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)

Fetal basal ganglia astrocytes and C6 glioma cells were plated on the surface of 1.5 cm thick hydrated collagen I wafers. Both cell types migrated through the entire thickness of the wafer within 1 day after plating. The collagen in the wafer was digested and the fine collagen I fibrils were clumped into large strands. By 2-3 days, the collagen strands were digested from the wafers and replaced by a mass of fetal astrocytes or C6 cells joined by their processes. The collagen I digestion and cell migration suggested protease production. In a second series of experiments, cultured C6 cells and E14 fetal astrocytes were immunohistochemically stained for the presence of plasminogen activators as an index of protease production. Both tissue (tPA) and urokinase (uPA) types were observed. Fetal astrocytes and C6 cells were also positive for guanidinobenzoatase, a serine protease associated with migrating cells. These data demonstrate that rapid migration of the cells on and through collagen I fibrils is concomitant with expression of plasminogen activators and proteases which can either activate or function as collagenases and release the cells from the substrate.
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PMID:Mechanisms of C6 glioma cell and fetal astrocyte migration into hydrated collagen I gels. 149 72

Flat, amorphous astroblasts in culture differentiate into rounded process-bearing cells after removal of serum from the media or following addition of dibutyryl cyclic-AMP (dbcAMP). We report here that addition of thrombin (10 nM) to rat primary astroglial cultures reversed both the spontaneous morphological differentiation of astroblasts caused by serum removal, and the more extensive morphological differentiation caused by pre-treatment with dbcAMP. The astroblasts retained the ability to differentiate upon removal of thrombin from the medium. Proteolytic activity of thrombin was required for the reversal of differentiation. Moreover, addition of serine protease inhibitors active against thrombin elicited a prolonged morphological differentiation rivaling that induced by dbcAMP, suggesting that inactivation of cell-associated thrombin might be sufficient for morphological differentiation to occur. Two other serine proteases with a cleavage specificity similar to thrombin were ineffective in reversing differentiation. Both the induction of morphological differentiation by dbcAMP and its reversal by thrombin were rapid, being essentially complete by 1 h. With more prolonged treatments, thrombin also reduced the dbcAMP-mediated increase in glutamine synthetase, a biochemical marker for astroglial differentiation. Thrombin also inhibited morphological differentiation in C6 glioma and altered the morphology of microglial cells; however, thrombin did not prevent neurite outgrowth in primary central neuronal cultures in contrast to its previously reported effects on the neuroblastoma 2a cell line. These findings indicate that a proteolytic mechanism mediated by thrombin and its inhibitors may underlie the regulation of astroglial differentiation.
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PMID:Thrombin and its inhibitors regulate morphological and biochemical differentiation of astrocytes in vitro. 197 84

A glia-derived neurite promoting factor (GdNPF) has serine protease inhibitory activity and in addition regulates the migration of neuronal cells. cDNA cloning of GdNPF is necessary for studying the physiological relevance and the mode of action of this protein and similar cell-derived protease inhibitors. Xenopus oocytes injected with rat glioma cells mRNA release this inhibitor. A rat cDNA clone coding for the previously purified glia-derived neurite promoting factor (GdNPF) was isolated upon hybridization-selected translation, followed by immunoprecipitation. The correct identity of this cDNA is proven by the presence of a sequence coding for a tryptic fragment from pure GdNPF. Northern analysis indicates that GdNPF mRNA is found almost exclusively in brain tissue and could be developmentally regulated. The same cDNA clone has been used to isolate full-length rat and human GdNPF cDNA. The deduced human GdNPF amino acid sequence indicates that the protein is a member of a family of cell-derived protease inhibitors named protease nexins.
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PMID:A glia-derived neurite promoting factor with protease inhibitory activity belongs to the protease nexins. 287 44

The activity of the serine protease plasminogen activator (PA), which correlates with tumorigenicity and metastatic capacity, was examined using the 125I-labeled fibrin plate assay in cell extracts from four human glioma lines as a function of growth in vitro. Cell-associated inhibitory activity to plasmin and urokinase-type PA was also measured concurrently. The relative PA activities differed markedly among the lines, whereas inhibitory activities did not. Two lines, SNB-19 and SNB-75, exhibited maximal PA activities (1-6 m Plough units/micrograms protein) as cultures approached confluence, whereas two other lines, SNB-56 and SNB-78, expressed low PA activity at all times (less than 0.2 m Plough units/micrograms protein). The PA of SNB-19 cell extracts was predominantly urokinase-type PA. In addition to having the highest PA levels, SNB-19 and SNB-75 were the most clonogenic in soft agar and tumorigenic in nude mice. In contrast, SNB-56 and SNB-78 were poorly clonogenic in soft agar and were not tumorigenic in nude mice. Measured directly, inhibitory activities to plasmin, urokinase-type PA, and tissue-type PA were detected in SNB-19 (high PA) and SNB-56 (low PA) cell extracts. However, there were no qualitative or quantitative differences in inhibitor effects between SNB-19 and SNB-56 suggesting that the differences in PA activity between these lines resulted from changes in PA activity and were not due to differential plasminogen activator inhibitor effects. The ability of the differentiating agent sodium butyrate (NaB) to modulate total PA activity was also examined. Peak SNB-19 cell PA activity was decreased in a concentration (Ki, 0.75 mM) and time-dependent manner by the addition of nontoxic amounts of NaB. The dose-dependent decrease in PA activity induced by NaB was most likely due to an effect on PA itself, since the action of inhibitor on urokinase was unchanged in response to NaB. These results suggest that net cellular PA activity in glioma cells is a balance between relative PA activity and inhibitor(s) effects and that this balance can be modulated by sodium butyrate.
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PMID:Plasminogen activator and inhibitor activity in human glioma cells and modulation by sodium butyrate. 312 Nov 70

Rat glial cells release a neurite-promoting factor with serine protease inhibitory activity. By using a rat glioma cDNA clone as a probe, it was possible to isolate rat cDNAs containing the entire sequence coding for this neurite-promoting factor. The largest rat cDNA (approximately 2100 bp) was characterized by DNA sequencing. It contained the entire coding region, 135 bp of the 5' nontranslated region, and about 750 bp of the 3' nontranslated region. The open reading frame coded for 397 amino acids including a putative signal peptide of 19 amino acids. The correct identity of the coding sequence was substantiated by the fact that the sequence of tryptic peptides, derived from the purified rat factor, matched exactly with the deduced amino acid sequence. The rat protein sequence had 84% homology with the corresponding protein from human glioma cells. Both amino acid sequences indicated that the proteins belong to the protease nexins [Baker, B.J., Low, D. A., Simmer, R. L., & Cunningham, D.D. (1980) Cell (Cambridge, Mass.) 21, 37-45] and therefore can be defined as glia-derived nexins (GDNs). Further analysis showed that both rat and human GDN belong to the serpin superfamily and share 41%, 32%, and 25% homology with human endothelial-cell-type plasminogen activator inhibitor, antithrombin III, and alpha-1 proteinase inhibitor, respectively.
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PMID:cDNA sequence coding for a rat glia-derived nexin and its homology to members of the serpin superfamily. 342 15

The lectin pathway is a novel pathway for activation of the complement cascade, which is initiated by the binding of mannose-binding protein (MBP) to its carbohydrate ligands. We investigated whether the complement system was activated in vitro by glioma cells through this pathway to the C3 level. MBP was found to bind to all six glioma cell lines tested by using flow cytometric analysis. Binding of a complex of MBP-associated serine protease and MBP was observed in two of the cell lines examined, thereby resulting in C4 consumption. Activation of C3 was hemolytically evaluated in these two lines. C3 consumption was also observed in one. Based on these results, it is likely that recognition by MBP followed by complement activation occurs in certain glioma cell lines.
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PMID:Mannose-binding protein recognizes glioma cells: in vitro analysis of complement activation on glioma cells via the lectin pathway. 773 Jan 43

C6 glioma cells could be successively subcultured and maintained in serum- and growth factor-free medium (SF/GFF medium). C6 cell proliferation in SF/GFF medium was positively correlated with the initial cell density at plating. This correlation disappeared when the medium had been renewed early after cell adhesion (3 h after plating), suggesting that C6 cell growth depends on some diffusible factor in the medium before renewal, and that this factor is not secreted from C6 cells in the assay culture but is transferred from the cell suspension. The supernatant of trypsinized C6 cell suspension (SCS), trypsin-EDTA solution for routine cell harvesting use, and modified trypsin of protein sequencing grade all promoted C6 cell proliferation at, appropriate dilutions or concentrations under SF/GFF conditions. The growth promoting effects of SCS and trypsin-EDTA solution were completely inhibited by soybean trypsin inhibitor. These results demonstrate that the serine protease trypsin has a proliferative effect on C6 cells continuously subcultured in SF/GFF medium. In addition, it is suggested that trypsin used for cell dispersion is transferred from cell suspension into the culture, where it promotes C6 cell growth after passage in our SF/GFF subculture system.
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PMID:Trypsin promotes C6 glioma cell proliferation in serum- and growth factor-free medium. 885 16

Matrix metalloproteinases have been implicated to play a vital role in glioma invasion as they degrade extracellular matrix to facilitate the subsequent migration of tumor cells into the surrounding brain tissue. The cytokine Interleukin-10 (IL-10) was detected recently in glial tumors in vivo. Expression of specific IL-10 mRNA as well as blood serum levels of IL-10 in glioma patients increased with malignancy suggesting a functional role of IL-10 in glioma progression. Moreover, glioma cell migration in vitro was enhanced in the presence of IL-10. We therefore investigated the expression of the matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) stromelysin-1 (MMP-3), 72-kDa collagenase (MMP-2), 92-kDa collagenase (MMP-9), matrilysin (MMP-7) and the human macrophage metalloelastase (MMP-12). In addition, a possible relation between exposure of glioma cells to IL-10 and invasiveness of these cells due to MMP expression was analyzed. Experiments with Matrigel coated Boyden chambers revealed a pronounced dose dependent effect of IL-10 on glioma invasiveness. The synthetic MMP-inhibitor Marimastat markedly reduced cell invasion in the Boyden chambers confirming the significance of MMPs in the process of invasion. Subsequently, the expression level of MMPs and the serine protease uPA was investigated in 7 glioma cell lines (U373, GaMG, U251, GHE, SNB19, U138 and D54) by RT-PCR. In all but one cell line no enhancement of MMP expression by IL-10 was detected. Matrilysin in U373 cells was the only protease found to be upregulated in the presence of IL-10 dependent on cell density. The present data suggest that IL-10 related effects on the invasive properties of the cell lines are not directly mediated by an upregulation of matrix metalloproteinase expression.
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PMID:Expression of matrix metalloproteinases in human glioma cell lines in the presence of IL-10. 989 93

The ability of glioma cells to migrate great distances from a primary tumor mass is the primary cause of tumor recurrence. The urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) is a serine protease that can initiate proteolytic cascades, which result in remodeling of extracellular matrix and basement membrane, allowing cells to move across and through these barriers. The binding between uPA and its receptor uPAR also mediates several signaling events that seem to contribute to the evolution of a migratory phenotype. In this study, we determined how the downregulation of uPA affects the signaling pathways leading to cell migration. Stably transfecting human glioblastoma cells with antisense uPA decreased the amount of cell-bound uPA and disrupted actin cytoskeleton formation and cell migration. The phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3k) and Akt signaling pathway has been suggested to mediate migration in various cancer cells. The antisense-uPA clones also had less phosphorylated PI3k and Akt than control cells, a finding associated with decreased cell migration, G2/M-phase arrest, and decreased clonogenic survival. Decreased activation of PI3k and the antiapoptotic factor Akt was not sufficient to induce apoptosis in the antisense-uPA clones, but staurosporine sensitized them to apoptosis to a greater extent than control cells. These results indicate that PI3k/Akt pathway is involved in the signaling cascade required to induce cell migration and that uPA has a direct role in regulating migration.
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PMID:Downregulation of uPA inhibits migration and PI3k/Akt signaling in glioblastoma cells. 1254 60

We have isolated a cDNA that encodes a novel serine protease, prosemin, from human brain. The cDNA of human prosemin is 1306 bp, encoding 317 amino acids. It showed significant homology with the sequence of a chromosome 16 cosmid clone (accession no. NT_037887.4). The prosemin gene contains six exons and five introns. The amino acid sequence of prosemin shows significant homology to prostasin, gamma-tryptase, and testisin (43%, 41%, and 38% identity, respectively), the genes of which are also located on chromosome 16. Northern hybridization showed that prosemin is expressed predominantly in the pancreas and weakly in the prostate and cerebellum. However, western blot and RT-PCR analyses showed that prosemin is expressed and secreted from various kinds of cancer cells, such as glioma, pancreas, prostate, and ovarian cell lines. Prosemin is secreted in the cystic fluid of clinical ovarian cancers. Furthermore, immunohistochemistry showed prosemin protein localized in the apical parts of ovarian carcinomas. Recombinant prosemin was expressed in COS cells and was purified by immunoaffinity chromatography. Recombinant prosemin preferentially cleaved benzyloxycarbonyl (Z)-His-Glu-Lys-methylcoumaryl amidide (MCA) and t-butyloxycarbonyl (Boc)-Gln-Ala-Arg-MCA. Our results suggest that prosemin is a novel serine protease of the chromosome 16 cluster that is highly expressed in the pancreas. The usefulness of this serine protease as a candidate tumor marker should be further examined.
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PMID:A novel serine protease highly expressed in the pancreas is expressed in various kinds of cancer cells. 1617 65


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