparin-Sepharose affinity chromatography and high-performance liquid chromatography gel filtration chromatography steps. Vascular permeability factor activity falls into a molecular weight range of 41,000 to 56,000 D. Activity is bound to hydroxylapatite, carboxymethyl-Sepharose, phenyl-Sepharose, and heparin-Sepharose, whereas little or no activity was bound to diethylaminoethyl-Sephacel. Vascular permeability factor activity is trypsin- and pepsin-sensitive but is unaffected by treatment with ribonuclease A. This suggests that VPF is a hydrophobic, positively charged (cationic) polypeptide with a potentially biologically significant affinity for heparin. As most proteins are negatively charged (anionic) and have no affinity for heparin, a significant advantage was gained by performing these purification steps. The activity of VPF is not inhibited by coinjection of conditioned medium with soybean trypsin inhibitor; or hexadimethrine (both known antagonists of tissue plasminogen activator, Hageman factor, and serum kallikrein); or aprotinin (an antagonist of both plasmin and tissue kallikrein); or phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride (a
serine esterase
(elastase) inhibitor); or pepstatin-A (an acid protease inhibitor which inactivates vascular permeability-inducing leukokinins). These data, together with the fact that VPF is produced and released into serum-free media, provides substantial evidence against it being one of the more commonly known serum-derived permeability mediators. Treatment with dithiothreitol inhibited VPF activity, indicating the presence of at least one essential disulfide bond in this molecule. Inhibition by dexamethasone of VPF expression in cultured malignant glial cells appears to be selective. Dexamethasone-induced inhibition of VPF was dose-responsive and was not associated with a parallel inhibition of cellular protein synthesis as determined by tritiated leucine incorporation into trichloroacetic acid-precipitable material. Inclusion of dexamethasone in the culture medium was not associated with altered cell viability or cell number. A series of in vivo studies confirmed the inhibition of VPF activity in test animals pretreated with dexamethasone. This steroid-induced inhibition was partially reversed by treatment of test animals with actinomycin D prior to exposure to dexamethasone.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Further characterization of malignant glioma-derived vascular permeability factor. 313 21
A unique tissue kallikrein-binding protein was identified and partially characterized in the brain and serum of Sprague-Dawley rats and in the serum-free conditioned media of mouse anterior pituitary cells (AtT 20) and rodent neuroblastoma x
glioma
hybrids (NG108-15). Kallikrein and kallikrein-binding protein(s) form SDS- and heat-stable complexes with a molecular weight (Mr) of approximately 92,000. The complex formation of 125I-labelled kallikrein and the binding protein in the serum and brain is inhibited by excess unlabelled rat urinary kallikrein, rat arginine
esterase A
(a kallikrein-like kininogenase), and human urinary kallikrein. When the active site of kallikrein was blocked by phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride or D-Phe-D-Phe-L-Arg-CH2Cl, no complex formation was detected. Kallikrein-binding protein only forms complexes with active kallikrein or trypsin-activated prokallikrein but not with prokallikrein. 125I-labelled kallikrein forms a 92-kilodalton protein with binding protein in various brain regions of perfused normotensive rats of the Wistar-Kyoto strain (WKY), including the cerebral cortex, cerebellum and brain stem; but complex formation was not found in corresponding brain regions of the spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR). Similarly, the kallikrein-binding protein was identified in various tissues including thymus, lung, liver, prostate, Cowper's gland, adrenal gland, kidney, and pancreas of WKY rats but not in tissues of SHR. The results suggest a major difference in the kallikrein-binding protein in hypertensive versus normotensive rats. The role of this specific kallikrein-binding protein in cellular hemodynamic processes and blood pressure regulation remains to be investigated.
...
PMID:A major difference of kallikrein-binding protein in spontaneously hypertensive versus normotensive rats. 317 Nov 70
Rose bengal, a xanthene derivative among the most efficient producer of singlet oxygen, was submitted to a chemical modification consisting in the introduction of an acetate group into the aromatic ring fluorophore structure. The acetate group acts as a quencher, thus inactivating both fluorescence and photosensitization properties of the molecule. In the modified structure, rose bengal acts as a fluorogenic substrate giving rise to the cellular reaction termed fluorochromasia. The acetate group is recognized by a
carboxylic esterase
activity that splits it. Removal of the quencher group results in restoring the native structure of photosensitizer inside the cells. The intracellular turnover of rose bengal acetate was studied in rat
glioma
-derived cultures cells, in terms of the balance of the processes of influx and enzyme hydrolysis of the fluorogenic substrate, and of the efflux of the fluorescent product. A large intracellular accumulation of photosensitizer is obtained when treatments are performed with the fluorogenic substrate, even at the drug concentration at which rose bengal does not enter the cells. The intracellular localization allows rose bengal to exert a more effective photosensitization effect. Provided that the quencher group is selected according to the metabolic properties of the tumor cells, the use of fluorogenic substrates as photosensitizer precursors could improve fluorescence diagnosis and the photodynamic therapy of tumors, exploiting the biological properties that distinguish pathological from normal conditions.
...
PMID:Enzyme-assisted cell photosensitization: a proposal for an efficient approach to tumor therapy and diagnosis. The rose bengal fluorogenic substrate. 929 81
Although the prognosis of childhood cancers has dramatically improved over the last three decades, new active drugs are needed. Camptothecins represent a very attractive new class of anticancer drugs to develop in paediatric oncology. The preclinical and clinical development of two of these DNA-topoisomerase I inhibitors, i.e. topotecan and irinotecan, is ongoing in paediatric malignancies. Here we review the currently available results of this evaluation. Topotecan proved to be active against several paediatric tumour xenografts. In paediatric phase I studies exploring several administration schedules, myelosuppression was dose-limiting. The preliminary results of topotecan evaluation in phase II study showed antitumour activity in neuroblastoma (response rate: 15% at relapse and 37% in newly diagnosed patients with disseminated disease) and in metastatic rhabdomyosarcoma (40% in untreated patients). Topotecan-containing drug combinations are currently investigated. Irinotecan displayed a broad spectrum of activity in paediatric solid tumour xenografts, including rhabdo-myosarcoma, neuroblastoma, peripheral primitive neuroectodermal tumour, medulloblastoma, ependymoma, malignant
glioma
and juvenile colon cancer. For several of these histology types, tumour-free survivors have been observed among animals bearing an advanced-stage tumour at time of treatment. The clinical evaluation of irinotecan in children is ongoing. Irinotecan undergoes a complex in vivo biotransformation involving several enzyme systems, such as
carboxylesterase
, UDPGT and cytochrome P450, in children as well as in adults. Preclinical studies of both drugs have shown that their activity was schedule-dependent. The optimal schedule of administration is an issue that needs to be addressed in children. In conclusion, the preliminary results of the paediatric evaluation of camptothecin derivatives show very encouraging results in childhood malignancies. The potential place of camptothecins in the treatment of paediatric malignant tumours is discussed.
...
PMID:Preclinical development of camptothecin derivatives and clinical trials in pediatric oncology. 961 66
We have isolated a cDNA encoding a rabbit
carboxylesterase
(CE;
EC 3.1.1.1
) that converts the camptothecin-derived prodrug irinotecan (CPT-11) to the potent topoisomerase I inhibitor 7-ethyl-10-hydroxycamptothecin. NH2-terminal amino acid sequencing of a purified rabbit CE allowed the design of redundant oligonucleotides to perform PCR from rabbit liver cDNA. DNA sequencing of the PCR product confirmed the identity of the clone, and after both 5' and 3' rapid amplification of cDNA ends, oligonucleotide primers were designed to amplify the entire cDNA. The 1698-bp open reading frame encoded a 565-amino acid protein containing the characteristic CE B-1 and B-2 motifs, a hydrophobic NH2-terminal leader sequence, and the COOH-terminal residues HIEL that are thought to be responsible for protein localization in the endoplasmic reticulum. Transient expression of the cDNA in COS-7 cells resulted in CE activity in cell extracts and increased the sensitivity of cells to CPT-11. Additionally, stable expression of the rabbit liver CE cDNA in the human
glioma
U-373 MG cell line resulted in a 56-fold decrease in the IC50 value for CPT-11, whereas the expression of a human alveolar macrophage cDNA encoding a highly homologous CE produced no change in drug sensitivity.
...
PMID:Isolation and partial characterization of a cDNA encoding a rabbit liver carboxylesterase that activates the prodrug irinotecan (CPT-11). 963 92
Carboxylesterases, expressed at high levels in human liver and intestine, are thought to detoxify xenobiotics. The anticancer prodrug 7-ethyl-10-[4-1-piperidino)-1-piperidino]carbonyloxycamptothecin (CPT-11) is also metabolized by carboxylesterases to produce the active drug 7-ethyl-10-hydroxycamptothecin. Activation of CPT-11 by human intestinal
carboxylesterase
(hiCE) in the human intestine may contribute to delayed onset diarrhea, a dose-limiting side effect of this drug. The goal of this study was to develop small molecule inhibitors selective for hiCE to circumvent or treat the toxic side effects of CPT-11. A secondary goal was to develop molecules that specifically inhibit activation of CPT-11 by a rabbit liver carboxylesterase (rCE). rCE is the most efficient CPT-11-activating enzyme thus far identified, and this enzyme is being developed for viral-directed enzyme prodrug therapy applications. Based on in vitro assays with partially purified hiCE and rCE proteins and on growth inhibition assays using U373MG human
glioma
cells transfected to express hiCE or rCE (U373pIREShiCE or U373pIRESrCE), we identified specific inhibitors of each enzyme. Lead compounds are derivatives of nitrophenol having 4-(furan-2-carbonyl)-piperazine-1-carboxylic acid or 4-[(4-chlorophenyl)-phenylmethyl]-piperazine-1-carboxylic acid substitutions in the p position. Kinetic analysis of each compound for hiCE compared with rCE showed that the Ki values of the most selective of these inhibitors differed by 6- to 10-fold. In growth inhibition assays, nontoxic, low micromolar concentrations of these inhibitors increased the EC50 of CPT-11 for U373pIREShiCE or U373pIRESrCE cells by 13- to >1,500-fold. The four compounds characterized in this study will serve as lead compounds for a series of inhibitors to be constructed using a combinatorial approach.
...
PMID:Characterization of inhibitors of specific carboxylesterases: development of carboxylesterase inhibitors for translational application. 1529 73
The treatment of malignant
glioma
is currently ineffective. Oncolytic viruses are being explored as a means to selectively lyse tumor cells in the brain. We have engineered a mutant herpes simplex virus type 1 with deletions in the viral UL39 and gamma(1)34.5 genes and an insertion of the two prodrug activating genes, CYP2B1 and secreted human intestinal
carboxylesterase
. Each of these can convert the inactive prodrugs, cyclophosphamide and irinotecan (CPT-11), into their active metabolites, respectively. This new oncolytic virus (MGH2) displays increased antitumor efficacy against human
glioma
cells both in vitro and in vivo when combined with cyclophosphamide and CPT-11. Importantly, cyclophosphamide, CPT-11, or the combination of cyclophosphamide and CPT-11 does not significantly affect oncolytic virus replication. Therefore, MGH2 provides effective multimodal therapy for gliomas in preclinical models when combined with these chemotherapy agents.
...
PMID:Brain tumor oncolysis with replication-conditional herpes simplex virus type 1 expressing the prodrug-activating genes, CYP2B1 and secreted human intestinal carboxylesterase, in combination with cyclophosphamide and irinotecan. 1606 68
The poor prognosis for patients with aggressive or metastatic tumors and the toxic side effects of currently available treatments necessitate the development of more effective tumor-selective therapies. Stem/progenitor cells display inherent tumor-tropic properties that can be exploited for targeted delivery of anticancer genes to invasive and metastatic tumors. Therapeutic genes that have been inserted into stem cells and delivered to tumors with high selectivity include prodrug-activating enzymes (cytosine deaminase,
carboxylesterase
, thymidine kinase), interleukins (IL-2, IL-4, IL-12, IL-23), interferon-beta, apoptosis-promoting genes (tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand) and metalloproteinases (PEX). We and others have demonstrated that neural and mesenchymal stem cells can deliver therapeutic genes to elicit a significant antitumor response in animal models of intracranial
glioma
, medulloblastoma, melanoma brain metastasis, disseminated neuroblastoma and breast cancer lung metastasis. Most studies reported reduction in tumor volume (up to 90%) and increased survival of tumor-bearing animals. Complete cures have also been achieved (90% disease-free survival for >1 year of mice bearing disseminated neuroblastoma tumors). As we learn more about the biology of stem cells and the molecular mechanisms that mediate their tumor-tropism and we identify efficacious gene products for specific tumor types, the clinical utility of cell-based delivery strategies becomes increasingly evident.
...
PMID:Stem and progenitor cell-mediated tumor selective gene therapy. 1836 24
Human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) have emerged as attractive cellular vehicles for gene therapy against brain malignancy because of their targeted tropism for cancer and the intrinsic attribute of autologous transplantation. We evaluated the characteristics and therapeutic potential of human adipose tissue-derived MSCs (hAT-MSCs) and prodrug gene therapy against diffuse pontine gliomas. The hAT-MSCs were isolated from human adipose tissue and characterised for morphology, surface markers and potential to differentiate into mesenchymal and neuronal lineages. We genetically modified hAT-MSCs to express rabbit
carboxylesterase
(rCE) enzyme, which can efficiently convert the prodrug CPT-11 (irinotecan-7-ethyl-10-[4-(1-piperidino)-1-piperidino]carbonyloxycamptothecin), into the active drug SN-38 (7-ethyl-10-hydroxycamptothecin). The migratory capacity of hAT-MSCs expressing rCE (hAT-MSC.rCE), their ability to convert CPT-11 to SN-38 and cytotoxic effect on F98 cells were evaluated in vitro. The therapeutic potential of hAT-MSC.rCE was confirmed using a rat brainstem
glioma
model. The hAT-MSCs showed fibroblast-like morphology and expressed hMSC-specific markers including CD73, CD90 and CD105. The hAT-MSCs could differentiate into a mesenchymal lineage and transdifferentiate into a neuronal lineage under optimum culture conditions. The hAT-MSC.rCE converted CPT-11 to SN-38 and preserved the tumour tropism of hAT-MSCs. Brainstem
glioma
-bearing rats treated with hAT-MSC.rCE and CPT-11 survived 5d more than rats treated with CPT-11 only (p=0.0018). Our study demonstrates that hAT-MSCs can be easily prepared and genetically modified as cellular vehicles for prodrug gene therapy and that they have therapeutic potential against brainstem gliomas.
...
PMID:Human adipose tissue-derived mesenchymal stem cells: characteristics and therapeutic potential as cellular vehicles for prodrug gene therapy against brainstem gliomas. 2166 24
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