Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0024623 (gastric cancer)
36,219 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Vitamin A level and the cytosol-binding proteins specific for vitamin A ere studied in human tumor and its surrounding tissue. The tissues examined were 10 hepatocellular carcinomas which were surgically removed, 4 other malignant tumors (2 metastatic liver cancer and one each of gastric cancer and glioma), and 3 human fetal livers. Compared with surrounding tissues, considerable decrease of vitamin A content was observed in the hepatocellular carcinoma suggesting local deficient state of the vitamin. In addition to cellular retinol-binding protein (CRBP) and retinoic acid-binding protein (CRABP), a new molecular species having affinity for both retinol and retinoic acid was detected in the cytosols obtained from hepatocellular carcinoma as well as glioma by means of gel filtration on Sephadex G-75. With regard to ligand specificity, the protein was found to be similar to cellular retinol-binding protein, F-type or CRBP(F) which was originally recognized in the fish eye cytosol. Since the protein was also demonstrated in human fetal liver, CRBP(F) is considered to be an oncofetal protein in nature. The present study further revealed that CRBP(F) was detected in 80% of hepatocellular carcinoma (whereas plasma alpha-fetoprotein was significantly elevated only in 50%), and hepatocellular carcinoma contained CRBP(F) in a larger amount than CRABP.
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PMID:Demonstration of a novel cellular retinol-binding protein, F-type, in hepatocellular carcinoma. 8 58

The occurrance and significance of important carcinofetal antigens other than AFP and CEA are reported. These included the alpha 2 H-protein which is produced in the liver and increases in serum of patients with various tumors, the fetal sulphoglycoprotein antigen FSA from the gastric juice of patients with gastric cancer, the carcinoplacental alkaline phosphatase (REGAN-isoenzyme)which is found in the serum of patients suffering from e.g. bronchogenic, mammary, urogenital and gastrointestinal carcinomas, the beta-S-fetoprotein which is most likely to be identical with C-reactive protein, gamma-fetoprotein, the carcinofetal antigen in glial tumors (CFGA); ectopic production of placental hormones like human gonadotropin, placental lactogen, plasminogen-activators; leukemia-associated antigens. Furthermore, some other less known carcinofetal antigens are mentioned.
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PMID:[Carcinofetal antigens. III. Further carcinofetal antigens (author's transl)]. 115 52

Neuroblastoma (NB) arises from primitive sympathetic neuroblasts in the adrenal gland or the sympathetic ganglion. NB in situ, sometimes observed in the adrenal glands of autopsied infants, is considered to be a premalignant lesion that may develop into NB. Little is understood about the morphological and biochemical changes that accompany this malignant progression. In this study, a unique monoclonal antibody, KP-NAC8, raised against a human NB cell line is described. This binds to NB cells but not to fetal neuroblasts. The antibody recognizes a Mr 200,000 surface protein on NB cells. KP-NAC8 binds to 15 of 17 human NB cell lines and all 26 fresh NB samples either from tumor tissues or from marrow aspirates involved with tumor. The antibody was found to cross-react with some other tumor cell lines, namely, Ewing's sarcoma (1 of 2), melanoma (1 of 4), lung cancer (3 of 3), and leukemia (2 of 14) cell lines. However, KP-NAC8 did not bind to any rhabdomyosarcoma (0 of 4), Wilms' tumor (0 of 4), retinoblastoma (0 of 2), glioma (0 of 4), and gastric cancer (0 of 2) cell lines examined. Among fetal tissues, KP-NAC8 did not react with normal neuroblasts in the adrenal glands of 5 fetuses. In a further study, the membrane phenotype of fetal adrenal neuroblasts was analyzed by a panel of 12 monoclonal antibodies including KP-NAC8. A comparison of the binding of the same panel of antibodies to fresh NB revealed that antibodies UJ13A, UJ127:11, PI153/3, anti-Thy-1, A2B5, BA-1, BA-2, HSAN1.2, and Leu-7 bound to both fetal adrenal neuroblasts and NB cells. Monoclonal antibodies OKIa-1 and J5 did not bind to either tissues. The only antibody that could distinguish fetal adrenal neuroblasts from NB cells was KP-NAC8. KP-NAC8 may, therefore, define a differentiation-related antigen that may prove helpful in understanding the biological nature of NB and NB in situ.
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PMID:Cell surface membrane antigen present on neuroblastoma cells but not fetal neuroblasts recognized by a monoclonal antibody (KP-NAC8). 356 10

Human cancers including eleven lines of stomach cancer, thirteen lines of lung cancer and six lines of glioma xenotransplated in nude mice were tested for experimental treatment by seven different anticancer agents in the present project. The doses used in this experiment were the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) and rational dose (RD) which was determined to maintain the blood level of drugs in nude mice the same as that in humans to obtain clinical effectiveness. In this experimental regimen, the response rate (number of effective lines/number of total lines tested) in the MTD treated group was much higher than the clinical response rate, but the response rate in the RD-administered group was almost the same as the clinical response rate.
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PMID:Utilization of nude mice in research on human cancer--screening system of anticancer agents using human tumor xenografts in nude mice. 360 90

A splice variant of CD44 (exon V4-V7) confers metastatic behavior in a rat carcinoma model; aberrant expression of splice variants has been detected on a variety of human tumor cell lines as well as primary and metastatic human tumors, including lymphomas, carcinomas (colon, thyroid, mamma, bladder), and glioma. We used enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay to determine the concentration of soluble CD44 in the serum samples of 10 normal individuals and 41 patients with various stages of gastric cancer. Soluble CD44S and its isoforms, V5 and V6, were present in the serum of normal individuals (288.53 +/- 18.33, 25.49 +/- 1.70, and 148.32 +/- 3.15 ng/ml, respectively). The concentrations of soluble CD44 V5 and V6 were elevated in patients with advanced gastric carcinoma (69.39 +/- 6.06 and 216.62 +/- 32.98 ng/ml, respectively). Serum CD44 V5 concentrations correlated with the extent of tumor invasion (T), the status of lymph node involvement (N), and distant metastasis (M) (TNM staging) (p < 0.05), whereas CD44S did not. These results suggest that detection of abnormal regulation of CD44 splicing could be helpful in gastric cancer diagnosis and disease evaluation.
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PMID:Soluble CD44 isoforms in serum as potential markers of metastatic gastric carcinoma. 874 47

To prevent neoplasia, cells of multicellular organisms activate cellular disposal programs such as apoptosis in response to deregulated oncogene expression, making the suppression of such programs an essential step for potentially neoplastic cells to become established as clinically relevant tumors. Since the mutation of ras proto-oncogenes, the most frequently mutated proto-oncogenes in human tumors, is very rare in some tumor types such as glioblastomas and gastric cancers, we hypothesized that mutated ras genes might activate a cell death program that cannot be overcome by these tumor types. Here we show that the expression of oncogenically mutated ras gene induces cellular degeneration accompanied by cytoplasmic vacuoles in human glioma and gastric cancer cell lines. Cells dying as a result of oncogenic Ras expression had relatively well-preserved nuclei that were negative for TUNEL staining. An immunocytochemical analysis demonstrated that the cytoplasmic vacuoles are derived mainly from lysosomes. This oncogenic Ras-induced cell death occurred in the absence of caspase activation, and was not inhibited by the overexpression of anti-apoptotic Bcl-2 protein. These observations suggested that oncogenic Ras-induced cell death is most consistent with a type of programmed cell death designated 'type 2 physiological cell death' or 'autophagic degeneration', and that this cell death is regulated by a molecular mechanism distinct from that of apoptosis. Our findings suggest a possible role for this non-apoptotic cell death in the prevention of neoplasia, and the activation of the non-apoptotic cell death program may become a potential cancer therapy complementing apoptosis-based therapies. In addition, the approach used in this study may be a valuable way to find genetically-regulated cell suicide programs that cannot be overcome by particular tumor types.
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PMID:Oncogenic Ras triggers cell suicide through the activation of a caspase-independent cell death program in human cancer cells. 1032 74

Common polymorphisms in DNA repair genes may alter protein function and an individual's capacity to repair damaged DNA; deficits in repair capacity may lead to genetic instability and carcinogenesis. To establish our overall understanding of possible in vivo relationships between DNA repair polymorphisms and the development of cancer, we performed a literature review of epidemiological studies that assessed associations between such polymorphisms and risk of cancer. Thirty studies of polymorphisms in OGG1, XRCC1, ERCC1, XPC, XPD, XPF, BRCA2, and XRCC3 were identified in the April 30, 2002 MEDLINE database (National Center for Biotechnology Information. PubMed Database: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez). These studies focused on adult glioma, bladder cancer, breast cancer, esophageal cancer, lung cancer, prostate cancer, skin cancer (melanoma and nonmelanoma), squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck, and stomach cancer. We found that a small proportion of the published studies were large and population-based. Nonetheless, published data were consistent with associations between: (a) the OGG1 S326C variant and increased risk of various types of cancer; (b) the XRCC1 R194W variant and reduced risk of various types of cancer; and (c) the BRCA2 N372H variant and increased risk of breast cancer. Suggestive results were seen for polymorphisms in other genes; however, small sample sizes may have contributed to false-positive or false-negative findings. We conclude that large, well-designed studies of common polymorphisms in DNA repair genes are needed. Such studies may benefit from analysis of multiple genes or polymorphisms and from the consideration of relevant exposures that may influence the likelihood of cancer in the presence of reduced DNA repair capacity.
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PMID:Polymorphisms in DNA repair genes and associations with cancer risk. 1249 39

Oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes are clustered around recombination hot spots or fragile sites in the genome, because double-strand break is the common initial step in translocation, deletion and gene amplification. FGFR2 gene on human chromosome 10q26 is amplified in diffuse-type gastric cancer, while WDR11 gene on human chromosome 10q26 is disrupted in glial tumors. Here, we investigated genomic structure around FGFR2 and WDR11 loci. The FGFR2 gene, consisting of 21 exons, was located within nucleotide position 485637-605687 of NT_030764.5 (reverse orientation), and WDR11 gene was located within nucleotide position 6515786-6574126 of NT_008902.12 (forward orientation). Because nucleotide position 1-91397 of NT_030764.5 corresponded to nucleotide position 6639437-6748623 of NT_008902.12, FGFR2 and WDR11 genes were found to be closely linked in tail-to-tail manner with an interval of ca. 570 kb. Due to the deletion of exon 21 within FGFR2 amplicons, exon 21 is substituted by exon 20 or other aberrant exons in aberrant FGFR2 transcripts previously isolated from KATO-III, OCUM-2M and HSC43 cells. Mapping of aberrant exons and deletion junctions around the WDR11-FGFR2 locus in KATO-III and OCUM-2M cells revealed that inverted-type recombination occurred through end joining of the FGFR2 locus on one allele and that on the other allele. Amplification of FGFR2 gene with such recombination around exon 21 results in exclusion of WDR11 gene from the FGFR2 amplicon. Tumor suppressor genes closely linked to oncogenes might be excluded from amplicon through a breakage-fusion-bridge process during oncogene amplification.
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PMID:FGFR2 and WDR11 are neighboring oncogene and tumor suppressor gene on human chromosome 10q26. 1268 85

This study investigated sonic hedgehog (Shh) signalling in gastric metaplasia in the insulin-gastrin (InsGas) hypergastrinaemic mouse +/- Helicobacter felis (H. felis) infection. Sonic hedgehog gene and protein expression was reduced in pre-metaplastic lesions from non-infected mice (90% gene reduction, P<0.01) compared to normal mucosa. Sonic hedgehog was reactivated in gastric metaplasia of H. felis-infected mice (3.5-fold increase, P<0.01) compared to pre-metaplastic lesions. Additionally, the Shh target gene, glioma-associated oncogene (Gli)-1, was significantly reduced in the gastric glands of InsGas mice (75% reduction, P<0.05) and reactivated with H. felis infection (P<0.05, base of glands, P<0.01 stroma of metaplastic glands). The ability of H. felis to activate the Shh pathway was investigated by measuring the effect of target cytokine, interleukin-8 (IL-8), on Shh expression in AGS and MGLVA1 cells, which was shown to induce Shh expression at physiological concentrations. H. felis induced the expression of NF-kappaB in inflammatory infiltrates in vivo, and the expression of the IL-8 mouse homologue, protein KC, in inflammatory infiltrates and metaplastic lesions. Sonic hedgehog pathway reactivation was paralleled with an increase in proliferation of metaplastic lesions (15.75 vs 4.39% in infected vs non-infected mice, respectively, P<0.001). Furthermore, Shh overexpression increased the growth rate of the gastric cancer cell line, AGS. The antiapoptotic protein, bcl-2, was expressed in the stroma of infected mice, along with a second Shh target gene, patched-1 (P=0.0001, stroma of metaplastic gland). This study provides evidence suggesting reactivation of Shh signalling from pre-metaplastic to advanced metaplastic lesions of the stomach and outlines the importance of the Shh pathway as a potential chemoprophylactic target for gastric carcinogenesis.
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PMID:De-regulation of the sonic hedgehog pathway in the InsGas mouse model of gastric carcinogenesis. 1750 14

Hedgehog-interacting protein (HHIP) was identified as a putative antagonist of the Hh pathway and as a target of Hh signalling. Our aim was to clarify the expression profiles and epigenetic alterations of the HHIP gene in gastrointestinal cancer. The expression and promoter epigenetic status of HHIP in cancer cell lines and freshly resected gastrointestinal cancer tissues were examined using RT-PCR, tissue microarray analysis, methylation-specific PCR, and chromatin immunoprecipitation assay. Cells were treated with the demethylating agent 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine and/or histone deacetylase inhibitor trichostatin A. WST-8 assays and in vitro invasion assays after treatment with HHIP-specific siRNA were performed. HHIP expression levels were reduced in most of the gastrointestinal cancer cell lines and in a certain subset of cancer tissues, and these were correlated with promoter hypermethylation. A heterochromatic structure characterized by neither acetylated H3 nor acetylated H4, and histone H3 lysine 9 hypermethylation and histone H3 lysine 4 hypomethylation was observed in cancer cells in which the HHIP gene was aberrantly silenced. On the other hand, overexpression of the HHIP gene was also found in some cancer tissues and there were significant correlations between protein expression levels of HHIP and those of Sonic hedgehog (Shh), Indian hedgehog, Patched, and glioma-associated oncogene homologue-1. An association was found between lymph node metastasis and HHIP silencing in colorectal cancer tissues with strong Shh expression and between advanced TNM stage and HHIP silencing in diffuse-type gastric cancer tissues with strong Shh expression. Down-regulation of HHIP expression by siRNA resulted in a significant increase in colon cancer cell growth and invasion in vitro. Silencing of the HHIP gene due to hypermethylation and chromatin remodelling appears to be frequently involved in gastrointestinal tumourigenesis.
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PMID:Transcriptional silencing of hedgehog-interacting protein by CpG hypermethylation and chromatic structure in human gastrointestinal cancer. 1772 92


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