Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0023418 (
leukemia
)
93,477
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Spontaneously arising, H-2Ds-positive SJL/J lymphomas have been reported to become irreversibly more aggressive and H-2Ds-negative upon successive transplantation in syngeneic mice. In an effort to determine whether this process was one of
tumor progression
, we sought to: (a) establish whether a clonal relationship exists between readily transplantable aggressive SJL/J lymphomas and their respective indolent predecessors; and (b) identify genetic events critical to the process of acquisition of increased malignancy. Examination of putatively distinct, aggressive, H-2Ds-negative lymphomas, including the long term transplantable line RCS5, revealed them to have the same heavy and light immunoglobulin chain gene rearrangement patterns, a characteristic karyotype marked by nine chromosomal abnormalities, and approximately ten newly acquired ecotropic murine
leukemia
proviruses at similar genomic sites. Independent, spontaneously arising H-2Ds-positive lymphomas, in early transplant, were found to be genetically distinct from the respective more malignant H-2Ds-negative tumors to which they gave rise during successive transplantation. The data are interpreted as indicating that the aggressive H-2Ds-negative tumors in this study originated from a common source, most likely the RCS5 tumor, rather than through progression of separate spontaneously arising SJL/J lymphomas. It cannot be concluded which of the multiple genetic abnormalities of the H-2Ds-negative tumors were critical to their highly malignant phenotype. However, chromosomal abnormalities and newly acquired murine
leukemia
proviruses are discussed as to the roles they might play in SJL/J lymphomas.
...
PMID:Progression of transplanted SJL/J lymphomas attributed to a single aggressive H-2Ds-negative lymphoma. 291 Apr 85
In vivo effects of DL-alpha-difluoromethylornithine (DFMO) on the metabolism of polyamines and nucleotide phosphates were monitored in P388/S
leukemia
cells grown intraperitoneally in BDF1 inbred male mice. Inhibiting the ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) activity DFMO depleted putrescine and spermidine to 30-50 and 50-60%, respectively, and increased spermine to 25-60% compared with the controls, when given as 2% solution in drinking water of the tumor-bearing animals. DFMO treatment caused a parallel 56% elevation of total nucleotide content in tumor cells with distinct and significant increase of some nucleotide phosphates. The most pronounced alterations were shown in the intracellular UTP (202%), CTP (103%), ADP (92%) and ATP (71%) concentrations. Changes in polyamine and nucleotide phosphate metabolisms were dependent on
tumor progression
. A possible explanation of the metabolic events induced by DFMO is discussed.
...
PMID:In vivo effects of DL-alpha-difluoromethylornithine on the polyamine and nucleotide phosphate metabolism in P388/S leukemia cells. 308 89
Clonal selections occurring during the progression of Moloney murine
leukemia
virus (MuLV)-induced T-cell lymphomas in mice were examined in primary and transplanted tumors by monitoring various molecular markers: proviral integration patterns, MuLV insertions near c-myc and pim-1, and rearrangements of the immunoglobulin heavy chain and beta-chain T-cell receptor genes. The results were as follows. Moloney MuLV frequently induced oligoclonal tumors with proviral insertions near c-myc or pim-1 in the independent clones. Moloney MuLV acted as a highly efficient insertional mutagen, able to activate different (putative) oncogenes in one cell lineage. Clonal selections during
tumor progression
were frequently marked by the acquisition of new proviral integrations. Independent tumor cell clones exhibited a homing preference upon transplantation in syngeneic hosts and were differently affected by the route of transplantation.
...
PMID:Tumor progression in murine leukemia virus-induced T-cell lymphomas: monitoring clonal selections with viral and cellular probes. 309 54
Chromosomal changes such as aneuploidies, translocations, and gene amplification occur in many murine tumors. In this study, we have analyzed the changes in chromosomes at different stages of tumor development in C57BL/6J mice treated with gamma-irradiation or the chemical carcinogen, N-methylnitrosourea. Trisomy 15 occurred in both groups of mice regardless of inducing agent. The frequency of this event differed significantly in radiation-treated animals between stage I and stage II of the disease. A specific marker chromosome occurred only in the gamma-irradiated mice and not in the mice treated with N-methylnitrosourea. This marker consists of a translocation between chromosomes 1 and 5. It occurred in 43% of the gamma-irradiated animals at stage 1 of the disease and did not vary markedly during tumor development. In contrast, trisomy 15 increased in frequency between stages I and II of the disease in the same animals. These results suggest that the translocation event may be an early event in tumor development, whereas trisomy 15 may contribute to
tumor progression
.
Leukemia
1988 Feb
PMID:Identification of a specific marker chromosome early in tumor development in gamma-irradiated C57BL/6J mice. 325 3
The myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) or preleukaemia is a haematological disorder characterized by low blood counts, bone marrow cells of abnormal appearance and progression to acute
leukaemia
in as many as 30% of patients. The distinctive preleukaemic and leukaemic phases of this disease make it an attractive model for
neoplastic progression
in human tumours. We reasoned that, because dominantly transforming genes (such as mutant alleles of ras proto-oncogenes) are found so frequently in acute
leukaemia
, the search for these genetic lesions during the clinical course of patients with MDS might give us insight into the function of oncogenes in leukaemogenesis. We report here that bone marrow cells from two of four patients with preleukaemia, and from one patient who progressed to acute
leukaemia
from MDS, contained a transforming allele of the Ki-ras proto-oncogene. In one preleukaemic patient, a novel mutation in codon 13 of this ras gene was detected in bone marrow cells harvested 1.5 years before the acute
leukaemia
developed. Our findings provide evidence that ras mutations may be involved in the early stages of human
leukaemia
.
...
PMID:Mutations of the Kirsten-ras proto-oncogene in human preleukaemia. 331 61
It has been shown before that prolonged treatment with doxycycline (DC), an inhibitor of mitochondrial protein synthesis, leads to proliferation arrest of a
leukemia
in the rat and, moreover, to eradication of this tumor. It has also been demonstrated that the period of treatment required to achieve this is shorter when DC administration is started in later stages of
tumor progression
. Therefore, the leukemic cells may have properties with regard to DC sensitivity which change with time during
tumor progression
. In the present study this hypothesis was tested by studying the permeability for DC, the presence of cell-surface molecules, and the mitochondrial content of the leukemic cells in various stages of tumor development in control and in DC-treated rats. Changes in DC permeability or antigenic phenotype were not observed, but the content of mitochondria decreases during
tumor progression
. DC treatment leads to an additional reduction of the content of functional mitochondria which results in proliferation arrest. The higher mitochondrial content of the leukemic cells during the earlier stages of tumor development explains thus why a longer period of DC treatment is needed to achieve growth arrest when treatment is started in these stages.
...
PMID:The effect of inhibition of mitochondrial protein synthesis on the proliferation and phenotypic properties of a rat leukemia in different stages of in-vivo tumor development. 360 28
We have isolated clonal cell lines from a transplanted adenocarcinoma induced by the RIII strain of mouse mammary tumor virus in a BALB/c mouse. Three major morphological cell types of these lines are developmentally linked; polygonal cells give rise to cuboidal and then to elongated cells. All cell lines expressed markers that are characteristic of mammary basal cells. In addition, the polygonal lines contained cells that have cell markers and ultrastructural features of epithelial cells; in these lines an occasional cell was found with myoepithelial features. The cuboidal and elongated lines lacked many epithelial differentiation characteristics and showed no myoepithelial differentiation. The cell lines contained variable numbers of acquired mouse mammary tumor virus and ecotropic murine
leukemia
virus proviruses. The various subclones derived from the original cell lines contained, in addition to the acquired proviruses of the parental line, one or more unique proviruses of either mouse mammary tumor virus or ecotropic murine
leukemia
virus origin. These unique insertions were used as genotypic markers to demonstrate the clonal relationship of the cell lines. Both polygonal and elongated cells are tumorigenic and give rise to adenocarcinomas and sarcoma-like tumors, respectively. In contrast, the cuboidal cells are poorly tumorigenic. Since cuboidal cells are derived from the polygonal cells, this suggests that
tumor progression
in this system proceeds via intermediates that are either poorly or nontumorigenic.
...
PMID:In vitro differentiation and progression of mouse mammary tumor cells. 375 29
The organization and expression of human histone genes were examined in W138 normal human diploid fibroblasts, SV40 transformed W138 cells, A549 epithelial lung carcinoma cells, two adeno-carcinoma cell lines (LOVO and HT29) and three
leukemia
cell lines (HL60, KG1 and K562). Analysis of the restriction enzyme digests of total genomic DNAs by hybridization with a series of cloned human histone sequences indicated polymorphic organization of at least a subset of the moderately reiterated human histone genes in these cells. Quantitative and qualitative differences were also observed in the representation of histone mRNAs by Northern blot analysis using cloned human histone genes as hybridization probes. However, there was no apparent correlation between variations in the representation of transcripts from various copies of the histone genes, variations in histone gene organization, and the extent of
tumor progression
.
...
PMID:Variations in the organization and expression of human histone genes in normal diploid and tumor cell lines. 620 Nov 32
Suppressor cells capable of enhancing tumor growth in vivo and of abrogating a potential anti-tumor immunity in vitro are generated in C57BL/6 mice inoculated with the high-leukemogenic A-RadLV. Mice inoculated with low-leukemogenic D-RadLV do not develop suppressor cells but contain anti-tumor reactive lymphocytes that can inhibit in vivo tumor growth. Cyclophosphamide (CyF) treatment of mice inoculated with A-RadLV hampered suppressor cell function and rendered the animals' lymphocytes responsive to A-RadLV induced tumor cells in vitro. Administration of CyF also reduced
leukemia
incidence in mice inoculated with A-RadLV, but had no effect on
leukemia
induction by D-RadLV in irradiated mice. It is suggested that the high leukemogenic activity of A-RadLV depends on the virus' ability to recruit CyF-sensitive suppressor cells early in latency and that
tumor progression
in mice inoculated with D-RadLV is arrested due to the host immune response.
...
PMID:Suppressor and reactive lymphocytes in radiation leukemia virus (RadLV)-induced leukemogenesis. 622 81
Friend virus infection of mice causes progressive leukemogenesis--a rapid splenic erythroblastosis that develops weeks later into a disseminating erythroleukemia. Furthermore, the replication-defective Friend spleen focus-forming virus (F-SFFV) encodes a membrane glycoprotein with an apparent Mr of 55,000 (designated gp55), which is structurally and immunologically related to the membrane envelope glycoproteins of dual tropic murine
leukemia
viruses. We now have isolated three spontaneous F-SFFV mutants that encode abnormally sized gp55-related glycoproteins with apparent Mrs of 40,000, 54,000, and 58,000, respectively. RNA blot and Southern blot analyses indicate that the mutant nucleic acids do not have substantial deletions or insertions in their glycoprotein gene regions. Protein fragmentation patterns indicate that the mutations affect nonoverlapping domains of the glycoprotein. Furthermore, these mutant glycoproteins seem to be defective in their processing to the plasma membranes. Although transmitted efficiently between cultured cells, the mutants have dramatically reduced leukemogenicities compared with the same titers of wild-type F-SFFV. We conclude that the gp55 structural gene is necessary for initiating the erythroblast proliferative phase of Friend disease and that changes in membranes can be primary causes rather than only secondary consequences of
tumor progression
.
...
PMID:Loss of leukemogenicity caused by mutations in the membrane glycoprotein structural gene of Friend spleen focus-forming virus. 630 44
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>