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)

Fas-associated death domain (FADD) plays a crucial role during death receptor-mediated apoptosis. In addition, FADD possesses apoptosis-independent activities, including cell-cycle regulation and cell proliferation regulated by the phosphorylation of FADD at Ser194. The aim of this study was to explore the possibility whether alteration of phosphorylated FADD (p-FADD) expression might be a characteristic of gastric cancer. We analyzed the expression of p-FADD protein in 60 gastric adenocarcinomas by immunohistochemistry using a tissue microarray approach. In the normal gastric mucosal cells, surface and glandular epithelial cells evenly expressed p-FADD in the nuclei but not in the cytoplasm. In the cancers, p-FADD expression was detected in 38 cases (63%) of the gastric carcinomas, but there was no p-FADD immunostaining in the remaining 22 cancers (37%). Of note, p-FADD immunostaining was observed in cytoplasm/nuclei (20 cancers; 33%) and cytoplasm (18 cancers; 30%). There was no significant association of p-FADD expression with clinocopathological characteristics, including invasion, metastasis, and stage. Our data showed that the expression of p-FADD in gastric cancers was heterogenous in its location compared to the uniform nuclear expression of p-FADD in normal gastric cells. Many of the cancers (67%) were devoid of nuclear p-FADD, suggesting that p-FADD functions in the nucleus may be perturbed in the cancers. Also, p-FADD expression in the cytoplasm in a large fraction of the cancers (63%), not seen in the normal cells, suggested that the cell death functions of p-FADD could be altered in the cancer cells.
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PMID:Expression of nuclear and cytoplasmic phosphorylated FADD in gastric cancers. 1720 86

Pterostilbene, an active constituent of blueberries, is known to possess anti-inflammatory activity and also induces apoptosis in various types of cancer cells. Here, the effects of pterostilbene on cell viability in human gastric carcinoma AGS cells were investigated. This study demonstrated that pterostilbene was able to inhibit cell proliferation and induce apoptosis in a concentration- and time-dependent manner. Pterostilbene-induced cell death was characterized with changes in nuclear morphology, DNA fragmentation, and cell morphology. The molecular mechanism of pterostilbene-induced apoptosis was also investigated. The results show the caspase-2, -3, -8, and -9 are all activated by pterostilbene, together with cleavage of the downstream caspase-3 target DNA fragmentation factor (DFF-45) and poly(ADP-riobse) polymerase. Moreover, the results indicate that the Bcl-family of proteins, the mitochondrial pathway, and activation of the caspase cascade are responsible for pterostilbene-induced apoptosis. Pterostilbene markedly enhanced the expression of growth arrest DNA damage-inducible gene 45 and 153 (GADD45 and GADD153) in a time-dependent manner. Flow cytometric analysis indicated that pterostilbene blocked cell cycle progression at G1 phase in a dose- and time-dependent manner. Pterostilbene increased the p53, p21, p27, and p16 proteins and decreased levels of cyclin A, cyclin E, cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (Cdk2), Cdk4, and Cdk6, but the expression of cyclin D1 was not affected. Over a 24 h exposure to pterostilbene, the degree of phosphorylation of Rb was decreased after 6 h. In summary, pterostilbene induced apoptosis in AGS cells through activating the caspase cascade via the mitochondrial and Fas/FasL pathway, GADD expression, and by modifying cell cycle progress and changes in several cycle-regulating proteins. The induction of apoptosis by pterostilbene may provide a pivotal mechanism of the antitumor effects and for treatment of human gastric cancer.
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PMID:Pterostilbene induces apoptosis and cell cycle arrest in human gastric carcinoma cells. 1769 82

When cells within the gastric mucosa progress from metaplasia to dysplasia to cancer, they acquire a Fas Ag apoptosis-resistant phenotype. It is unusual to completely abolish the pathway, suggesting other forms of Fas Ag signaling may be important or even necessary for gastric cancer to progress. Little is known about alternate signaling of the Fas Ag pathway in gastric mucosal cells. Using a cell culture model of rat gastric mucosal cells, we show that gastric mucosal cells utilize a type II signaling pathway for apoptosis. Under conditions of low receptor stimulation or under conditions where apoptosis is blocked downstream of the death-inducing signal complex, Fas Ag signaling proceeds toward proliferative signaling. Under conditions favoring proliferative signaling, cFLIP is recruited to the Fas-associated death domain-like interleukin-1beta-converting enzyme at the death-inducing signal complex and activates ERK1/2. ERK1/2 in turn activates NF-kappaB. ERK1/2 stimulates proliferation, whereas NF-kappaB activation results in upregulation of the antiapoptotic protein survivin, further promoting proliferation over apoptosis. These results suggest that factors that inhibit apoptosis confer a growth advantage to the cells beyond the survival advantage of avoiding apoptosis and in effect convert the Fas Ag signaling pathway from a tumor suppressor to a tumor promoter.
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PMID:Fas Ag-FasL coupling leads to ERK1/2-mediated proliferation of gastric mucosal cells. 1799 9

Although N-myc downstream regulated gene 2 (NDRG2) has been known to be a tumor suppressor gene, the function of this gene has not been elucidated. In the present study, we investigated the expression and function of NDRG2 in human gastric cancer. Among seven gastric cancer and two non-cancer cell lines, only two gastric cancer cell lines, SNU-16 and SNU-620, expressed NDRG2, which was detected in the cytoplasm. Interestingly, NDRG2 was highly expressed in normal gastric tissues, but gastric cancer patients were divided into NDRG2-positive and -negative groups. The survival rate of NDRG2-negative patients was lower than that of NDRG2-positive patients. We confirmed that the loss of NDRG2 expression was a significant and independent prognostic indicator in gastric carcinomas by multivariate analysis. To investigate the role of NDRG2 in gastric cancer cells, we generated a NDRG2-silenced gastric cancer cell line, which stably expresses NDRG2 siRNA. NDRG2-silenced SNU-620 cells exhibited slightly increased proliferation and cisplatin resistance. In addition, inhibition of NDRG2 decreased Fas expression and Fas-mediated cell death. Taken together, these data suggest that inactivation of NDRG2 may elicit resistance against anticancer drug and Fas-mediated cell death. Furthermore, case studies of gastric cancer patients indicate that NDRG2 expression may be involved in tumor progression and overall survival of the patients.
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PMID:Expression of NDRG2 is related to tumor progression and survival of gastric cancer patients through Fas-mediated cell death. 1816 Aug 41

The level of serum CCL5, a C-C chemokine, is reportedly correlated with tumor progression in several cancers. We herein investigated the mechanisms by which CCL5 might contribute to tumor progression in gastric cancer. Serum CCL5 levels significantly correlated with tumor progression and prognosis in patients with gastric cancer. Immunohistochemistry showed that tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes expressed CCL5, while the tumor cells expressed the CCL5 receptors. Fluorescent double staining showed that tumor-infiltrating CD4+ cells rather than CD8+ cells preferentially expressed CCL5. Using gastric cancer cell lines (MKN45, KATO III), we examined CCL5 production by coculturing whole peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs), CD4+ cells, or CD8+ cells, with tumor cells. CD4+ cells cocultured with tumor cells remarkably enhanced CCL5 production in a direct cell-cell contact manner over other cocultured PBMCs, including CD8+ cells. Gastric cancer cell lines expressed CCL5 receptors and augmented their proliferation in response to CCL5 stimulation. Furthermore, we examined the effect of CCL5-treated cancer cells on the cocultured PBMCs, focusing on the CD4+/CD8+ proportion and apoptosis. Coculture of CCL5-treated gastric cancer cells with PBMCs resulted in a significant decrease in the proportion of CD8+ cells but not CD4+ cells, suggesting Fas-FasL-mediated apoptosis in CD8+ cells. In immunodeficient mice coinjected with KATO III and PBMCs, neutralization of CCL5 significantly suppressed tumor progression, resulting in a favorable outcome. In conclusion, gastric cancer cells might thus induce CD4+ T cells to secrete CCL5 and exploit it for their progression, as well as to aid in the prevention of CD8+ T cell-involved tumor elimination.
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PMID:Gastric cancer cells exploit CD4+ cell-derived CCL5 for their growth and prevention of CD8+ cell-involved tumor elimination. 1824 96

The herb medicine formula "Yang Wei Kang Liu" (YWKLF) has been used to inhibit the metastasis of human gastric cancer to prolong patient survival. In this study, we evaluated the effect of combination of chemotherapy with YWKLF on the survival of stage IV gastric cancer patients and the potential mechanisms of YWKLF by focusing on its capacity to activate apoptotic pathways in human gastric cancer cell line MGC-803. We found that combination of chemotherapy with oral administration of YWKLF significantly increased the survival of stage IV gastric cancer patients. In an approach of "serum pharmacology" in which sera were collected from rabbits orally administered with YWKLF and examined for their anti-tumor cell activity in vitro, we observed that sera from rabbits administered with YWKLF induced the apoptosis of MGC-803 cells by causing the loss of mitochondrial membrane potential, increasing the expression of Fas protein and Bax mRNA, as well as down-regulating Fas-L mRNA. Our results suggest that activation of major pro-apoptotic pathways may account for the anti-gastric cancer activity of YWKLF, which may provide a basis for isolation and identification of more highly effective anti-cancer components.
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PMID:The herb medicine formula "Yang Wei Kang Liu" improves the survival of late stage gastric cancer patients and induces the apoptosis of human gastric cancer cell line through Fas/Fas ligand and Bax/Bcl-2 pathways. 1860 65

The apoptosis-inducing ability of hybrid compounds composed of macrosphelide and thiazole-containing side chain of epothilones was investigated. Among the tested series of hybrid compounds the one containing thiazole side chain at C15 (MSt-2) showed the maximum potency to induce apoptosis, while another containing thiazole side chain at C3 (MSt-6) was less potent. MSt-2 was found to induce apoptosis in human lymphoma (U937) cells in a dose- and time-dependent manner as confirmed by DNA fragmentation analysis. MSt-2 treated cells showed rapid reactive oxygen species (ROS) formation and c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) activation. Furthermore, significant activation of extrinsic pathway as evident by Fas expression and caspase-8 activation was also observed. MSt-2-mediated decreased expression of Bid is an important event for cross talk between intrinsic and extrinsic signaling. N-acetyl-l-cysteine pre-treatment rescued cells from MSt-2-induced ROS formation, mitochondrial membrane potential (Delta psi(m)) loss, Fas expression, caspase-8 and -3 activation and DNA fragmentation. Moreover, antioxidant enzymes catalase and/or superoxide dismutase conjugated with polyethylene glycol also inhibit MSt-2-induced ROS formation, apoptosis and Delta psi(m) loss suggesting thereby pro-oxidant effects of MSt-2. Furthermore, JNK and pan-caspase inhibitors also protect cells from MSt-2-induced apoptosis. In addition to this, MSt-2 was found to be more potent in human colon carcinoma (HCT116) and human gastric cancer (AGS) cells while it has no effect on human normal dermal fibroblast. The important structure-activity relationship observed in the current study which makes MSt-2 more potent than MSt-6 is the position of thiazole side chain and stereochemistry of position 3 in chemical structure. In short the results of our study demonstrate that MSt-2-induced rapid ROS generation and mitochondrial dysfunction in cells trigger events responsible for mitochondria-dependent apoptosis pathway.
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PMID:Mechanism of apoptosis induced by a newly synthesized derivative of macrosphelides with a thiazole side chain. 1901 19

Cancers in the gastrointestinal system account for a large proportion of malignancies and cancer-related deaths with gastric cancer and colorectal cancer being the most common ones. For those patients in whom surgical resection is not possible, other therapeutic approaches are necessary. Disordered apoptosis has been linked to cancer development and treatment resistance. Apoptosis occurs via extrinsic or intrinsic signaling each triggered and regulated by many different molecular pathways. In recent years, the selective induction of apoptosis in tumor cells has been increasingly recognized as a promising approach for cancer therapy. A detailed understanding of the molecular pathways involved in the regulation of apoptosis is essential for developing novel effective therapeutic approaches. Apoptosis can be induced by many different approaches including activating cell surface death receptors (for example, Fas, TRAIL and TNF receptors), inhibiting cell survival signaling (such as EGFR, MAPK and PI3K), altering apoptosis threshold by modulating pro-apoptotic and anti-apoptotic members of the Bcl-2 family, down-regulating anti-apoptosis proteins (such as XIAP, survivin and c-IAP2), and using other pro-apoptotic agents. In this review, the authors reviewed the currently reported apoptosis-targeting approaches in gastrointestinal cancers.
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PMID:Targeting apoptosis as an approach for gastrointestinal cancer therapy. 1927 96

We sought to investigate the efficacy of arsenic trioxide (As(2)O(3)) against a human gastric cell line implanted in nude mice in vivo, as well as the mechanism involved. The solid tumor model was created in nude mice with the gastric cancer cell line SGC-7901. The animals were randomly divided into three groups. As(2)O(3) was injected into animals in two arsenic-treated groups (2.5 mg/kg and 5 mg/kg), and the same volume of saline solution was injected into the control group. The inhibitory effect was observed in every group. Apoptotic cells and apoptotic bodies were observed by transmission electron microscope; the fraction of apoptotic cells was detected by TUNEL (terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase dUTP nick-end labeling) under laser confocal technology. The expression of Fas and FasL was detected by immunohistochemical staining. In nude mice, after treatment with 5 mg/kg and 2.5 mg/kg As(2)O(3), approximately 50% and 30% tumor growth inhibition were observed, respectively (P < 0.05 for both treatment groups). Increase in apoptotic cells and apoptotic bodies appeared in As(2)O(3)-treated tumors compared with the control group. The fluorescence intensity levels of apoptotic cells in tumor were significantly higher in the arsenic-treated groups (P < 0.05 for both treatment groups). The fluorescence intensity level of apoptotic cells in the 5-mg/kg group was higher than that in the 2.5-mg/kg group (P < 0.05). The expression of Fas protein increased in dose- and time-dependent manner after the treatment with As(2)O(3), but that of FasL protein showed no significant difference between control and treated groups. As(2)O(3) did not induce hepatic and renal system injury in the nude mice. As(2)O(3) can inhibit the growth of human gastric cell implanted tumor. We ascribe this to upregulation of Fas, which can induce apoptosis of gastric cells.
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PMID:Antitumor effect and mechanisms of arsenic trioxide on subcutaneously implanted human gastric cancer in nude mice. 2036 23

Helicobacter pylori infection is the major cause of gastroduodenal pathologies, but only a minority of infected patients develop gastric B-cell lymphoma, gastric autoimmunity, or other life threatening diseases, as gastric cancer or peptic ulcer. The type of host immune response against H. pylori, particularly the cytolytic effector functions of T cells, is crucial for the outcome of the infection. T cells are potentially able to kill a target via different mechanisms, such as perforins or Fas-Fas ligand interaction. In H. pylori-infected patients with gastric autoimmunity cytolytic T cells, that cross-recognize different epitopes of H. pylori proteins and H(+)K(+)-ATPase autoantigen, infiltrate the gastric mucosa and lead to gastric atrophy via long-lasting activation of Fas ligand-mediated appotosis and perforin-induced cytotoxicity. On the other hand, gastric T cells from MALT lymphoma exhibit defective perforin- and Fas-Fas ligand-mediated killing of B cells, with consequent abnormal help for B-cell proliferation, suggesting that deregulated and exhaustive H. pylori-induced T cell-dependent B-cell activation can support both the onset and the promotion of low-grade B-cell lymphoma.
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PMID:Cytotoxic T cells in H. pylori-related gastric autoimmunity and gastric lymphoma. 2061 32


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