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Query: UMLS:C0025202 (
melanoma
)
69,561
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
BALB/c mice were immunized with tyrosinase, partially purified in two stages from a human
melanoma
cell line. A hybridoma was obtained which produced monoclonal antibody (MoAb 1C11) reactive with 8/10
melanoma
cell lines and 10/10 primary cultures of human melanocytes, neval cells, and melanomas. Immunoreactivity correlated to a certain extent with tyrosinase activity but not with melanin content. No crossreactivity was obtained with neuroblastoma, medulloblastoma, fibroblasts, keratinocytes, lymphoid cells, or murine melanomas. Purification of the antigen directly from cell lysates with a MoAb 1C11 CNBr-Sepharose affinity column gave a green-brown protein of 56 kDa with no detectable tyrosinase activity. This protein was therefore different from 60 kDa active tyrosinase, identified by enzyme activity and Western blotting with a MoAb derived previously (MoAb 5C12). Unlike 5C12, 1C11 reactivity was not destroyed by pretreatment of the antigen with periodate. Immunogold labelling showed that the 1C11-reactive antigen was associated with melanosomes, and there was close correlation between 5C12 and 1C11 reactivity in resistance to
trypsin
and in staining various melanocytic cell populations. MoAb 1C11 may therefore recognise a polypeptide epitope in a molecule closely linked to melanin biosynthesis.
...
PMID:Monoclonal antibody against a melanosomal protein in melanotic and amelanotic human melanoma cells. 247 76
The effect of all-trans retinoic acid on metastatic B16
melanoma
lung colonization and synthesis and properties of glycosaminoglycans was examined. Injection of tumour cells, pretreated with 10(-6) M-retinoic acid or grown to low density, into the tail vein of syngeneic C57 mice produced significantly fewer pulmonary tumours compared to subconfluent control cells. By cochromatography of glycosaminoglycans isolated from control ([14C]glucosamine-labelled) and 10(-6) M-retinoic acid-treated ([3H]glucosamine-labelled) cells on DEAE ion-exchange columns, differences in elution profiles were detected. Chondroitin sulphates isolated from retinoic acid-treated cells eluted at a lower salt concentration than those from control cells, while retinoic acid-treated cells synthesised heparan sulphates of a higher charge density than heparans from control cultures. These changes were apparent in both medium and
trypsin
-releasable fractions. Retinoic acid-treated cultures were seeded so that they were of a similar density to control cultures when harvested, as cell density was shown to affect glycosaminoglycan synthesis, the glycosaminoglycans from low-density cultures having similar properties to those isolated from retinoic acid-treated cultures. Retinoic acid treatment also reduced the overall synthesis of glycosaminoglycans while having little effect on the composition or distribution between medium,
trypsin
-releasable and cell-associated fractions. These observed changes in glycosaminoglycans may, in part, be responsible for retinoic acid-induced inhibition of lung colonization, and reduced adhesion to basement membrane components, which we have previously demonstrated.
...
PMID:Retinoic acid-induced inhibition of lung colonization and changes in the synthesis and properties of glycosaminoglycans of metastatic B16 melanoma cells. 251 93
Two analogues of alpha-MSH (Ac-Ser-Tyr-Ser-Met-Glu-His-Phe-Arg-Trp-Gly-Lys-Pro-Val-NH2), Ac-[Nle4, Asp5, D-Phe7, Lys10]alpha-MSH4-10NH2 and Ac-[Nle4, Asp5, D-Phe7, Lys10] alpha-MSH4-10-NH2, were synthesized, and the melanotropic activities of the peptides were compared in several bioassays. Potencies were determined in the in vitro frog and lizard skin bioassays and in the S91
melanoma
cell tyrosinase assay. Both analogues were equipotent or more potent than alpha-MSH in all bioassays, and the activities of the analogues were prolonged compared to alpha-MSH. The two analogues were very resistant to inactivation by purified proteolytic enzymes (alpha-chymotrypsin,
trypsin
, and pepsin). The two peptides could be topically applied and transdermally delivered across the skin of mice in vivo, resulting in a shift from pheomelanogenesis to eumelanogenesis within follicular melanocytes. The cyclic analogue exhibited greater potency, prolonged activity, and stability against enzyme inactivation than did the linear peptide. The significance of the findings for the further design of melanotropin analogues is discussed, as in the possible relevance of these melanotropin analogues for use in biomedical studies.
...
PMID:Linear and cyclic alpha-melanotropin [4-10]-fragment analogues that exhibit superpotency and residual activity. 255 3
Studies with four different transplantable murine tumors demonstrated that surgical instruments contaminated by contact with a tumor mass could produce tumors in a surgical wound. Eighty-seven per cent of mice with wounds made by invisibly contaminated scissors developed tumors. Irrigation with water did not prevent tumor growth. Before spilled tumor cells can invade and grow into a recurrence in the wound site, they must first attach to underlying extracellular matrix. We have devised a simple in vitro assay to identify inhibitors of tumor-cell attachment to develop therapeutic compounds that can prevent tumor-cell reimplantation. Various test compounds, including proteases (
trypsin
and Dispase), known modulators of matrix metabolism (proline analogues, cycloheximide, heparin, cortisone, cortexolone, and heparin-steroid combinations), large molecular weight polymers (agarose, dextran, polyethylene oxide), and synthetic fibronectin peptides were tested for their ability to inhibit mouse
melanoma
(B16-F10) cell attachment to gelatinized dishes. Most of these compounds had little or no effect on tumor-cell adhesion when cells were plated in serum-containing medium. However we identified three compounds that inhibited tumor-cell attachment in a reversible fashion: (1) a specific inhibitor of collagen deposition (L-azetidine-2-carboxylic acid); (2) a bacterial neutral protease (Dispase); and (3) synthetic fibronectin peptides that contained the arginine-glycine-asparate (RGD) sequence that is responsible for cell binding. Dispase and the RGD-containing peptides also inhibited cell implantation and prevented tumor formation in a surgical wound. We propose that inhibitors of attachment might be used either alone or with other biologic modifiers to prohibit implantation of free tumor cells at the time of surgery and thus, to prevent local tumor recurrence.
...
PMID:Inhibition of tumor-cell attachment to extracellular matrix as a method for preventing tumor recurrence in a surgical wound. 268 68
The relative amounts of influenza C virus-specific receptors of 25 established lines of mammalian cells including four lines of human
malignant melanoma
origin were compared by virus binding experiments. All the human
melanoma
cell cultures studied possessed two to four times more receptors than were found on MDCK cells, a cell line known to be highly susceptible to influenza C virus. It may therefore be a feature common to human
melanoma
cells that O-acetylsialic acid, a determinant for the attachment of influenza C virus, exists in large quantities on their surface. This is not specific to
melanoma
cells, however, since several human cell lines derived from lung cancer, gastric cancer, and placenta specimens also exhibited high levels of virus binding. Twenty of 25 virus-binding cell cultures were further examined for their ability to support the replication of influenza C virus. In the presence of
trypsin
(5 to 20 micrograms/ml), the virus was found to undergo multiple cycles of replication much more efficiently in the HMV-II line of human
melanoma
cells than in MDCK cells. Additionally, by using HMV-II cells as a host, we succeeded in isolating two influenza C strains (C/Yamagata/1/88, C/Yamagata/2/88) from 241 throat swabs collected from patients with acute respiratory illness.
...
PMID:A human melanoma cell line highly susceptible to influenza C virus. 273 78
Autocrine-secreted tumor cell growth-inhibiting activities were isolated from supernatants of a
malignant melanoma
cell line, HTZ 19-dM, established from a central nervous system
melanoma
metastasis. HTZ 19-dM was characterized by cyto- and immunocytochemistry and karyotyping; cells were propagated in defined serum-free tissue culture medium for up to 8 months. Supernatants were ultrafiltrated, dialyzed, lyophilized, and purified by Bio-Gel P-10 gel permeation chromatography, leading to three active fraction pools, MIAI [
melanoma
-inhibiting activity (MIA), 2 kDa), MIAII (Mr 11,500-17,000) and MIAIII (proteins at the cutoff of Bio-Gel P-10) inhibiting growth of 19-dM cells with 50% inhibitory concentrations of 0.79 microgram/ml (MIAI), 0.13 microgram/ml (MIAII), and 16.7 micrograms/ml (MIAII). MIAII could be further purified by reverse phase high pressure liquid chromatography; the main activity displayed a 50% inhibitory concentration of 0.33 microgram/ml. On sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis one major band (molecular weight about 14,000) and two minor bands (up to Mr 17,000) were identified. Macromolecular synthesis was inhibited in 19-dM cells up to greater than 99.5%; tumor stem cell colony formation was reduced by 99.89%; the inhibitory effect of MIAII was irreversible, nonsaturable, and partially antagonized by a serum factor (depending on purification stage). MIAII was heat stable (3 min at 100 degrees C) and
trypsin
labile. The effect of MIAII on allogeneic neuroectodermal tumors was also investigated; proliferation of two of three malignant melanomas and two of four glioblastomas was inhibited up to 85.2%; proliferation of a neuroblastoma cell line could be inhibited to 33.8%, whereas normal fibroblasts and low grade gliomas were not influenced in their proliferation.
...
PMID:Autocrine tumor cell growth-inhibiting activities from human malignant melanoma. 276 2
Past studies have shown that contact between tumor cells and fibroblasts results in stimulation of collagenase production by the fibroblasts. Membrane fractions prepared by differential centrifugation of sonicated B-16
melanoma
cells were shown here to contain a collagenase stimulatory factor(s) (CSF). Trypsin treatment of intact B-16 cells prior to membrane fractionation led to loss of 90% of the total activity, indicating that CSF is localized on the outer surface of the cells. Stimulation of fibroblast collagenase production was also observed with dialyzed octylglucoside extracts of the B-16 membranes. Additional of exogenous lipid, ie, a mixture of phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylserine, to the detergent extract of the membranes followed by dialysis and centrifugation at 100,000g resulted in 80% recovery of the factor activity in the pellet containing reconstituted lipid vesicles. Fractionation of tritium-labeled, reconstituted lipid vesicles on a Sephacryl S-300 column revealed that the collagenase stimulatory factor coeluted with the radioactive lipid vesicles. The fractionated lipid vesicles lost stimulatory activity completely after
trypsin
treatment or heating at 65 degrees C, indicating that the factor is a protein.
...
PMID:Membrane association of collagenase stimulatory factor(s) from B-16 melanoma cells. 282 6
We have reported previously that the production of a tumor cell factor that stimulates synthesis of fibroblast collagenase is influenced by a fibroblast-deposited matrix component, possibly heparan sulfate-proteoglycan. In this study, binding sites for heparin and heparan sulfate on mouse B-16
melanoma
cells have been demonstrated. Binding of 3H-heparin and 35S-heparan sulfate has been shown to occur to whole cells, isolated membranes, and to a component(s) of detergent extracts of the membranes. Scatchard analysis of binding of 3H-heparin yielded a Kd of 2-5 x 10(-8) M and a Bmax of 0.5 x 10(7) heparin molecules bound per cell. Binding of 35S-heparan sulfate was of at least an order of magnitude lower affinity than heparin, but the Bmax was similar to that for heparin. Competition studies showed that 35S-heparan sulfate binding was inhibited totally by heparin and heparan sulfate and partially by dermatan sulfate, but no inhibition was obtained with hyaluronate or chondroitin sulfate. Binding of 3H-heparin was inhibited totally by heparin but to different extents by preparations of heparan sulfate from different tissue sources. The heparin/heparan sulfate binding activity is a protein(s) because it is destroyed by treatment with
trypsin
. Binding of 3H-heparin to transblots of the detergent extract of the B-16 cell membranes indicated that at least part of the binding activity is a 14,000-dalton protein.
...
PMID:Heparin and heparan sulfate binding sites on B-16 melanoma cells. 284 Apr 40
Involvement of platelet membrane glycoproteins (GP) in interactions between platelets and tumor cells was studied by using two human tumor cell lines and two monoclonal antibodies against platelet membrane GP. HMV-I cells derived from vaginal
melanoma
induced platelet aggregation in heparinized plasma, which was not followed by coagulation. M7609 cells derived from colon adenocarcinoma also induced platelet aggregation in heparinized plasma, which, on the contrary, was followed by coagulation. Aggregating activities of the HMV-I cells were abolished by pretreatment with neuraminidase or
trypsin
, but M7609 activity was not labile to these enzymes. Aggregations induced by M7609 were inhibited by hirudin or MD805, while those by HMV-I were not. M7609 cells dose dependently shortened the recalcification time of normal as well as Factor IX-deficient plasmas, while they were not effective in shortening the time of Factor II- or Factor VII-deficient plasmas. The procoagulant activity of HMV-I cells was 1000 times less than M7609 on the basis of cell numbers. When human platelets were preincubated with monoclonal anti-GPIb or anti-GPIIb/IIIa complex antibodies, neither cell line could cause aggregations. These findings suggest that both GPIb and the GPIIb/IIIa complex on the platelet surface are involved in the thrombin-dependent and -independent platelet aggregations induced by tumor cells.
...
PMID:Involvement of platelet membrane glycoprotein Ib and glycoprotein IIb/IIIa complex in thrombin-dependent and -independent platelet aggregations induced by tumor cells. 291 Apr 73
Optimal monoclonal antibody-mediated immunotherapy requires the identification of tumor-restricted cell surface antigens. We have identified and partially characterized 5 new monoclonal antibodies generated against malignant astrocytoma, medulloblastoma, neuroblastoma and
melanoma
which were used to define 5 neuroectodermal tumor antigenic systems. CNT/1 identifies a 57-kDa, heat-stable,
trypsin
-sensitive neuroblastoma surface antigen, which is expressed intracellularly in many malignant gliomas, medulloblastomas, ependymomas, breast and ovarian carcinomas. CNT/2 reacts with a 130-kDa, heat-labile,
trypsin
- and neuraminidase-resistant antigen restricted to low-grade astrocytomas and malignant gliomas. CNT/11 reacts with a 70-kDa, heat-labile,
trypsin
-sensitive antigen coded for by a gene on chromosome 12, and is restricted to astrocytomas, neuroblastomas and sarcomas. CNT/8 identifies a heat-labile,
trypsin
-sensitive antigen whose gene has been localized to chromosome 15 and is expressed by neuroectodermal and mesodermally derived tumors and few epithelial cancers. The B2.6 antigen is identified only in terms of serologic reactivity with a subset of cultured astrocytomas and melanomas. Neuroectodermal tumor-associated antigens may be categorized as lineage-consistent, lineage-independent and putatively tumor-restricted in their expression. These restricted antibodies may be potentially useful reagents to consider for monoclonal antibody-mediated immunotherapy of CNS neoplasms.
...
PMID:Five novel cell surface antigens of CNS neoplasms. 292 43
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