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

Tumor invasion and metastasis of melanoma have been shown to require proteolytic degradation of the extracellular environment, achieved primarily by enzymes of the matrix metalloproteinases (MMP) family. Increased enzyme activity is localized at the border of tumor cells and the adjacent peritumoral connective tissue, emphasizing the crucial role of tumor-stroma interactions in the regulation of MMP activity. To analyze whether direct cell-cell contacts of melanoma cells and stromal fibroblasts or whether soluble factors, secreted by melanoma cells are involved in the regulation of MMP, we used different in vitro co-culture systems. Both direct and indirect co-cultures of high invasive BLM melanoma cells and human dermal fibroblasts resulted in an induction of pro-MMP-1 synthesis. Medium conditioned by BLM cells strongly induced pro-MMP-1 synthesis in fibroblasts, indicating the importance of diffusible factors for this induction. Competition by recombinant human interleukin (IL)-1 receptor antagonist, neutralizing IL-1alpha and basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) antibodies, resulted in a concentration-dependent reduction of pro-MMP-1 synthesis. Taken together, our results indicate an essential role for soluble factors, mainly IL-1alpha and bFGF, in the stimulation of dermal fibroblasts by human melanoma cells to secrete MMP-1.
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PMID:High invasive melanoma cells induce matrix metalloproteinase-1 synthesis in fibroblasts by interleukin-1alpha and basic fibroblast growth factor-mediated mechanisms. 1573 6

Host-tumor interaction is considered critical in carcinogenesis, tumor invasion, and metastasis. To explore the reciprocal effects of host-tumor interaction, we developed a system to assess the gene expression patterns of A2058 human melanoma cells cocultured in fibrillar collagen with HS-68 primary human fibroblasts. The gene expression pattern of the cocultured A2058 cells was only modestly affected, whereas the HS-68 fibroblast gene expression pattern was significantly altered. Interleukin-11 and inhibitor of DNA-binding domain-1 gene expression in the cocultured A2058 cells was down-regulated, indicative of a proinflammatory response and resistance to apoptosis, respectively. The overall pattern of up-regulated genes indicated triggering of the proinflammatory process. In addition, the melanoma growth and migration stimulatory chemokines CXCL1 and CXCL2 were significantly up-regulated in the cocultured fibroblasts. These results were corroborated by additional coculture experiments with the melanoma cell lines WM-164, BLM, and SK-Mel-28 and immunohistochemistry on invasive human melanoma sections. Taken together, these results indicate that tumor cells cause a proinflammatory and melanoma growth-promoting response in stromal fibroblasts. The role of inflammation in carcinogenesis, tumor promotion, invasion, and metastasis is viewed as being increasingly important and the results of these studies underscore this as well as identify certain key proteins that are expressed as a result of the complex interactive processes in the host-tumor microenvironment.
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PMID:Gene expression profiling reveals cross-talk between melanoma and fibroblasts: implications for host-tumor interactions in metastasis. 1589 4

Malignant transformation of melanocytes frequently coincides with alterations in epithelial cadherin (E-cadherin) expression, switching on of neural cadherin (N-cadherin), and, when progressed to a metastatic stage, loss of membranous placental cadherin (P-cadherin). In vitro studies of melanoma cell lines have shown invasion suppressor and promoter roles for E-cadherin and N-cadherin, respectively. In the present study, we investigated the effect of P-cadherin on aggregation and invasion using melanoma cells retrovirally transduced with human P-cadherin. De novo expression of P-cadherin in P-cadherin-negative cell lines (BLM and HMB2) promoted cell-cell contacts and Ca2+-dependent cell-cell aggregation in two- and three-dimensional cultures, whereas it counteracted invasion. These effects were not observed following P-cadherin transduction of endogenously P-cadherin-positive MeWo cells. In addition, P-cadherin-transduced BLM cells coaggregated with keratinocytes and showed markedly reduced invasion in a reconstructed skin model. The proadhesive and anti-invasive effects of P-cadherin were abolished on targeted mutation of its intracellular juxtamembrane domain or its extracellular domain. For the latter mutation, we mimicked a known missense mutation in P-cadherin (R503H), which is associated with congenital hypotrichosis with juvenile macular dystrophy.
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PMID:P-cadherin promotes cell-cell adhesion and counteracts invasion in human melanoma. 1620 47

Altered signaling pathways are key regulators of cellular functions in tumor cells. Constitutive activation of signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT)3 and -5 may be involved in tumor formation and progression. We have investigated the role of STAT5 in cutaneous melanoma metastases using various RNA and protein techniques. In melanoma specimens, Stat5b transcripts were upregulated approximately 3.8-fold. In 13 of 21 (62%) human melanoma metastases, STAT5 was phosphorylated in comparison to normal human melanocytes and benign nevi. The STAT5 target gene Bcl-2 was frequently upregulated. The investigation of the underlying mechanism revealed specific STAT5 activation by recombinant human epidermal growth factor (rEGF). rEGF-induced activation of STAT5 occurred in vitro through the non-receptor tyrosine kinases transforming gene (src) of Rous Sarcoma virus and Janus kinase 1. Inhibition of Stat5b expression by small interfering RNA strongly reduced the expression of Bcl-2 and led to decreased cell viability and increased apoptosis in the melanoma cell lines A375 and BLM. Transfection with dominant-negative Stat5b caused enhanced cell death and G1 arrest in A375 cells. Our study identifies phosphorylated STAT5 in melanoma and shows regulation through rEGF; STAT5 may thus act as a survival factor for growth of human melanoma and may represent a potential target for molecular therapy.
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PMID:STAT5 phosphorylation in malignant melanoma is important for survival and is mediated through SRC and JAK1 kinases. 1674 10

Phosphatase and tensin homologue deleted from chromosome 10 (PTEN) seems to be an important tumor suppressor gene in melanoma. Because the PTEN gene is only infrequently deleted or mutated, and because the PTEN protein is low to absent in a significant number of melanomas, we investigated alternative methods of epigenetic silencing. We did quantitative positional methylation analysis (pyrosequencing) on 37 sera from melanoma patients and on 21 pairs of corresponding sera and melanoma specimens in addition to Taqman reverse transcription-PCR. We report significant positional PTEN promoter methylation in 62% of circulating DNA isolated from sera of patients with metastatic melanoma. The percentage of methylation of a selected CpG island in blood showed a correlation with methylation levels in the corresponding melanoma tissue. Moreover, high percentages of PTEN methylation were associated with low PTEN transcription levels. Using the demethylation agent 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine, reduced methylation and a corresponding increase in PTEN protein were observed in BLM melanoma cells, leading to reduced AKT activity in an in vitro kinase assay. In summary, epigenetic PTEN silencing seems to be a relevant mechanism of inactivating this tumor suppressor gene in melanoma that may promote melanoma development by derepression of the AKT pathway.
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PMID:Epigenetic silencing of the PTEN gene in melanoma. 1681 26

Angiogenesis is a process required not only for embryonal development but is encountered in wound healing and in pathological situations such as tumour growth. In vitro, formation of capillary-like structures can be induced by seeding human microvascular endothelial cells (HDMECs) on top of a fibrin matrix in the presence of phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) as a stimulating agent. In this study, we show that supernatants collected from high-invasive melanoma cells (BLM) induce the formation of tubular structures similar to PMA treatment whereas supernatants from low-invasive cells (WM164) did not. Analysis of proteins secreted into the supernatant of both melanoma cell lines identified differential expression of several pro-angiogenic proteins in high- and low-invasive melanoma cells. Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) was strongly expressed by high- but not by low-invasive melanoma cells. Neutralisation of VEGF as well as inhibition of matrix metalloproteases (MMPs) using the broad spectrum MMP inhibitor 1,10-phenanthroline, both strongly reduced the melanoma-induced tube formation. PMA treatment of HDMECs on a fibrin matrix stimulated MT1-MMP synthesis, indicating that this protease is involved in PMA-induced angiogenesis. In addition, stimulation of HDMECs by supernatants of BLM melanoma cells resulted in a strong induction of ADAM-15, which is known to act as a metalloproteinase. In conclusion, these results show that VEGF released by melanoma cells is an important mediator of neo-vascularisation and that this process depends on the presence of metalloproteinases.
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PMID:Melanoma cell-derived vascular endothelial growth factor induces endothelial tubulogenesis within fibrin gels by a metalloproteinase-mediated mechanism. 1694 78

The capacity of tumor cells to form metastatic foci correlates with their ability to interact with and migrate through endothelial cell layers. This process involves multiple adhesive interactions between tumor cells and the endothelium. Only little is known about the molecular nature of these interactions during extravasation of tumor cells. In human melanoma cells, the integrin alphavbeta3 is involved in transendothelial migration and its expression correlates with metastasis. However, many human melanoma cells do not express beta3 integrins. Therefore, it remained unclear how these cells undergo transendothelial migration. In this study we show that human melanoma cells with different metastatic potency, which do not express beta2 or beta3 integrins, express the VCAM-1 receptor alpha4beta1. VCAM-1 is up-regulated on activated endothelial cells and is known to promote transendothelial migration of leukocytes. Interestingly, despite comparable cell surface levels of alpha4beta1, only the highly metastatic melanoma cell lines MV3 and BLM, but not the low metastatic cell lines IF6 and 530, bind VCAM-1 with high affinity without further stimulation, and are therefore able to adhere to and migrate on isolated VCAM-1. Moreover, we demonstrate that function-blocking antibodies against the integrin alpha4beta1, as well as siRNA-mediated knock-down of the alpha4 subunit in these highly metastatic human melanoma cells reduce their transendothelial migration. These data imply that only high affinity interactions between the integrin alpha4beta1 on melanoma cells and VCAM-1 on activated endothelial cells may enhance the metastatic capacity of human beta2/beta3-negative melanoma cells.
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PMID:High affinity interaction of integrin alpha4beta1 (VLA-4) and vascular cell adhesion molecule 1 (VCAM-1) enhances migration of human melanoma cells across activated endothelial cell layers. 1735 5

The newly identified protein BLAP75/RMI1 associates with the helicase BLM and is critical for the function of the homologous recombination complex. Mutations altering BLM function are associated with highly elevated cancer susceptibility (Bloom's syndrome). We have analyzed the common polymorphism Ser455Asn in RMI1 and its association with cancer risk in acute myeloid leukemia (AML, N=93), myelodysplatic syndromes (MDS, N=74), and malignant melanoma (MM, N=166). Two control groups were used: one population-based (N=119) and one recruited from spouses of cancer patients (N=189). The results showed a consistent pattern, where carriers of the Asn variant had a significantly increased risk of AML/MDS. The risk of AML/MDS for SerAsn+AsnAsn subjects was odds ratio (OR)=1.7, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.1-2.5 or MM was OR=1.5, 95% CI 1.0-2.2. Age might modify the effect of RMI1 on cancer risk. This was most evident for MM: AsnAsn homozygotes > or =64 years showed OR=2.7, 95% CI 1.1-6.0, whereas individuals <64 years showed OR=0.87, 95% CI 0.31-2.5. These results indicate a role of low-penetrance genes involved in BLM-associated homologous recombination for cancer risk.
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PMID:Genetic variant of the human homologous recombination-associated gene RMI1 (S455N) impacts the risk of AML/MDS and malignant melanoma. 1790 Aug

Taxol (paclitaxel) is a new antineoplastic drug that has shown promise in the treatment of different tumor types. However, the molecular mechanisms governing taxol-induced apoptosis are poorly understood. Activation of mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases is induced by a wide variety of external stress signals and may lead to apoptosis. Therefore, we challenged the human melanoma cell lines A375 and BLM with taxol and characterized the molecular mechanisms regulating taxol-induced apoptosis. Taxol resulted in the activation of apoptosis signal regulated kinase (ASK)1, c-jun NH(2)-terminal kinase (JNK), p38(MAPK) and extracellular-regulated kinase (ERK) together with the downregulation of uncoupling protein 2 (UCP2). In addition, reactive oxygen species (ROS) were induced and DNA-binding activity of the transcription factors AP-1, ATF-2 and ELK-1 was enhanced. Ultimately, cytochrome c was released, and caspases-9 and -3 as well as PARP were cleaved. Pretreatment of melanoma cells with the JNK inhibitor (SP600125) or the p38 inhibitor (SB203580) blocked taxol-induced UCP2 downregulation, ROS generation and apoptosis, whereas the ERK inhibitor (PD98059) had no such effect. Our data provide evidence that taxol-induced mitochondrial stress occurs through the activation of both JNK and p38 pathways, and suggest a novel role for UCP2 in the modulation of taxol-induced apoptosis of melanoma cells.
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PMID:Taxol-induced mitochondrial stress in melanoma cells is mediated by activation of c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) and p38 pathways via uncoupling protein 2. 1806 34

Recombinant human erythropoietin (Epo) is used to prevent and treat tumor-related anemia and improve quality of life in cancer patients. Recent evidence suggested that Epo may adversely affect the survival of selected cancer patients by promoting tumor growth, inhibition of apoptosis, and induction of migration. Epo unfolds its effect on the Epo receptor (EpoR). We show--to the best of our knowledge for the first time--significantly increased EpoR expression in clinical melanoma metastases and primary melanomas in comparison with different sets of nevi by quantitative real-time reverse transcriptase-PCR, immunohistochemistry, and western blot analysis. When assessing the functionality of the EpoR-signaling pathway, recombinant human Epo led to the phosphorylation of JAK-2, signal transducers and activators of transcription 3 (STAT3), and ERK1/2 in several of the melanoma cell lines that were analyzed. Besides, Epo counteracted cisplatin-induced cell death in BLM and MV3 cells. Finally, Epo promoted cell migration of MV3 cells, whereas inhibition of the JAK/STAT and ERK1/2 pathways reduced Epo-mediated migration. In summary, we show the overexpression of functional EpoR expression in about half of the analyzed clinical melanoma metastasis specimens and show anti-apoptotic as well as pro-migratory effects of Epo, which is of importance for the treatment of anemia in advanced melanoma.
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PMID:Role of erythropoietin receptor expression in malignant melanoma. 1953 48


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