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)

Detailed studies of tumor cell-associated procoagulants and fibrinolytic factors have implied that local thrombin generation and fibrin deposition and dissolution may be important in tumor growth and dissemination. To directly determine whether fibrin(ogen) or plasmin(ogen) are determinants of the metastatic potential of circulating tumor cells, this study examined the impact of genetic deficits in each of these key hemostatic factors on the hematogenous pulmonary metastasis of 2 established murine tumors, Lewis lung carcinoma and the B16-BL6 melanoma. In both tumor models, fibrinogen deficiency strongly diminished, but did not prevent, the development of lung metastasis. The quantitative reduction in metastasis in fibrinogen-deficient mice was not due to any appreciable difference in tumor stroma formation or tumor growth. Rather, tumor cell fate studies indicated an important role for fibrin(ogen) in sustained adhesion and survival of tumor cells within the lung. The specific thrombin inhibitor, hirudin, further diminished the metastatic potential of circulating tumor cells in fibrinogen-deficient mice, although the inhibitor had no apparent effect on tumor cell proliferation in vitro. The absence of plasminogen and plasmin-mediated fibrinolysis had no significant impact on hematogenous metastasis. The authors concluded that fibrin(ogen) is a critical determinant of the metastatic potential of circulating tumor cells. Furthermore, thrombin appears to facilitate tumor dissemination through at least one fibrin(ogen)-independent mechanism. These findings suggest that therapeutic strategies focusing on multiple distinct hemostatic factors might be beneficial in the containment of tumor metastasis.
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PMID:Fibrinogen is an important determinant of the metastatic potential of circulating tumor cells. 1107 21

Thrombomodulin (TM) is an anticoagulant molecule expressed on the endothelial cell surface and soluble TM antigen, which is present in human plasma and urine, represents the products of limited proteolytic cleavage of cell-surface TM. Recently, it was demonstrated that TM is also expressed on the surface of several tumor cells and the expression level of TM negatively correlated with malignancy in cancer. We investigated the effect of soluble TM isolated from human urine (uTM) on the invasion and metastasis of murine melanoma cells (B16F10 cells) through a reconstituted basement membrane (Matrigel) and in a murine model of experimental lung metastasis. Matrigel reconstituted with uTM inhibited the invasion of B16F10 cells in a dose-dependent manner in a range from 10 to 1000 ng/ml uTM as compared with the control Matrigel without uTM. The inhibitory action of uTM was not altered in the presence of an excess amount of hirudin, an inhibitor of thrombin proteolytic activity, but abolished in the presence of anti-human TM IgG. Matrigel reconstituted with thrombin (1 NIH unit/ml) enhanced the invasion level of cells by 1.5-fold relative to the control Matrigel without thrombin. The thrombin-enhanced invasion of B16F10 cells was repressed by addition of hirudin (10 units/ml) or uTM (100 ng/ml) into the Matrigel. Matrigel reconstituted with hirudin (10 units/ml) and uTM (100 ng/ml) additionally accelerated the inhibitory activity of hirudin or uTM on the thrombin-enhanced invasion of B16F10 cells. Moreover, metastatic colonies formed in the lungs of mice injected intravenously with B16F10 cells were significantly reduced by injection of uTM once a day up to 2 days after co-injection of uTM with the cells. These results suggested that Matrigel reconstituted with uTM inhibited the invasion of B16F10 cells in vitro through a thrombin-independent mechanism and the injection of uTM suppressed experimental lung metastasis of the cells in mice.
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PMID:Inhibition of invasion and experimental metastasis of murine melanoma cells by human soluble thrombomodulin. 1109 Sep 74

The blood coagulation mechanism regulates the growth and dissemination of malignancy by multiple mechanisms, and anticoagulant drugs have been shown to inhibit the progression of certain cancers. Although progress has been slow, there is ample information on the effects of anticoagulants in various tumors that suggests that the use of anticoagulants has considerable potential in the treatment of some cancers. For example, melanoma is one of a small number of human tumor types in which the tumor is associated with an intact coagulation pathway leading to thrombin generation and conversion of fibrinogen to fibrin in situ immediately adjacent to viable tumor cells. Observations in experimental models combined with the limited clinical trial data on this subject suggest that inhibition of tumor cell thrombin generation may improve outcomes in melanoma cases. Thus, we postulate that pharmacological interruption of the tumor cell-associated coagulation pathway at any one step or even at multiple levels might constitute effective therapy for this disease. Drugs that block the activity of tissue factor, factor Xa, or thrombin are available for clinical testing and, if effective, offer the prospect of a relatively nontoxic, novel treatment for this aggressive tumor.
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PMID:Treatment of cancer with anticoagulants: rationale in the treatment of melanoma. 1137 26

An antimetastatic and cytostatic substance, termed AC7-1, was isolated from Ardisia crispa and identified as a benzoquinonoid compound, 2-methoxy-6-tridecyl-1,4-benzoquinone. It was originally characterized as the potent PAF (platelet-activating factor) receptor-binding antagonist with nonspecific antiplatelet effects on platelet aggregation induced by various agonists including PAF, ADP, thrombin and collagen. The nonspecific antiaggregatory properties of AC7-1 drew our interest given its possible relationship in integrin receptor-binding antagonistic activity. The integrin receptor plays an important role in metastasis and thrombosis as the cell surface transmembrane protein. Based on the aforementioned facts, the antimetastatic activities of AC7-1 were examined using various in vitro and in vivo metastasis assays. AC7-1 strongly blocked B16-F10 melanoma cell adhesion to extracellular matrix (ECM) and B16-F10 melanoma cell invasion. AC7-1 also remarkably inhibited pulmonary metastasis and tumor growth in vivo. AC7-1 inhibited B16-F10 melanoma cell adhesion to only specific synthetic peptides including RGDS. These findings suggest that antimetastatic activities of AC7-1 can be caused by blocking integrin-mediated adherence. We found AC7-1 to be a potential candidate for the development of a new antimetastatic drug.
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PMID:Antimetastatic and antitumor effects of benzoquinonoid AC7-1 from Ardisia crispa. 1147 88

Polyphosphoinositides (PPIs) affect the localization and activities of many cellular constituents, including actin-modulating proteins. Several classes of polypeptide sequences, including pleckstrin homology domains, FYVE domains, and short linear sequences containing predominantly hydrophobic and cationic residues account for phosphoinositide binding by most such proteins. We report that a ten-residue peptide derived from the phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP(2)) binding region in segment 2 of gelsolin, when coupled to rhodamine B has potent PIP(2) binding activity in vitro; crosses the cell membrane of fibroblasts, platelets, melanoma cells, and neutrophils by a process not involving endocytosis; and blocks cell motility. This peptide derivative transiently disassembles actin filament structures in GFP-actin-expressing NIH3T3 fibroblasts and prevents thrombin- or chemotactic peptide-stimulated actin assembly in platelets and neutrophils, respectively, but does not block the initial [Ca(2+)] increase caused by these agonists. The blockage of actin assembly and motility is transient, and cells recover motility within an hour after their immobilization by 5-20 microm peptide. This class of reagents confirms the critical relation between inositol lipids and cytoskeletal structure and may be useful to probe the location and function of polyphosphoinositides in vivo.
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PMID:Cell permeant polyphosphoinositide-binding peptides that block cell motility and actin assembly. 1153 30

CD43, the major transmembrane sialoglycoprotein of neutrophils, monocytes, T lymphocytes and platelets, is highly glycosylated and its high sialic acid content contributes to the strongly negative charge of cells. In this study the role of CD43 in melanoma development was addressed using CD43 -/- mice (null mutated for the corresponding gene or knockout [KO]). Growth of B16F10 melanoma was retarded in the KO mice compared with the wild-type CD43+/+ control (WT). A marked difference in lung colonization and other metastatic foci was observed in the KO and WT mice up to 15 days after intravenous injection of tumour cells. The initial resistance of KO mice was reversed with time, and in the long term there was no difference in the survival rate of the two animal groups. Transient resistance was attributed to increased adhesion of thrombin-activated platelets and leukocytes to melanoma and endothelial cells in KO mice. In the KO mice tumour emboli were found in the central portion of the lung more than at the lung periphery immediately after intravenous injection, in contrast to the WT mice. Activation of melanoma adhesion receptors by thrombin or TRAP stimulated lung colonization in WT but not KO mice. Therefore, the correlation of tumour embolism and metastasis in short-term experiments depends on the nature and stability of interactions between the tumour and the blood/endothelial cells of the host.
Melanoma Res 2002 Feb
PMID:Transient resistance to B16F10 melanoma growth and metastasis in CD43-/- mice. 1182 53

Serum amyloid A (SAA) is an acute phase reactant, and its level in the blood is elevated to 1000-fold in response of the body to trauma, infection, inflammation, and neoplasia. SAA was reported to inhibit platelet aggregation and to induce adhesion of leukocytes. This study looked at adhesion of human platelets to SAA. Immobilized SAA supported the adhesion of human washed platelets; level of adhesion to SAA was comparable to fibronectin and lower than to fibrinogen. Adhesion to SAA was further enhanced by Mn(2+) and the physiological agonist, thrombin. Platelet adhesion to SAA was completely abolished by anti-SAA antibody. SAA-induced adhesion was inhibited by antibodies against the integrin receptor alphaIIbbeta3, by the peptide GRGDSP and by SAA-derived peptide containing YIGSR-like and RGD-like adhesion motifs (amino acids 29 to 42). Adhesion was not inhibited by control immunoglobulin G, by antibody against the integrin receptor alphaVbeta3, by the peptide GRGESP, and by SAA-derived peptide that includes incomplete RGD motif. SAA-derived peptide 29 to 42 also inhibited platelet adhesion to fibronectin. Transfected human melanoma cells expressing alphaIIbbeta3 adhered to SAA, whereas transfected cells expressing alphaVbeta3 did not. By using flow cytometry, the alphaIIbbeta3 cells displayed significantly higher levels of binding of soluble SAA than the alphaVbeta3 cells. These data indicate that human platelets specifically adhere to SAA in an RGD- and alphaIIbbeta3-dependent manner. Thus, SAA may play a role in modulating platelet adhesion at vascular injury sites by sharing platelet receptors with other platelet-adhesive proteins.
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PMID:Adhesion of human platelets to serum amyloid A. 1183 Apr 69

Detailed studies tumor cell-associated procoagulants and fibrinolytic factors have strongly suggested that local thrombin and plasmin generation may be important in tumor progression. Given that one target for both these serine proteases is fibrinogen, a logical extension of this hypothesis is that local fibrin deposition and dissolution may be key determinants of tumor growth and/or dissemination. To directly test this concept, we initiated studies of tumor growth, experimental metastasis, and spontaneous metastasis in C57Bl/6-inbred mice with and without fibrinogen. Using two established C57Bl/6-derived tumor cell lines, Lewis lung carcinoma and B16-BL6 melanoma, fibrinogen deficiency was found to strongly diminish, but not prevent, the development of lung metastases in both experimental and spontaneous metastasis assays. This difference was not a consequence of any obvious difference in tumor stroma formation or the growth of primary or secondary tumors. Rather, tumor cell fate studies argued that there is an important role of fibrin(ogen) in the sustained adhesion and/or survival of tumor cell emboli within the lung. The specific thrombin inhibitor, hirudin, was also shown to strongly diminish metastatic potential, consistent with earlier reports. More importantly, hirudin was found to further diminish the already low metastatic potential of tumor cells in fibrinogen-deficient mice. We conclude that fibrin(ogen) is a critical determinant of metastatic potential, but thrombin appears to contribute to tumor cell dissemination through at least one fibrinogen-independent mechanism. Further, these findings suggest that therapeutic strategies directed at several hemostatic factors might be useful in the suppression of metastatic disease.
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PMID:Fibrinogen and tumor cell metastasis. 1199 Apr 65

Platelet-tumor cell interactions are believed to be important in tumor metastasis. Tumor cell tissue factor (TF) expression enhances metastasis and angiogenesis, and is primarily responsible for tumor-induced thrombin generation and the formation of tumor cell-platelet aggregates. Activated platelets express and release CD40 ligand (CD40L), which induces endothelial TF expression by ligation to CD40. We investigated the effect of platelet-derived CD40L on the TF activity of human CD40-positive melanoma cells and monocytes by incubating supernatants from activated or resting platelets with tumor cells or monocytes, and by bringing resting or activated platelets into close apposition with tumor cell monolayers. CD40L was present on the surface of activated (but not resting) platelets and was also released following platelet activation. Both recombinant soluble CD40L (rsCD40L) and activated platelet supernatants increased procoagulant activity (PCA) and TF antigen in tumor cells and monocytes. The increase in TF activity induced by both rsCD40L and activated platelet supernatants was inhibited by anti-CD40L antibody. Furthermore, contact of activated platelets with tumor cells increased cellular PCA, and this effect was also inhibited by anti-CD40L. In malignancy, the increase in cellular TF activity via CD40 (tumor cell)-CD40L (platelet) interaction may possibly enhance intravascular coagulation and hematogenous metastasis.
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PMID:Platelet-CD40 ligand interaction with melanoma cell and monocyte CD40 enhances cellular procoagulant activity. 1219 2

The importance of coagulation activation in cancer patients is suggested by the clinical finding of hypercoagulability, experimental enhancement of metastasis and angiogenesis by coagulation factors such as tissue factor (TF) and thrombin and the possible antitumor effects of anticoagulant agents. Tinzaparin is a low-molecular-weight heparin (LMWH) with a relatively high molecular weight distribution and high sulfate to carboxylate ratio. In addition to its ability to inhibit thrombin and factor Xa, tinzaparin is particularly effective at releasing endothelial tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI), the natural inhibitor of both procoagulant and non-coagulant effects of TF. The present study was undertaken to investigate the effect of tinzaparin on lung metastasis using a B16 melanoma model in experimental mice. Tinzaparin's anticoagulant effect in mice and its ability to release TFPI from human endothelial cells at various time points were demonstrated. Subcutaneous (s.c.) injection of tinzaparin (10 mg kg-1) 4 h before intravenous administration of melanoma cells (2.0 x 105) markedly (89%) reduced lung tumor formation (3 +/- 2) compared with controls (31 +/- 23; P < 0.001). In a second group of animals, tinzaparin (10 mg kg-1, s.c.) administered daily for 14 days following the initial (pretumor cell) dose, before assessment of lung seeding, reduced tumor formation by 96% (P < 0.001). No bleeding problems were observed in any of the tinzaparin-treated animals, despite a 4-fold prolongation of the whole blood clotting time after a single s.c. dose of tinzaparin (10 mg kg-1). Administration of tumor cells (2 x 106) caused a rapid and significant fall in platelet count 15 min after injection (a sensitive marker of intravascular coagulation) in controls (939 +/- 37 vs. 498 +/- 94 x 106 mL-1, P < 0.01), but this was prevented by tinzaparin treatment (921 +/- 104 x 106 mL-1). These data provide further experimental evidence to support the potential for LMWH as antimetastatic agents.
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PMID:Antimetastatic effect of tinzaparin, a low-molecular-weight heparin. 1294 Oct 39


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