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)

Gliomas represent the largest group of primary brain tumors in adults. The astrocytic variants are the most common and the adult forms are histologically stratified into three malignancy grades. Of these glioblastoma is the most common and the most malignant; it has also been best studied by molecular genetics and cytogenetics. Double-minute chromosomes, known to represent amplified genes, are found in 50% of glioblastomas. Amplified genes are not detected in the most benign of the astrocytomas. Many genes have been shown to be amplified in more than single cases of gliomas and these include EGFR, CDK4, SAS, MDM2, GLI, PDGFAR, MYC, N MYC, MYCL1, MET, GADD153, and KIT. The most commonly amplified genes in glioblastomas are EGFR (in approximately 40%), CDK4, and SAS (in approximately 15%). The remainder of the genes are amplified at lower frequency. The best mapped amplicon in gliomas involves the 12q13-14 region. The amplicon is of undetermined size, encompasses a number of genes, and may be rearranged. It occurs in 15% of glioblastomas and almost always includes the CDK4 and SAS genes, in about 10% of tumors the MDM2 gene, and at lower frequency GLI, GADD153, and A2MR. All but A2MR are overexpressed if amplified. The amplified EGFR gene is frequently rearranged, resulting in changes in the regions of the transcript that codes for the extracellular domain. The resultant receptor is constitutively activated. These findings provide examples of the impact the use of modern molecular biological techniques has had on our understanding of oncogenic mechanisms in gliomas.
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PMID:Gene amplification in human gliomas. 858 64

Chordoid glioma of the third ventricle was recently reported as a novel tumor entity of the central nervous system with characteristic clinical and histopathological features (Brat et al., J Neuropathol Exp Neurol 57: 283-290, 1998). Here, we report on a histopathological, immunohistochemical and molecular genetic analysis of five cases of this rare neoplasm. All tumors were immunohistochemically investigated for the expression of various differentiation antigens, the proliferation marker Ki-67, and a panel of selected proto-oncogene and tumor suppressor gene products. These studies revealed a strong expression of GFAP, vimentin, and CD34. In addition, most tumors contained small fractions of neoplastic cells immunoreactive for epithelial membrane antigen, S-100 protein, or cytokeratins. The percentage of Ki-67 positive cells was generally low (<5%). All tumors showed immunoreactivity for the epidermal growth factor receptor and schwannomin/merlin. There was no nuclear accumulation of the p53, p21 (Waf-1) and Mdm2 proteins. To examine genomic alterations associated with the development of chordoid gliomas, we screened 4 tumors by comparative genomic hybridization (CGH) analysis. No chromosomal imbalances were detected. More focussed molecular genetic analyses revealed neither aberrations of the TP53 and CDKN2A tumor suppressor genes nor amplification of the EGFR, CDK4, and MDM2 proto-oncogenes. Our data strongly support the hypothesis that chordoid glioma of the third ventricle constitutes a novel tumor entity characterized by distinct morphological and immunohistochemical features, as well as a lack of chromosomal and genetic alterations commonly found in other types of gliomas or in meningiomas.
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PMID:Chordoid glioma of the third ventricle: immunohistochemical and molecular genetic characterization of a novel tumor entity. 1051

The INK4a-ARF locus encodes 2 separate proteins through differential splicing of alternative first exons to produce p16INK4a (exon 1alpha) and p14ARF (exon 1beta) products in human cells. The p16INK4a protein inhibits the cyclin D-dependent kinases (CDK) that control the phosphorylation of the Rb protein and cell proliferation. The p14ARF gene product can complex with and sequester the MDM2 protein within the nucleus, thus modulating the activity of the p53 protein. Loss of p16INK4a expression would disrupt the retinoblastoma (Rb)/p16INK4a/cyclin D-dependent kinase (CDK4) pathway, whereas loss of p14ARF expression would inactivate both the Rb and p53/ MDM2/p14ARF pathways through MDM2, which can complex with either Rb or p53. Loss of the p16INK4a gene on 9p21 has been documented in a wide range of human tumors, including one third of glioblastomas. However, in tumors showing homozygous loss of exon 2 of the p16INK4a gene, loss of exon 1beta of the p14ARF gene has not been established. In this study, we have assessed deletion of the p14ARF gene in 29 pediatric and 107 adult high-grade astrocytomas and 9 glioma cell lines, using multiplex PCR analysis for exon 1beta. We found homozygous deletions for exon 1alpha and exon 1beta in 3 of 29 (10%) of the pediatric cases (2 grade III, 1 grade IV), 25 of 107 (23%) of the adult cases (6 grade III and 19 grade IV), and 8 of 9 (89%) of the glioma cell lines. Therefore, loss of the INK4a-ARF locus in high-grade astrocytomas may contribute to the highly malignant behavior and treatment resistance of these tumors through elimination of multiple checkpoint cell cycle control proteins.
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PMID:Incidence of p14ARF gene deletion in high-grade adult and pediatric astrocytomas. 1066 22

P16 and P14ARF are two tumor suppressors encoded by the locus ink4a-arf which is frequently deleted in human tumors. Recent experiments performed with mouse embryonic fibroblasts have shown that P14ARF is an upstream regulator of the P53 pathway. This raises the question as to whether in human tumors the loss of p14arf and mutation of p53 are mutually exclusive events which segregate with genetic alterations at other loci. To examine this question we performed a multigenic analysis on 29 gliomas. We analysed p53 and p14arf in relation with five other genetic loci encoding the most frequently mutated genes in human gliomas: cdkn2a, mdm2, egfr, pten and the chromosomal regions 10q23.3 and 10q25-26. Our study shows for the first time that p53 mutations and p14arf deletions appear mutually exclusive in human glioblastoma, suggesting that they may be functionally redundant in glioma tumorigenesis. The P53 pathway is, therefore, disrupted in 81.8% of malignant gliomas (WHO grades III and IV), either by mutation of the p53 gene (31.8%) or by p14arf deletion (54.5%). These tumors further showed MDM2 overexpression (9.1%), egfr oncogene amplification/egfr overexpression (50%), pten mutations (27.3%) and loss of heterozygosity (LOH) at the chromosomal regions 10q23.3 (86.4%) and 10q25-26 (100%). These alterations did not segregate with p53 mutations or p14arf deletions, while p14arf and cdkn2a were always deleted.
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PMID:p53 gene mutation and ink4a-arf deletion appear to be two mutually exclusive events in human glioblastoma. 1094 38

Tumors of glial origin such as glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) comprise the majority of human brain tumors. Patients with GBM have a very poor survival rate, with an average life expectancy of <1 year. We asked whether we could identify a survival pathway in high-grade glioma and oligodendroglioma cells that when suppressed, would induce apoptosis of these tumor cells but not of normal human adult astrocytes. To identify these pathways, we selectively suppressed the activity of a number of proteins (Ras, Rac1, Akt1, RhoA, c-jun, and MEK1/2) hypothesized to play roles in cell survival. We found that suppression of Rac1, a small GTP-binding protein, inhibited survival and produced apoptosis in three human glioma cell lines (U87, U343, and U373). Serum induced the activity of Rac1 and the activity or phosphorylation state of p21-activated kinase 1 and c-Jun NH(2)-terminal kinase (JNK), two intracellular targets of Rac1. Suppression of Rac1 also induced apoptosis in 19 of 21 short-term cultures of human primary cells from grades II and III oligodendroglioma and grade IV glioblastoma that varied in p53, epidermal growth factor receptor, epidermal growth factor receptor vIII, MDM2, and p16/p19 mutational or amplification status. In contrast, inhibition of Rac1 activity did not induce apoptosis of normal primary human adult astrocytes. In both established glioma cell lines and primary glioma cells, apoptosis induced by the inhibition of Rac was partially rescued by activated mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase 1, an activator of JNK, suggesting that JNK functions downstream of Rac1 in glioma cells. These results indicate that Rac1 regulates a major survival pathway in most glioma cells, and that suppression of Rac1 activity stimulates the death of virtually all glioma cells, regardless of their mutational status. Agents that suppress Rac1 activity may therefore be useful therapeutic treatments for malignant gliomas.
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PMID:Suppression of Rac activity induces apoptosis of human glioma cells but not normal human astrocytes. 1192 35

p73 protein, a member of the p53 family protein, induce p21 and MDM2 transcription. In some carcinomas, the expression of p73 was higher in carcinoma than in normal tissue, and the overexpression was correlated to grade, stage or prognosis. However, either the expression of p73 protein or the relationship among p73, p21 and MDM2 proteins was not known well in glioma. In this study, we examined the expression of p73, p21 and MDM2 proteins immunohistochemically and analyzed the relationship among these three proteins in sixty surgical specimens of gliomas including 10 glioblastomas, 10 anaplastic astrocytomas, 6 diffuse astrocytomas, 8 pilocytic astrocytomas, 1 anaplastic ependymoma, 8 ependymomas, 9 anaplastic oligodendroglial tumors and 8 low grade oligodendroglial tumors. The p73 labelling index (LI)s and p21 LIs differed among the tumor types, but there was no difference in the MDM2 LIs among all of the tumor types. The mean p73 LI of ependymomas was significantly higher than in any other tumor type. The mean p2I LIs of ependymomas and pilocytic astrocytomas were significantly higher than in any other tumor type. There were no significant correlations among p73 LIs, p21 LIs, MDM2 LIs and MIB-1 LIs in all p73 immunopositive tumors. The present results suggest that p73 and p21 overexpression of ependymomas and p21 overexpression of pilocytic astrocytomas are one of the features of these tumors, and that p73 overexpression does not influence the expression manners of either p21 or MDM2 in gliomas.
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PMID:The expression of p73, p21 and MDM2 proteins in gliomas. 1224 Nov 7

BACKGROUND: The aim of this work was to investigate in vitro the putative role of EGR-1 in the growth of glioma cells. EGR-1 expression was examined during the early passages in vitro of 17 primary cell lines grown from 3 grade III and from 14 grade IV malignant astrocytoma explants. The explanted tumors were genetically characterized at the p53, MDM2 and INK4a/ARF loci, and fibronectin expression and growth characteristics were examined. A recombinant adenovirus overexpressing EGR-1 was tested in the primary cell lines. RESULTS: Low levels of EGR-1 protein were found in all primary cultures examined, with lower values present in grade IV tumors and in cultures carrying wild-type copies of p53 gene. The levels of EGR-1 protein were significantly correlated to the amount of intracellular fibronectin, but only in tumors carrying wild-type copies of the p53 gene (R = 0,78, p = 0.0082). Duplication time, plating efficiency, colony formation in agarose, and contact inhibition were also altered in the p53 mutated tumor cultures compared to those carrying wild-type p53. Growth arrest was achieved in both types of tumor within 1-2 weeks following infection with a recombinant adenovirus overexpressing EGR-1 but not with the control adenovirus. CONCLUSIONS: Suppression of EGR-1 is a common event in gliomas and in most cases this is achieved through down-regulation of gene expression. Expression of EGR-1 by recombinant adenovirus infection almost completely abolishes the growth of tumor cells in vitro, regardless of the mutational status of the p53 gene.
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PMID:Inhibition of cell growth by EGR-1 in human primary cultures from malignant glioma. 1471 80

Necrosis in glioblastoma is often associated with high levels of Fas (APO-1), HIF-1alpha and PARP expression. The presence of such molecules suggests a regulative element to cell death within this tissue, which may involve p53. We aimed to establish whether p53 and its downstream targets Bax, MDM2 and p21 play a role in perinecrotic cell death in glioblastoma. Following sequencing of the p53 gene in U87 and U373 glioma cell lines, p53 was found to be reactive in the p53 wild-type line U87 in response to hypoxia but not in the p53 mutant line, U373. Although no increase in perinecrotic p53 expression was detected in spheroid cultures derived from these lines, a 60 kDa MDM2 isoform lacking a C-terminal domain showed perinecrotic localization, irrespective of p53 status. Similar findings were observed surrounding regions of necrosis in 80% of glioblastoma biopsies examined. Increasing levels of wild-type p53 did not affect cell death in U87 spheroid cultures but killed all U373 cells 3 days post transfection. Dominant negative p53 did not affect cell death in U373 and U87 spheroid cultures. Although p53 accumulation appeared not to be important for the onset of cell death both in spheroid and biopsy cases, high levels of perinecrotic 60 kDa MDM2 may have implications for glioma cell death susceptibility in both p53 mutant and wild-type tumour cell populations.
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PMID:Discovery of a perinecrotic 60 kDa MDM2 isoform within glioma spheroids and glioblastoma biopsy material. 1577 12

Glioma, and in particular high-grade astrocytoma termed glioblastoma multiforme (GBM), is the most common primary tumor of the brain. Primarily because of its diffuse nature, there is no effective treatment for GBM, and relatively little is known about the processes by which it develops. Therefore, in order to design novel therapies and treatments for GBM, research has recently intensified to identify the cellular and molecular mechanisms leading to GBM formation. Modeling of astrocytomas by genetic manipulation of mice suggests that deregulation of the pathways that control gliogenesis during normal brain development, such as the differentiation of neural stem cells (NSCs) into astrocytes, might contribute to GBM formation. These pathways include growth factor-induced signal transduction routes and processes that control cell cycle progression, such as the p16-CDK4-RB and the ARF-MDM2-p53 pathways. The expression of several of the components of these signaling cascades has been found altered in GBM, and recent data indicate that combinations of mutations in these pathways may contribute to GBM formation, although the exact mechanisms are still to be uncovered. Use of novel techniques including large-scale genomics and proteomics in combination with relevant mouse models will most likely provide novel insights into the molecular mechanisms underlying glioma formation and will hopefully lead to development of treatment modalities for GBM.
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PMID:Molecular mechanisms in gliomagenesis. 1609 98

In population-based glioma patients, we examined survival in relation to potentially pertinent constitutive polymorphisms, serologic factors, and tumor genetic and protein alterations in epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), MDM2, and TP53. Subjects were newly diagnosed adults residing in the San Francisco Bay Surveillance Epidemiology and End Results Area during 1991 to 1994 and 1997 to 1999 with central neuropathology review (n = 873). Subjects provided blood for serologic studies of IgE and IgG to four herpes viruses and constitutive specimens for genotyping 22 polymorphisms in 13 genes (n = 471). We obtained 595 of 697 astrocytic tumors for marker studies. We determined treatments, vital status, and other factors using registry, interview, medical record, and active follow-up data. Cox regressions for survival were adjusted for age, gender, ethnicity, study series, resection versus biopsy only, radiation, and chemotherapy. Using a stringent P < 0.001, glioma survival was associated with ERCC1 C8092A [hazard ratio (HR), 0.72; 95% confidence limits (95% CL), 0.60-0.86; P = 0.0004] and GSTT1 deletion (HR, 1.64; 95% CL, 1.25-2.16; P = 0.0004); glioblastoma patients with elevated IgE had 9 months longer survival than those with normal or borderline IgE levels (HR, 0.62; 95% CL, 0.47-0.82; P = 0.0007), and EGFR expression in anaplastic astrocytoma was associated with nearly 3-fold poorer survival (HR, 2.97; 95% CL, 1.70-5.19; P = 0.0001). Based on our and others' findings, we recommend further studies to (a) understand relationships of elevated IgE levels and other immunologic factors with improved glioblastoma survival potentially relevant to immunologic therapies and (b) determine which inherited ERCC1 variants or other variants in the 19q13.3 region influence survival. We also suggest that tumor EGFR expression be incorporated into clinical evaluation of anaplastic astrocytoma patients.
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PMID:Serum IgE, tumor epidermal growth factor receptor expression, and inherited polymorphisms associated with glioma survival. 1661 82


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