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Query: UMLS:C0017638 (
glioma
)
30,880
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Glioblastoma (GBM) is a highly malignant, rapidly progressive astrocytoma that is distinguished pathologically from lower grade tumors by necrosis and microvascular hyperplasia. Necrotic foci are typically surrounded by "pseudopalisading" cells-a configuration that is relatively unique to malignant gliomas and has long been recognized as an ominous prognostic feature. Precise mechanisms that relate morphology to biologic behavior have not been described. Recent investigations have demonstrated that pseudopalisades are severely hypoxic, overexpress hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF-1), and secrete proangiogenic factors such as VEGF and IL-8. Thus, the microvascular hyperplasia in GBM that provides a new vasculature and promotes peripheral tumor expansion is tightly linked with the emergence of pseudopalisades. Both pathologic observations and experimental evidence have indicated that the development of hypoxia and necrosis within astrocytomas could arise secondary to vaso-occlusion and intravascular thrombosis. This emerging model suggests that pseudopalisades represent a wave of tumor cells actively migrating away from central hypoxia that arises after a vascular insult. Experimental
glioma
models have shown that endothelial apoptosis, perhaps resulting from angiopoetin-2, initiates vascular pathology, whereas observations in human tumors have clearly demonstrated that intravascular thrombosis develops with high frequency in the transition to GBM. Tissue factor, the main cellular initiator of thrombosis, is dramatically upregulated in response to
PTEN
loss and hypoxia in human GBM and could promote a prothrombotic environment that precipitates these events. A prothrombotic environment also activates the family of protease activated receptors (PARs) on tumor cells, which are G-protein-coupled and enhance invasive and proangiogenic properties. Vaso-occlusive and prothrombotic mechanisms in GBM could readily explain the presence of pseudopalisading necrosis in tissue sections, the rapid peripheral expansion on neuroimaging, and the dramatic shift to an accelerated rate of clinical progression resulting from hypoxia-induced angiogenesis.
...
PMID:'Pseudopalisading' necrosis in glioblastoma: a familiar morphologic feature that links vascular pathology, hypoxia, and angiogenesis. 1678 63
Adrenomedullin is a vasoactive peptide that is upregulated in higher-grade gliomas and promotes tumor cell proliferation. Since reduced activity of the anti-oncogene
PTEN
seems to also correlate with higher tumor grade, this suggests an inverse association between
PTEN
activity and adrenomedullin expression. PC12 pheochromocytoma and human U251
glioma
cell lines were stably transfected with human
PTEN
or control plasmid. Adrenomedullin expression was analyzed using quantitative PCR and Western blotting. A cell proliferation assay was used to assess adrenomedullin effects on U251 cells overexpressing
PTEN
. PC12 and U251 cells overexpressing
PTEN
had 17- and 8-fold decreases in adrenomedullin mRNA levels, respectively, compared to control cells. Cellular and secreted adrenomedullin peptide was similarly reduced. Addition of adrenomedullin to medium of controlled cells induced proliferation, as described previously, but U251 cells overexpressing
PTEN
did not respond to exogenous adrenomedullin. Further exploration revealed that
PTEN
also inhibits expression of the gliomas receptor for adrenomedullin, which accounts for this effect. These data were all replicated with an inducible
PTEN
construct confirming that these effects are not exclusively secondary to chronic overexpression. Given the profound effects of adrenomedullin on tumor cells, this is a novel and previously unidentified mechanism by which alterations in
PTEN
levels or function may influence tumor growth.
...
PMID:PTEN inhibits adrenomedullin expression and function in brain tumor cells. 1682 Oct 90
Glioblastoma is a severe type of primary brain tumor, and its highly invasive character is considered to be a major therapeutic obstacle. Several recent studies have reported that ionizing radiation (IR) enhances the invasion of tumor cells, but the mechanisms for this effect are not well understood. In this study, we investigated the possible signaling mechanisms involved in IR-induced invasion of
glioma
cells. IR increased the matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-2 promoter activity, mRNA transcription, and protein secretion along with the invasiveness of
glioma
cells lacking functional
PTEN
(U87, U251, U373, and C6) but not those harboring wild-type (WT)-
PTEN
(LN18 and LN428). IR activated phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K), Akt, and mammalian target of rapamycin, and blockade of these kinases by specific inhibitors (LY294002, Akt inhibitor IV, and rapamycin, respectively) and transfection of dominant-negative (DN) mutants (DN-p85 and DN-Akt) or WT-
PTEN
suppressed the IR-induced MMP-2 secretion in U251 and U373 cells. In addition, inhibitors of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR; AG490 and AG1478), Src (PP2), and p38 (SB203580), EGFR neutralizing antibody, and transfection of DN-Src and DN-p38 significantly blocked IR-induced Akt phosphorylation and MMP-2 secretion. IR-induced activation of EGFR was suppressed by PP2, whereas LY294002 and SB203580 did not affect the activations of p38 and PI3K, respectively. Finally, these kinase inhibitors significantly reduced the IR-induced invasiveness of these cells on Matrigel. Taken together, our findings suggest that IR induces Src-dependent EGFR activation, which triggers the p38/Akt and PI3K/Akt signaling pathways, leading to increased MMP-2 expression and heightened invasiveness of
PTEN
mutant
glioma
cells.
...
PMID:Ionizing radiation enhances matrix metalloproteinase-2 secretion and invasion of glioma cells through Src/epidermal growth factor receptor-mediated p38/Akt and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/Akt signaling pathways. 1695 Nov 63
The mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) plays a central role in regulating the proliferation of malignant
glioma
cells, and mTOR-specific inhibitors such as rapamycin analogs are considered as promising therapy for malignant gliomas. However, the efficacy of mTOR inhibitors alone in the treatment of patients with malignant gliomas is only modest, potentially because these agents rather than acting as mTOR kinase inhibitors instead interfere with the function of only mTOR/raptor (regulatory-associated protein of mTOR) complex and thus do not perturb all mTOR functions. The purpose of this study was to determine whether global inhibition of the mTOR molecule enhances the antitumor effect of rapamycin on malignant
glioma
cells. We showed that rapamycin induced autophagy and that inhibition of autophagy by small interfering RNA (siRNA) directed against autophagy-related gene Beclin 1 attenuated the cytotoxicity of rapamycin in rapamycin-sensitive tumor cells, indicating that the autophagy was a primary mediator of rapamycin's antitumor effect rather than a protective response. Exogenous expression of an mTOR mutant interfering with its kinase activity markedly enhanced the incidence of rapamycin-induced autophagy. Moreover, silencing of mTOR with siRNA augmented the inhibitory effect of rapamycin on tumor cell viability by stimulating autophagy. Importantly, not only rapamycin-sensitive malignant
glioma
cells with
PTEN
mutations but also rapamycin-resistant malignant
glioma
cells with wild-type
PTEN
were sensitized to rapamycin by mTOR siRNA. These results indicate that rapamycin-induced autophagy is one of the agent's antitumor effects and that silencing or inhibiting mTOR kinase activity could enhance the effectiveness of rapamycin.
...
PMID:Silencing mammalian target of rapamycin signaling by small interfering RNA enhances rapamycin-induced autophagy in malignant glioma cells. 1700 13
The
PTEN
tumor suppressor gene modulates cell growth and survival known to be regulated by the activation of the transcription factor NFkappaB, suggesting
PTEN
might affect the NFkappaB activation pathway. We found that
PTEN
inhibited NFkappaB activation induced by TNF. The suppression of NFkappaB activation correlated with sequential inhibition of the tumor necrosis factor-induced expression of NFkappaB-regulated anti-apoptotic (IAP1, IAP2, Bcl-2, Bcl-xL, cFLIP, Bfl-1/A1, and survivin) gene products. Downregulation of the antiapoptotic genes by
PTEN
increased TNF-induced apoptosis, as indicated by caspase activation, TUNEL, annexin staining, and esterase assay. We conclude that the ectopic expression of
PTEN
enhances TNF-induced apoptosis and downregulates the proliferation of
glioma
cells through the suppression of various molecules including NFkappaB, and various mediators of cellular survival and proliferation, and that this targets might be essential for its central role in the growth and survival of
glioma
cancer cells.
...
PMID:PTEN enhances TNF-induced apoptosis through modulation of nuclear factor-kappaB signaling pathway in human glioma cells. 1701 14
The collagen type IV cleavage fragment tumstatin and its active subfragments bind to integrin alpha(V)beta(3) and inhibit activation of focal adhesion kinase, phophoinositol-3 kinase, Akt, and mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) in what is thought to be an endothelial cell-specific manner. The resultant endothelial cell apoptosis accounts for the ability of tumstatin to function as an endogenous inhibitor of angiogenesis and an indirect suppressor of tumor growth. We hypothesized that the inability of tumstatin to directly suppress tumor cell growth might be the result of the constitutive activation of the Akt/mTOR pathway commonly seen in tumors. Consistent with this idea, several integrin alpha(V)beta(3)-expressing
glioma
cell lines with
PTEN
mutations and high levels of phospho-Akt (pAkt) were unaffected by exposure to an active fragment of tumstatin (T3), whereas alpha(V)beta(3)-expressing
glioma
cell lines with a functional
PTEN
/low levels of pAkt exhibited T3-induced growth suppression that could be bypassed by small interfering RNA-mediated suppression of
PTEN
, introduction of a constitutively expressed Akt, or introduction of the Akt and mTOR target eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4E. The direct tumor-suppressive actions of T3 were further shown in an alpha(V)beta(3)-deficient in vivo mouse model in which T3, while unable to alter the tumstatin-insensitive vasculature contributed by the alpha(V)beta(3)-deficient host, nonetheless suppressed the growth and proliferative index of i.c. implanted alpha(V)beta(3)-expressing
PTEN
-proficient
glioma
cells. These results show that tumstatin, previously considered to be only an endogenous inhibitor of angiogenesis, also directly inhibits the growth of tumors in a manner dependent on Akt/mTOR activation.
...
PMID:The PTEN/Akt pathway dictates the direct alphaVbeta3-dependent growth-inhibitory action of an active fragment of tumstatin in glioma cells in vitro and in vivo. 1714 79
The continual activation of signaling cascades results in dramatic consequences that include loss of cellular growth control and neoplastic transformation. We show here that phosphoinositide 3-kinase and its mediator Akt was constitutively activated in
glioma
and that this might be due to the aberrant expression of their natural antagonist
PTEN
. The
PTEN
(phosphatase and tensin homologue deleted on chromosome ten) tumor suppressor gene modulates cell growth and survival through mechanisms that are incompletely understood. In this study, we investigated the possibility that
PTEN
mediates its effects through modulation of transcription factor AP-1, which is in part due to decrease in c-fos expression which was dependent on PI3kinase activity. Consistent with a reduction in the c-fos levels, an AP-1 dependent reporter gene was poorly induced in the
PTEN
expressing cell lines. In contrast to its effect on c-fos,
PTEN
did not affect the expression of c-Jun and other fos family members. We also show that the effect of
PTEN
on c-fos expression was due to its ability to antagonize PI3-kinase and could be mimicked by the expression of dominant negative Akt mutant. Taken together, these data indicate that the aberrant expression of
PTEN
contributes to the activation of the PI3kinase/Akt pathway and its transcription factor mediators in
glioma
. We conclude that the ectopic expression of
PTEN
down regulates the proliferation of
glioma
cells through the suppression of AP-1 and that this target might be essential for its central role in the growth and survival of
glioma
cancer cells.
...
PMID:PTEN down regulates AP-1 and targets c-fos in human glioma cells via PI3-kinase/Akt pathway. 1723 55
We assessed alterations in the EGFR/
PTEN
/PI3K pathway in 107 primary (de novo) glioblastomas and 32 secondary glioblastomas that progressed from low-grade or anaplastic astrocytomas. SSCP followed by DNA sequencing in exons 9 and 20 of the PIK3CA gene revealed missense mutations in 5/107 (5%) primary and 1/32 (3%) secondary glioblastomas. Quantitative real-time PCR showed PIK3CA amplification (>3 copy numbers) in 14/107 (13%) primary and 3/32 (9%) secondary glioblastomas. Only one glioblastoma showed both PIK3CA mutation and amplification. Taken together with previously published data on EGFR amplification and
PTEN
mutations, at least one alteration in the EGFR,
PTEN
, or PIK3CA genes was detected in 63% of primary glioblastomas, which was significantly more frequent than in secondary glioblastomas (31%; P < 0.001). Furthermore, this signaling pathway was altered by either
PTEN
mutations or PIK3CA amplification in 10 of 12 (83%) malignant
glioma
cell lines analyzed. These results suggest that the EGFR/
PTEN
/PI3K pathway is frequently altered in glioblastomas and is a promising target for therapy, in particular for primary glioblastomas.
...
PMID:PIK3CA alterations in primary (de novo) and secondary glioblastomas. 1723 14
Loss of the
PTEN
tumor suppressor gene and amplification of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), which is common in malignant gliomas, result in activation of the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR). Rapamycin is a highly specific inhibitor of mTOR and induces a cytostatic effect in various
glioma
cell lines. DNA-damaging agents such as nitrosourea are widely used in malignant
glioma
treatment; therefore, we investigated the effect of rapamycin on cell growth and death in combination with 1-(4-amino-2-methyl-5-pyrimidinyl)methyl-3-(2-chloroethyl)-3-nitrosourea (ACNU, nimustine hydrochloride) in human
glioma
cells. In U251 malignant
glioma
(U251MG) cells, we confirmed that rapamycin enhanced ACNU-induced apoptosis. We found that rapamysin inhibited ACNU-induced p21 induction, and knocking down of p21 protein by siRNA enhanced ACNU-induced apoptosis in U251MG cells. Furthermore, adenovirus-mediated over-expression of p21 protein rescued U251MG cells from apoptosis induced by ACNU and rapamycin. Finally, treatment of intracerebral U251MG xenografts with a combination of rapamycin and ACNU in vivo resulted in statistically prolonged median survival (P<0.05). These results suggest that rapamycin in combination with DNA-damaging agents may be efficacious in the treatment of malignant gliomas.
...
PMID:Specific mTOR inhibitor rapamycin enhances cytotoxicity induced by alkylating agent 1-(4-amino-2-methyl-5-pyrimidinyl)methyl-3-(2-chloroethyl)-3-nitrosourea (ACNU) in human U251 malignant glioma cells. 1739 Jan 4
Despite the potential importance of the cell cycle and apoptosis pathways in brain tumor etiology, little has been published regarding brain tumor risk associated with common gene variants in these pathways. Using data from a hospital-based case-control study conducted by the National Cancer Institute between 1994 and 1998, we evaluated risk of
glioma
(n = 388), meningioma (n = 162), and acoustic neuroma (n = 73) with respect to 12 single nucleotide polymorphisms from 10 genes involved in apoptosis and cell cycle control: CASP8, CCND1, CCNH, CDKN1A, CDKN2A, CHEK1, CHEK2, MDM2,
PTEN
, and TP53. We observed significantly decreased risk of meningioma with the CASP8 Ex14-271A>T variant [odds ratio (OR)(AT), 0.8; 95% confidence interval (95% CI), 0.5-1.2; OR(AA), 0.5; 95% CI, 0.3-0.9; P(trend) = 0.03] and increased risk of meningioma with the CASP8 Ex13+51G>C variant (OR(GC), 1.4; 95% CI, 0.9-2.1; OR(CC), 3.6; 95% CI, 1.0-13.1; P(trend) = 0.04). The CT haplotype of the two CASP8 polymorphisms was associated with significantly increased risk of meningioma (OR, 1.7; 95% CI, 1.1-2.6), but was not associated with risk of
glioma
or acoustic neuroma. The CCND1 Ex4-1G>A variant was associated with increased risk for
glioma
, and the Ex8+49T>C variant of CCNH was associated with increased risk of
glioma
and acoustic neuroma. The MDM2 Ex12+162A>G variant was associated with significantly reduced risk of
glioma
. Our results suggest that common variants in the CASP8, CCND1, CCNH, and MDM2 genes may influence brain tumor risk. Future research in this area should include more detailed coverage of genes in the apoptosis/cell cycle control pathways.
...
PMID:Polymorphisms in apoptosis and cell cycle control genes and risk of brain tumors in adults. 1768 42
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