Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0025202 (melanoma)
69,561 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In medium containing low concentrations of serum, rat 13762NF mammary adenocarcinoma cell lines and clones (MTPa and MTC; isolated from the locally growing tumor) of low metastatic potential to lung did not exhibit a growth response to lung-conditioned medium, whereas a highly metastatic cell clone isolated from a spontaneous lung metastasis (MTLn3) did. The major growth-promoting factor for MTLn3 cells from porcine and rat lung-conditioned media was isolated by using a five-step procedure (anion exchange chromatography, Affi-gel blue affinity chromatography, chromatofocusing, size exclusion chromatography, and preparative native gel electrophoresis). The lung-derived factor that stimulated the growth of highly metastatic MTLn3 cells was a glycoprotein of Mr approximately 66,000 (non-reduced) or Mr approximately 72,000 (reduced) and possessed a pI of 6.9-7.0. It preferentially promoted the growth of lung-metastasizing tumor lines over their poorly lung-metastasizing counterparts in three tumor systems: rat 13762NF mammary adenocarcinoma, murine B16 melanoma, and murine RAW117 large-cell lymphoma. The factor's growth-stimulatory affect was inactivated by reduction or exposure to high temperature (95 degrees C). Although the growth factor appears to be glycosylated, its molecular weight was not altered by treatment with the protein-deglycosylating agent, trifluoromethane sulfonic acid. Cleavage of the protein by cyanogen bromide resulted in the formation of five fragments. Malignant cell response to this lung-derived paracrine growth factor may be important in the successful formation of lung metastases.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of a Mr approximately 66,000 lung-derived (paracrine) growth factor that preferentially stimulates the in vitro proliferation of lung-metastasizing tumor cells. 216 61

A mouse monoclonal antibody (BA-Br-3) raised against the breast carcinoma cell line CAMA-1 was previously shown to react with a greater than or equal to 300-kDa globule-like glycoprotein from human milk fat also expressed in the cytoplasm and on the surface of human carcinoma cells of different histological types. In this report the reactivity of this mAb with a large number of normal and malignant human tissues was analyzed using immunoperoxidase techniques. When tested on sections of both fresh-frozen tissues and formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissues, BA-Br-3 reacted with a formalin-resistant antigenic determinant expressed by normal and malignant epithelial cells. Preferential reactivity was observed at the apical portion of ductal epithelial cells in normal breast and in glandular epithelia distributed in several other organs. Reactivity with mucin-like secretions in the lumina of ducts was also found. BA-Br-3 reacted mostly in heterogenous staining patterns with 88% of 49 breast carcinoma specimens tested, regardless of their histological type or whether they were primary or secondary neoplasms. Testing of epithelial malignant tumors other than breast carcinomas with this antibody showed that 127 of 151 (84%) were also reactive. mAb BA-Br-3 and E29 (a commercially available anti-(epithelial membrane antigen) shared very similar staining patterns and distributions of reactivity with breast and other epithelial tumors. However, BA-Br-3 showed a significantly higher percentage of reactivity with melanoma (33% versus 6%, P = 0.003) and a trend toward a higher percentage of reactivity with sarcoma (55% versus 27%, P greater than 0.05). This antibody, therefore, defines a molecule that is a member of the mucin-like epithelial membrane antigen family. Further studies are warranted to determine its usefulness in antibody-directed cancer diagnosis, prognosis, and immunotherapy.
...
PMID:Human tumor and normal tissue reactivity of the anti-(breast cancer) monoclonal antibody BA-Br-3 and its similarity to the anti-(epithelial membrane antigen) monoclonal antibody E29. 218 92

Using allogeneic antibody, we previously described a high-molecular-weight glycoprotein in the urine of 68% of melanoma patients. This glycoprotein has been termed urinary-tumor-associated antigen (U-TAA). A murine monoclonal antibody (MAb) specific for U-TAA (ADI-40F4) has been developed. By the use of ADI-40F4, U-TAA was detected in serum samples from 63% (33/52) of stage II and stage III melanoma patients, but from only 5% (1/20) of normal controls. This report describes the physical and immunochemical properties of U-TAA in the serum. The antigen elutes from a DEAE-Sephacel column in association with IgG in the void volume and as free antigen in a second peak. The molecular mass of the free antigen is 590-620 kDa and it sediments in the region of 28-29% sucrose by density gradient ultracentrifugation. Free antigen has an isoelectric point of 6.1. This high molecular weight antigen is composed of smaller subunits linked by reducible bonds. The ADI-40F4 reactive epitope resides on a 90-100 kDa subunit. These results provide evidence that U-TAA which is produced by melanoma cells in vitro is present in the circulation of melanoma patients.
...
PMID:Characterization of a 90-100 kDa tumor-associated antigen in the sera of melanoma patients. 219 Sep 38

The ways in which the carbohydrate moieties of laminin affect its cellular interactions have been examined by two different experimental approaches. In one approach, we used lectins in order to block specific carbohydrates on laminin which previously had been dried onto a plastic surface. We found that wheat germ agglutinin and Griffonia simplicifolia agglutinin I blocked the binding of the neuron-like rat pheochromocytoma cell line PC12. However, when concanavalin A was used cell binding was unaffected but neurite outgrowth was prevented, compared to controls, over a 24-h period. In the second approach we used unglycosylated laminin as a substratum on the plastic surface. We have developed a method for the purification of unglycosylated laminin from tunicamycin treated cultures of a mouse embryonal carcinoma derived cell line, M1536 B3, and have partially characterized the purified material. A mixture of unglycosylated and glycosylated laminin was selectively purified from the M1536 B3 cell lysate by an anti-EHS laminin monoclonal antibody immunoaffinity column. The unglycosylated laminin was separated from glycosylated laminin using G. simplicifolia lectin affinity chromatography. The lectins, wheat germ agglutinin, G. simplicifolia agglutinin I, and concanavalin A, did not bind to any of the subunits of unglycosylated laminin in Western blots. The unglycosylated laminin migrated as a single band in agarose-gel electrophoresis under nonreducing conditions indicating that it is a fully assembled and disulfide bonded molecule. Circular dichroism studies showed no differences between glycosylated and unglycosylated laminin, indicating similar molecular conformations. Western blots using antibodies specific for the A, B1, and B2 chains of laminin showed that unglycosylated laminin contained each of these subunits. We then performed cell binding and spreading or neurite outgrowth assays using unglycosylated laminin. A mouse melanoma cell line, B16 F1, bound to this laminin in the same numbers as to the control glycosylated laminin, but cell spreading was minimal. When this unglycosylated laminin was used as a substrate for PC12 cells neurite outgrowth was impaired; no effect was noted on the number of cells bound, compared to glycosylated laminin. We conclude from these results that once cells become bound to laminin the carbohydrate residues of that glycoprotein must be available to enable the cells to spread or to extend neurite processes.
...
PMID:A biological role of the carbohydrate moieties of laminin. 219 77

We and others previously described the melanoma-associated oncofetal glycosphingolipid antigen 9-O-acetyl-GD3, a disialoganglioside O-acetylated at the 9-position of the outer sialic acid residue. We have now developed methods to examine the biosynthesis and turnover of disialogangliosides in cultured melanoma cells and in Golgi-enriched vesicles from these cells. O-Acetylation was selectively expressed on di- and trisialogangliosides, but not on monosialogangliosides, nor on glycoprotein-bound sialic acids. Double-labeling of cells with [3H]acetate and [14C]glucosamine introduced easily detectable labels into each of the components of the ganglioside molecules. Pulse-chase studies of such doubly labeled molecules indicated that the O-acetyl groups turn over faster than the parent molecule. When Golgi-enriched vesicles from these cells were incubated with [acetyl-3H]acetyl-coenzyme A, the major labeled products were disialogangliosides. [Acetyl-3H]O-acetyl groups were found at both the 7- and the 9-positions, indicating that both 7-O-acetyl GD3 and 9-O-acetyl GD3 were synthesized by the action of O-acetyltransferase(s) on endogenous GD3. Analysis of the metabolically labeled molecules confirmed the existence of both 7- and 9-O-acetylated GD3 in the intact cells. Surprisingly, the major 3H-labeled product of the in vitro labeling reaction was not O-acetyl-GD3, but GD3, with the label exclusively in the sialic acid residues. Fragmentation of the labeled sialic acids by enzymatic and chemical methods showed that the 3H-label was exclusively in [3H]N-acetyl groups. Analyses of the double-labeled sialic acids from intact cells also showed that the 3H-label from [3H]acetate was exclusively in the form of [3H]N-acetyl groups, whereas the 14C-label was at the 4-position. Pulse-chase analysis of the 3H/14C ratio showed that the N-acetyl groups of both GD3 and of the monosialoganglioside GM3 were turning over faster than the parent molecules. Selective periodate oxidation showed that both the inner and outer sialic acid residues of GD3 incorporated 3H-label in the in vitro reaction, and showed similar turnover of N-acetylation in the pulse-chase study. Taken together, these results indicate that both the O- and N-acetyl groups of the sialic acid residues of gangliosides turn over faster than the parent molecules. They also demonstrate a novel re-N-acetylation reaction that predicts the existence of de-N-acetyl gangliosides in melanoma cells.
...
PMID:Biosynthesis and turnover of O-acetyl and N-acetyl groups in the gangliosides of human melanoma cells. 219 84

In the previous study, we generated a monoclonal antibody, 8F11, against NL-17, a high metastatic clone derived from a metastatic variant of murine colon adenocarcinoma 26. 8F11 inhibited platelet aggregation induced by NL-17 and recognized a Mr 44,000 membrane protein as antigen. In the present study, the reactivity of 8F11 to murine B16 melanoma and its metastatic variants was examined, and the antigen recognized by 8F11 on the cell surface was characterized. 8F11 was found to strongly react with 3 metastatic variants of B16 melanoma. In contrast, only slight reactivity was observed with parent B16 melanoma. The reactivity of the antibody to these cells was in the order B16F10 greater than B16BL-6 greater than B16F1 much greater than B16. Western blot analysis showed a Mr 41,000 protein as the antigen recognized by 8F11 on the cell surface of B16F10 cells. The Mr 41,000 antigen appeared to be a glycoprotein that bound to wheat germ agglutinin as has been observed for the Mr 44,000 antigen of NL-17. To elucidate the functional role of the Mr 41,000 antigen in B16 melanoma, platelet aggregation induced by B16 and B16F10 was compared. B16 was reported to stimulate platelet aggregation by the generation of thrombin, whereas B16F10 was found to activate platelet by at least 2 mechanisms: one dependent on thrombin and the other independent on thrombin. The activity of B16 and its metastatic variants to induce platelet aggregation in the presence of MD805, a synthetic antagonist of thrombin, well correlated with the reactivity of 8F11 to these cells. 8F11 blocked platelet activation by B16F10 under conditions preventing thrombin activity such as enzymatic formation of lysolecithin through the treatment of the cell surface with phospholipase A2 or in the presence of MD805. These data indicate that Mr 41,000 glycoprotein recognized by 8F11 on metastatic variants of B16 melanoma is involved in the thrombin-independent platelet aggregation. A positive correlation was observed between the levels of Mr 41,000 glycoprotein expression of B16 and its metastatic variants and their pulmonary metastasis after i.v. injection, suggesting Mr 41,000 glycoprotein, as well as other factors reported previously, may play an important role in the hematogenous spread of B16 melanoma.
...
PMID:Expression of a Mr 41,000 glycoprotein associated with thrombin-independent platelet aggregation in high metastatic variants of murine B16 melanoma. 220 29

Spleen cells from inbred Biozzi mice, immunized against the human breast cancer cell line T47D, were fused with murine myeloma SP2O cells to generate monoclonal antibodies. One of these, 1BE12, of IgM isotype, reacted with five of six human breast tumor cell lines, while no binding was detectable with normal lymphocytes, RBC, or fibroblasts. The antigen recognized by monoclonal antibody 1BE12 was localized on the surface of T47D and MCF7 cells and was detected in cell-free supernatants of cultures. The antigen was found also on the surface of milk secretory cells. Immunohistochemical staining of frozen and paraffin-embedded sections of human tissues showed apical polarized reactivity in normal breast glands, while in all breast cancers staining was either cytoplasmic or membranous and heterogeneously distributed. Immunostaining was also observed in some other normal epithelia, including salivary gland, gastroduodenal mucosa, exocrine pancreas, and cervix. The antigen was not detectable in secretory endometrium, whereas proliferative endometrium was strongly stained. Colon carcinoma, and cancers of the bladder and endometrium were strongly reactive. No staining was detected in melanoma, lymphoma, mesothelioma, non-small cell lung carcinoma, and thyroid, renal, and ovarian carcinomas. Lectin absorption of MCF7 membrane extracts reduced 1BE12 binding. A large reduction in 1BE12 reactivity was observed after digestion of T47D and MCF7 membrane extracts with proteases. Treatment with sodium periodate resulted in complete loss of antigenicity, while neuraminidase treatment did not affect 1BE12 binding. These findings suggest that the 1BE12 epitope is expressed on the carbohydrate moiety of a glycoprotein and does not contain sialic acid. Immunoblotting of the perchloric acid-soluble fraction of MCF7 membrane extracts after electrophoresis in 1% agarose detected the antigen as a high molecular weight species (Mr greater than 900,000). The antigen was purified by perchloric acid extraction of MCF7 membrane preparations followed by affinity chromatography on 1BE12 antibody coupled to Sepharose-4B and gel exclusion fast protein liquid chromatography. No reactivity of the purified material was found with monoclonal antibodies directed against human milk fat globule membrane-associated mucins HMFG1 and DF3.
...
PMID:Characterization and distribution in human tissues of a glycoproteic antigen defined by monoclonal antibody 1BE12 raised against the human breast cancer cell line T47D. 222 61

The p85 glycoprotein expressed on a variety of human cell types including astrocytes and lymphocytes has not been associated with the CD44 cluster. The recent demonstration that Hermes, a glycoprotein implicated in the adhesion of lymphocytes to endothelium, belongs to the CD44 cluster raises interesting questions concerning the role of this molecule on astrocytes and on non-lymphoid cells. To obtain confirmation of the identity of p85 glycoprotein and CD44, p85 glycoprotein was purified from B-chronic lymphocytic leukemia cells by affinity to monolonal 50B4-IgG and electrophoretic elution, digested with trypsin or CNBr and fractionated by reversed-phase HPLC. The sequences of three peptides were obtained which could be aligned with the amino acid sequence deduced from the CD44 cDNA at residues 49-54, 59-66 and 309-323. These constitute the first reported peptide sequences for antigens of the CD44 cluster and confirm that p85 glycoprotein is indeed the product of the CD44 gene. Since two different cDNA clones encoding molecules with cytoplasmic tails of 72 and 5 amino acids have been isolated, the isolation of peptide 309-323 confirms the existence of a processed protein with the longer cytoplasmic domain. Using a cDNA probe, we have characterized the expression of CD44 in several normal and malignant cell types. The level of CD44 mRNA was correlated with the surface expression of CD44 antigens (50B4) in several leukemic cell lines, in astrocytoma lines and in normal granulocytes. Negative cells included the Y79 retinoblastoma line, the NALM-6 leukemic line and endothelial cells. Identical mRNA species of 5.0, 2.3 and 1.7 kb were present in all CD44-positive samples, including normal granulocytes, astrocytoma, melanoma and leukemia cell lines and leukemic cells from patients. The highest level of expression of CD44 was observed on astrocytoma lines and on acute lymphoblastic leukemia cells of immature phenotype. The presence of high levels of CD44 on malignant cells could increase the ability of these cells to adhere to matrix proteins and/or to interact with endothelium, thus potentially altering their capacity for invasiveness and metastasis.
...
PMID:Confirmation by peptide sequence and co-expression on various cell types of the identity of CD44 and P85 glycoprotein. 223 56

Sixty-six human lung neoplasms of different histological types and normal bronchial epithelial cells of newborn babies and adults were studied histochemically using ConA and PSA and the result was compared with that of CEA. Normal mucosal epithelium could bind to ConA, and the location of ConA receptors was related to the maturation of mucosal epithelial cells. Normal mucosal epithelium in adult bronchi failed to be stained with PSA and anti-CEA, and most of lung neoplasms could bind to PSA and positive for CEA, indicating that new glycoconjugate and CEA-glycoprotein could be synthesized after malignant transformation of mucosal epithelium. The binding of ConA, PSA and anti-CEA to cell membrane and nucleus membrane was characteristic of squamous cell lung cancer while lung adenocarcinoma mainly showed cytoplasmic staining. The weak staining of ConA, PSA and anti-CEA in small cell carcinoma and negative staining in carcinoid and malignant melanoma help testify that their origin may differ from that of squamous cell carcinoma and adenocarcinoma.
...
PMID:[Histochemical localization of glyco-conjugate and CEA-glycoprotein in human lung neoplasms]. 224 89

A cell surface Mr approximately 90,000 glycoprotein (gp90) was found in higher amounts on brain-colonizing than on lung-colonizing murine B16 melanoma sublines. The possible role of gp90 in determining the brain-associated metastatic properties of B16 cells was examined by purifying the glycoprotein and studying the effects of anti-gp90 on the growth, adhesion, and organ colonization properties of B16 cells. The specificity of the anti-gp90 was demonstrated in immunoprecipitation studies where a cell surface- or metabolically labeled Mr approximately 90,000 glycoprotein of pI approximately 4 was exclusively found upon two-dimensional sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under reducing conditions. Immunoprecipitation analysis, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays, and the lectin-binding properties of gp90 on lectin affinity columns indicated that it is a Mr approximately 180,000 disulfide-linked dimer, probably related to the transferrin receptor. B16 sublines selected for various organ colonization properties differentially expressed gp90, bound 125I-labeled transferrin, and responded differently to purified transferrin in proliferation assays in relation to their metastatic properties (B15b greater than O13 greater than F10 greater than F1). Anti-gp90 immunoglobulin G affected the growth of brain-colonizing B16-B15b more than B16-F1 cells, but had no effect on the adhesion of B16-B15b or -F1 cells to microvessel endothelial cells in vitro, and anti-gp90 immunoglobulin G F(ab')2 had little effect on the brain colonization properties of B16-B15b cells in syngeneic mice. In blocking assays, anti-gp90 inhibited the binding of 125I-labeled transferrin to B16-B15b cells in a dose-dependent manner. The results suggest that the differential growth-stimulating effects of transferrin on highly metastatic B16 melanoma cells may be due to their differential expression of a Mr approximately 90,000 glycoprotein that is related to the transferrin receptor. In organ sites, such as the brain, differential expression of a transferrin-like receptor may allow metastatic cells to respond to low concentrations of growth factors known to be present in certain organs.
...
PMID:Differential expression of a Mr approximately 90,000 cell surface transferrin receptor-related glycoprotein on murine B16 metastatic melanoma sublines selected for enhanced brain or ovary colonization. 229 94


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>