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)

Most solid tumors, including gastric cancers, respond poorly to non-surgical treatments which are expected to induce an apoptosis-dependent involution. We hypothesize that the apoptotic machinery in solid tumors is either defective or in a suppressed condition. Overcoming the ineffective induction of apoptosis may improve the responsiveness of solid tumors to non-surgical treatments. Recently, sorbitol, a kind of hexose, has been found to be an effective inducer of apoptosis in HEp-2 cells. Therefore, it is of particular interest to examine the effect of sorbitol-treatment on gastric cancer cells. in the present study, we selected 4 gastric cancer cell lines which have been reported to exhibit different abilities in regard to apoptosis induction, and examined the effect of sorbitol-treatment on apoptosis induction. Within 3 hr after sorbitol-treatment, apoptosis was induced comparably in all cell lines examined. Cell death in MKN-1, MKN-28 or MKN-74 proceeded in a biphasic manner, while cell death in KATO-III was monophasic. The cell death partially depended on caspase activity. Treatments with sorbitol in combination with 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) markedly suppressed the apoptotic cell death, suggesting a role of protein kinase-C-dependent process. To our knowledge, this is the most rapid induction of apoptosis in human gastric cancer cells reported to date.
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PMID:Rapid induction of apoptosis in human gastric cancer cell lines by sorbitol. 1123 46

Gamma-thujaplicin and beta-dolabrin, the constituents of the wood of Thujopsis dolabrata Sieb. et Zucc. var. hondai showed strong in vitro cytotoxic effects against the human stomach cancer cell lines KATO-III and Ehrlich's ascites carcinoma. The cytotoxic effects of the two compounds against both tumor cell lines were clear when cell growth was measured by the 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide (MTT) method. Gamma-thujaplicin and beta-dolabrin at 0.32 microg/ml inhibited cell growth of human stomach cancer KATO-III by 85 and 67%, and Ehrlich's ascites carcinoma by 91 and 75%, respectively. There is no large difference in cytotoxicity between these compounds, but the activity of gamma-thujaplicin was slightly more potent than that of beta-dolabrin. On the other hand, hinokitiol acetate did not show a cytotoxic effect, suggesting that at least a part of the mechanism of the cytotoxic effect of hinokitiol-related compounds is due to metal chelation between the carbonyl group at C-1 and the hydroxyl group at C-2 in the tropolone skeleton of these molecules. The acute toxicities [50% lethal dose (LD50) value: intraperitoneal injection, Van der Waedem] of gamma-thujaplicin and beta-dolabrin in mice were 277 mg/kg and 232 mg/kg, respectively.
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PMID:Cytotoxicity of the hinokitiol-related compounds, gamma-thujaplicin and beta-dolabrin. 1125 89

Allogeneic transfusion seems to drive the immune system toward a Th2 response and away from a Th1 response, providing a hypothetical mechanism for transfusion-induced immunomodulation. By means of an intracytoplasmic cytokine detection technique with flow cytometry, it is possible to measure Th1 and Th2 cells derived from peripheral blood mononuclear cells. This study evaluated the presence of transfusion-induced immunomodulation in 11 gastric cancer patients after gastrectomy with perioperative blood transfusion, compared to 11 gastric cancer patients who were treated by gastrectomy without transfusion. Lymphocytes subsets, including CD4 T cells, CD8 T cells, CD4/CD8 Ratio, CD2(+) T cells, CD3(+) T cells, and CD19(+) B cells, were measured in these patients, as well as variables that might suggest transfusion-induced immunomodulation, such as duration of antibiotic use, duration of hospital stay, and total hospital charges. This study also measured changes in the Th1/Th2 ratio. Th1 and Th2 lymphocytes were characterized by measuring intracellular expression of cytokines with flow cytometry. Cells were stimulated with phorbol myristate acetate and ionomycin in the presence of brefeldin-A. The results showed no significant differences in lymphocyte subsets, Th1/Th2 ratio, total hospital charges, or duration of antibiotic utilization between the groups of transfused and non-transfused gastric cancer patients after gastrectomy. The only significant difference was a longer hospital stay for transfused patients (mean 20.5 da) compared to non-transfused patients (mean 16.2 da). The anticipated finding of a Th2 response after blood transfusion was not observed. A larger group of patients may be needed to document such an effect, since many confounding variables affect the morbidity and outcome of surgery in these patients.
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PMID:Search for immunomodulatory effects of blood transfusion in gastric cancer patients: flow cytometry of Th1/Th2 cells in peripheral blood. 1133 7

We investigated the reaction of Guo with nitrous acid in the presence of NaCl. When 1 mM Guo was incubated with 100 mM NaNO(2) and 2M NaCl in sodium acetate buffer at pH 3.2 and 37 degrees C, 2-chloroinosine (2-Cl-Ino) was produced in addition to oxanosine (Oxo) and xanthosine (Xao). The yield of 2-Cl-Ino was 0.033 mM at an incubation time of 2 h. Under the same reaction conditions, GMP and dGuo gave rise to the corresponding 2-chloro derivatives with comparable yields. All the 2-chloro derivatives were fairly stable (t(12)>360 h) at physiological pH and temperature. To elucidate the reaction mechanism of the chlorination, the diazoate derivative of Guo, a reaction intermediate of the Guo-HNO(2) system, was employed as a starting compound. When the diazoate was incubated with 2M NaCl in a neutral solution, 2-Cl-Ino was produced in addition to Oxo and Xao. These results suggest that the 2-chloro derivatives can be produced from foodstuffs in the human stomach and may have potential importance as a carcinogen causing gastric cancer.
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PMID:Formation of 2-chloroinosine from guanosine by treatment of HNO(2) in the presence of NaCl. 1159 75

The M(r) 78,000 glucose-regulated protein (GRP78) can be induced by physiological stresses such as glucose deprivation and hypoxia. In solid tumors, hypoxia can promote malignant progression and confer resistance to irradiation and chemotherapy by altering gene expression. Here, we investigated the molecular mechanisms and signaling pathway involved in the late and prolonged induction of the GRP78 gene by hypoxia in a human gastric cancer cell line, MKN28. Nuclear run-on assays and mRNA stability measurements revealed that transcriptional activation, not stabilization of mRNA, contributed to the dramatic induction of GRP78 gene under hypoxia. Induction of GRP78 by chronic hypoxia was completely abolished by pretreatment with PD98059 [a specific inhibitor of mitogen-activated protein/extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) kinase (MEK1)] or by overexpression of a dominant-negative MEK1 mutant, demonstrating a direct involvement of ERK in the induction of transcription at the GRP78 promoter under these conditions. Furthermore, hypoxia increased the transcriptional activity of a 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate response element-like motif on the GRP78 promoter and increased the abundance and DNA binding activity of AP-1 complex composed of c-Jun and c-Fos. A selective protein kinase C (PKC) inhibitor, GF109203X, inhibited the induction of GRP78 gene expression as well as the activities of both ERK and Raf-1. Among six PKC isoforms expressed in MKN28 cells, PKC-epsilon expression level and kinase activity were increased by hypoxia. Transfection of MKN28 cells with a dominant-negative PKC-epsilon blocked the induction of GRP78 through ERK by hypoxia, indicating that PKC-epsilon directly participated in GRP78 induction under hypoxia. Taken together, this study shows that a PKC-epsilon-Raf-1-MEK-ERK-AP1 signaling cascade acts on a 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate response element-like element to mediate hypoxia-induced GRP78 expression in human gastric cancer cells. We also confirmed in vivo the overexpression of GRP78 in surgical specimens of human primary gastric tumors.
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PMID:Induction of glucose-regulated protein 78 by chronic hypoxia in human gastric tumor cells through a protein kinase C-epsilon/ERK/AP-1 signaling cascade. 1171 66

Endotoxin (ETX) primes polymorphonuclear cells (PMNs) for the subsequent release of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in response to various stimulants such as phorbol myristate acetate (PMA). Although PMNs contribute to oxidative stress after stimulation by standard stimulants and after priming by many humoral factors, it is unknown whether the PMNs from patients at different postoperative times exhibit the same response to the same standard stimulant. We examined the response of PMA-induced production of ROS from PMNs at various intervals after major abdominal surgery in response to ETX priming. This study was a prospective clinical and laboratory study conducted over a 7-day period that involved 25 patients who were referred for elective major abdominal surgery (8 for gastric cancer, 9 for colonic cancer, 8 for rectal cancer). Blood was sampled on the day before operation and on postoperative days (PODs) 1, 3, and 7. For each sample we measured luminol-dependent chemiluminescence (CL), the time to peak counts (Tmax) of PMNs stimulated by PMA, and the serum ETX level. We studied the correlation between CL and ETX in samples from PODs 1 and 3. We also studied the CL of PMNs on PODs 1 and 3 preincubated (primed) with various concentrations of ETX (0, 20, 40, 60, and 100 pg/ml). We found that CL decreased on POD 1 compared with the preoperative level (p <0.05) because of the decreased Tmax. The level of CL per 1 ml of whole blood, however, was higher on PODs 1 and 3 than preoperatively. During this time, leukocytosis should compensate for the impaired production of ROS by an individual PMN. The serum ETX level was increased on POD 1 (p <0.05). There was a negative correlation between CL and ETX on POD 1 (correlation coefficient ?0.62, p < 0.01) and a positive correlation on POD 3 (0.61, p <0.01). CL on POD 3 was accelerated by ETX priming, but the CL on POD 1 was depressed by the priming using a low concentration of ETX. The mode of the response of PMNs to ETX priming differed between PODs 1 and 3. On POD 1 the responses of PMNs to environmental stimulants is suppressed, but by POD 3 these responses had increased.
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PMID:Changes in the response of neutrophils to endotoxin priming following major abdominal surgery. 1209 37

Bile acids have been suggested to play an important role in the etiology of colon and gastric cancer after gastrectomy, but the molecular biology of these effects is poorly understood. We evaluated the effect of different bile acids on human gastric and colon carcinoma cells and identified genes by RNA arbitrarily primed PCR for differential display that are modulated following treatment with hydrophobic bile acids. Thioredoxin reductase (TR) mRNA was upregulated after treatment with taurochenodeoxycholic acid (TCDCA) in St 23132 cells. This raised the question whether deoxycholic acid (DCA) would have regulative effects on TR in HT-29 cells. After an incubation time of 6 h with DCA, TR mRNA expression was increased up to threefold. Ursodeoxycholic acid had no influence on TR mRNA expression. The upregulation of TR after DCA incubation was almost identical to incubation with 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate. This implies that hydrophobic bile acids mediate oxidative stress in gastrointestinal cancer cells, which was confirmed by measurement of oxidative burst after treatment with DCA. The results suggest that hydrophobic bile acids induce oxidative stress in gastrointestinal cancer resulting in a compensatory upregulation of TR mRNA, one of the key components in the complex anti-oxidant defense system within eukaryotic cells. The activation of at least parts of the redox signaling system is potentially related to the cytotoxicity and the stimulation of the cell death machinery induced by toxic bile acids.
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PMID:Bile acids mimic oxidative stress induced upregulation of thioredoxin reductase in colon cancer cell lines. 1215 45

Nur77 is an orphan receptor. Although Nur77 affects cell proliferation and apoptosis through its capability of binding to a variety of response elements and regulating their transactivation activities, the intrinsic function of Nur77 is not yet fully understood; in particular, its regulation of apoptosis and proliferation has been characterized as cell type-dependent and agent context-dependent. In this study, Nur77 can be seen to regulate apoptosis via its expression and translocation, rather than its transactivation activity in gastric cancer cells. Nur77 was constitutively expressed in BGC-823 cells. The tetradecanoylphorbol-1,3-acetate (TPA) treatment not only resulted in up-regulation of the Nur77 mRNA level, but also led to translocation of Nur77 protein from the nucleus to the mitochondria, and caused the release of cytochrome c. This TPA-induced translocation of Nur77 was in association with the initiation of apoptosis in gastric cancer cells. Although all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) could not induce apoptosis in BGC-823 cells due to failure of stimulating Nur77 translocation, expression of Nur77 in the nucleus was required for cell growth inhibition by ATRA. Transfection of antisense Nur77 receptor into BGC-823 cells resulted in resistance of cell growth against ATRA inhibition, and the cells were still arrested in the S phase. Furthermore, the action of Nur77 in TPA-induced apoptosis was mediated through a protein kinase C signaling pathway, while mitogen-activated protein kinase and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase signaling pathways were responsible for the regulation of Nur77 mRNA expression. Taken together, the data revealed the dual functioning mechanisms of Nur77 in gastric cancer cells in response to TPA and ATRA.
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PMID:Dual roles of Nur77 in selective regulation of apoptosis and cell cycle by TPA and ATRA in gastric cancer cells. 1237 65

Gastrointestinal carcinomas synthesize elevated levels of prostaglandin E(2) (PGE(2)), which has been mechanistically linked to carcinogenesis. Recently, microsomal prostaglandin E synthase-1 (mPGES-1) was cloned, which seems to be inducible and linked to cyclooxygenase-2 (Cox-2) in the biosynthesis of PGE(2). We examined expression of mPGES-1 in intestinal type gastric adenocarcinomas and in gastric cancer cell lines. The transcript for mPGES-1 was elevated in 57% (4/7) of gastric carcinomas as detected by Northern blot analysis. Moderate to strong mPGES-1 immunoreactivity was observed in 56% (5/9) of the carcinomas as detected by immunohistochemistry. Furthermore, mPGES-1 mRNA, protein and microsomal PGES activity were detected in gastric adenocarcinoma cell lines that originated from intestinal type tumors (MKN-7 and MKN-28). In contrast to Cox-2, however, expression of mPGES-1 mRNA or protein were not induced by phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) or interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta) in any of the gastric cancer cell lines tested (MKN-1, -7, -28, -45 and -74). Two gastric cancer cell lines (MKN-45 and MKN-74) did not express mPGES-1 and lacked microsomal PGES activity, but were still able to synthesize PGE(2). Because all gastric cell lines expressed cPGES as detected by immunoblotting, it is possible that Cox-2 can interact with cPGES or with some other yet unidentified PGES in gastric cancer cells. Furthermore, our data show that regulatory mechanisms that drive expression of mPGES-1 and Cox-2 dissociate in gastric cancer cell lines.
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PMID:Expression of microsomal prostaglandin E synthase-1 in intestinal type gastric adenocarcinoma and in gastric cancer cell lines. 1452 Jun 91

Whereas nitrosation of secondary amines produces nitrosamines, amino acids with primary amino groups and glycine ethyl ester were reported to react with nitrite to give unidentified agents that alkylated 4-(p-nitrobenzyl)pyridine to produce purple dyes and be direct mutagens in the Ames test. We report here that treatment of glycine ethyl ester at 37 degrees C with excess nitrite acidified with HCl, followed by ether extraction, gave 30-40% yields of a product identified as ethyl chloro(hydroximino)acetate [ClC(=NOH)COOEt, ECHA] and a 9% yield of ethyl chloroacetate. The ECHA was identical to that synthesized by a known method from ethyl acetoacetate, strongly alkylated nitrobenzylpyridine, and may have arisen by N-nitrosation of glycine ethyl ester to give ethyl diazoacetate, which was C-nitrosated and reacted with chloride to give ECHA. Nitrosation of ethyl diazoacetate also yielded ECHA. Ethyl nitroacetate was not an intermediate as its nitrosation did not produce ECHA. ECHA reacted with aniline to give ethyl (hydroxamino)(phenylimino)acetate [PhN=C(NHOH)CO2Et]. This product was different from ethyl [(phenylamino)carbonyl]carbamate [PhNHC(=O)NHCO2Et], which was synthesized by reacting ethyl isocyanatoformate (OCN.CO2Et) with aniline. ECHA reacted with guanosine to give a derivative, which may have been a guanine-C(=NOH)CO2Et derivative. ECHA showed moderate toxicity and weak but significant mutagenicity without activation in Salmonella typhimurium TA-100 (mean, 1.31 x control value for 12-18 microg/plats) and for V79 mammalian cells (1.5-1.7 x control value for 60-100 microM). In conclusion, gastric nitrosation of glycine derivatives such as peptides with a N-terminal glycine might produce ECHA analogues that alkylate bases of gastric mucosal DNA and thereby initiate gastric cancer.
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PMID:Nitrosation of glycine ethyl ester and ethyl diazoacetate to give the alkylating agent and mutagen ethyl chloro(hydroximino)acetate. 1502 13


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