Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0025202 (
melanoma
)
69,561
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We studied two cases of pigmented neuroectodermal tumor of infancy (PNTI) by routine light microscopy and immunohistochemistry on formalin fixed, paraffin embedded tissues using antibodies to HMB-45 "melanoma associated" antigen, S-100 protein, neuron specific enolase (NSE),
Leu
-7 antigen, chromogranin, epithelial membrane antigen, collagen Type IV, alpha-fetoprotein and muscle-specific actin and to the intermediate filaments cytokeratin (CK), vimentin, desmin and neural filaments. We found that the large epithelioid cells, many of which contained melanin pigment, were strongly positive for CK and HMB-45, and less intensively positive for vimentin and NSE. The small neuroblast-like cells revealed only focal, weak NSE positivity. Both cell types were negative for S-100 protein and for the other antigens examined. Our results suggest that: (1) the large and small cell populations in PNTI have different immunophenotypes; (2) the expression of CK and HMB-45, together with the S-100 negativity, appears unique for the pigmented cells; and (3) this profile may be helpful in the exclusion of
melanoma
and peripheral neuroblastoma from the differential diagnosis.
...
PMID:Pigmented neuroectodermal tumor of infancy. A light microscopic and immunohistochemical study. 170 90
The alternatively spliced type III connecting segment (IIICS) region of fibronectin contains two distinct sites that support the adhesion of
melanoma
cells. These sites are contained within the synthetic peptides CS1 and CS5 (residues 1-25 and 90-109 of the IIICS, respectively). Recently, the cellular receptor for the CS1 site has been identified as the integrin heterodimer alpha 4 beta 1. In this report, we have investigated the role of the CS5 sequence in
melanoma
cell adhesion and the identity of its receptor. Adhesion to CS5, when presented to cells as an immobilized IgG conjugate, was blocked by antifunctional monoclonal antibodies directed against either the alpha 4 or beta 1 integrin subunits, but not by antibodies against other subunits, implying that alpha 4 beta 1 is also the receptor for CS5. In peptide inhibition experiments, CS5 was inhibitory for
melanoma
cell spreading on both CS5-IgG and CS1-IgG conjugates; conversely, CS1 inhibited spreading on both CS1-IgG and CS5-IgG. In both cases, peptide inhibition could be outcompeted by increasing the concentration of substrate-bound conjugate. These results suggest that CS1 and CS5 are recognized by the same or overlapping sites on alpha 4 beta 1. The minimal active sequence within CS5, the tetrapeptide Arg-Glu-Asp-Val (REDV), is somewhat related to the Arg-Gly-Asp-Ser (RGDS) sequence that represents a major active site in the central cell-binding domain (CCBD) of fibronectin. When RGDS peptide homologues were tested for their ability to inhibit spreading of
melanoma
cells on CS1- and CS5-IgG conjugates, GRGDS, GRGES, and REDV were found to be inhibitory, while GRDGS had no effect. In contrast, spreading on a fibronectin fragment containing the CCBD was inhibited by GRGDS only. GRGDS was also able to elute alpha 4 beta 1 specifically from a CS1 affinity column, confirming directly that alpha 4 beta 1-IIICS interactions are sensitive to peptides containing this recognition motif. Because the minimal active sequence within CS1 is the tripeptide
Leu
-Asp-Val (LDV; Komoriya et al., manuscript submitted for publication), these findings together define a new adhesive recognition sequence, X-Asp-Y, used by alpha 4 beta 1 for binding to fibronectin. The central aspartate residue in this tripeptide is almost always essential, but some flexibility in the amino acid residues at X (glycine,
leucine
, or glutamic acid) and Y (serine or valine) is tolerated. Potential models for the interaction of the IIICS region with alpha 4 beta 1 are discussed.
...
PMID:The CS5 peptide is a second site in the IIICS region of fibronectin recognized by the integrin alpha 4 beta 1. Inhibition of alpha 4 beta 1 function by RGD peptide homologues. 175 Sep 29
Fibronectin contains at least two major domains that support cell adhesion. One is the central cell-binding domain that is recognized by a variety of cell types via the integrin alpha 5 beta 1. The second, originally identified by its ability to support
melanoma
cell adhesion, is located in the alternatively spliced type III connecting segment (IIICS). A dominant cell type-specific adhesion site within the IIICS has been localized to a peptide designated as CS1 comprising its amino-terminal 25 residues. The receptor for CS1 is the integrin alpha 4 beta 1. We have synthesized a variety of peptides with overlapping sequences in order to identify the minimum active amino acid sequence of this major cell adhesion site. A peptide comprising the carboxyl-terminal 8 amino acids of CS1, EILDVPST, was found to support
melanoma
cell spreading, while all peptides without this sequence had little or no activity. Two smaller overlapping pentapeptides, EILDV and LDVPS, were also active, whereas EILEV, containing a conservative substitution of Glu for Asp, was inactive. These data suggested that the minimum sequence for cell adhesion activity is
Leu
-Asp-Val, the tripeptide sequence common to both active peptides. This prediction was confirmed by the observed ability of the
Leu
-Asp-Val peptide itself to block spreading on fibronectin, whereas
Leu
-Glu-Val was inactive. Interspecies amino acid sequence comparison also supports the importance of the LDV sequence, since it is completely conserved in the IIICS regions of human, rat, bovine, and avian fibronectins.
...
PMID:The minimal essential sequence for a major cell type-specific adhesion site (CS1) within the alternatively spliced type III connecting segment domain of fibronectin is leucine-aspartic acid-valine. 186 42
This paper describes the powerful cytotoxic action exerted by strychnopentamine (SP), a dimeric indole alkaloid extracted from Strychnos usambarensis Gilg, on B16
melanoma
cells and on non-cancer human fibroblasts cultured in vitro. SP strongly inhibits cell proliferation and induces cell death at a relatively low concentration (less than 1 microgram/ml) after 72 h of treatment in the two lines. Incorporation of [3H]thymidine and [3H]
leucine
by B16 cells significantly decreases after only 1 h of treatment at 0.5 microgram/ml. SP induces the formation of dense lamellar bodies and vacuolization in the cytoplasm, intense blebbing at the cell surface and various cytological alterations leading to cell death.
...
PMID:Effects of strychnopentamine on cells cultured in vitro. 193 50
We have examined the killing effect of 4-S-cysteaminylphenol (4-S-CAP), a newly synthesised melanin precursor, on B16
melanoma
cell lines possessing different melanin-producing activities and found it to be particularly effective in heavily melanised
melanoma
cells, but less so in moderately melanised
melanoma
cells, and having no effect on amelanotic melanoma cells and nonmelanoma cells. Thus, it was found that the killing effect of 4-S-CAP is highly dependent upon the synthesis of melanin and tyrosinase in
melanoma
cells, suggesting that 4-S-CAP may become toxic to
melanoma
cells only after oxidation by tyrosinase. The killing activity of 4-S-CAP also was found to be associated with a profound inhibition of the thymidine incorporation in pigmented
melanoma
cells, as compared to the uridine and
leucine
incorporation. Further, the inhibition of DNA synthesis was most pronounced in heavily melanised
melanoma
cells, less so in moderately melanised
melanoma
cells, and not seen in amelanotic melanoma cells. As a possible mechanism that might account for this action, it may be that 4-S-CAP is oxidised by tyrosinase to the o-quinone form via the catechol derivative and that some of the quinones then conjugate with sulfhydryl enzymes including DNA polymerase, thus exerting a killing activity for pigmented
melanoma
cells. Thus, 4-S-CAP appears to provide a new, effective cytotoxic agent for rational chemotherapy of malignant melanomas.
...
PMID:The killing effect of 4-S-cysteaminylphenol, a newly synthesised melanin precursor, on B16 melanoma cell lines. 199 95
Conjugates of the chemotactic peptide fMet-
Leu
-Phe (fMLP) to IgG retain chemotactic and antigen recognition function in vitro and enhance intra-tumour macrophage numbers in a guinea pig model. We report a study approved by the ethics committee on the acute toxicity of fMLP conjugates in ten consenting cancer patients with metastasizing
melanoma
and colon cancer. They were given increasing single doses (1-2500 micrograms) IgG-fMLP made with the anti-
melanoma
monoclonal antibody (mAb) 9.2.27. Clinical examinations and blood cell counts, urinalysis, electrolytes, and liver and kidney function tests before and after the infusion and weekly thereafter revealed no relevant toxicities. One patient had a herpes zooster exacerbation on day 1, which was judged to be coincidental. Peak post-infusion conjugate serum concentrations fell to unmeasurable levels within a few days. In no case was a human humoral anti-(mouse Ig) immune response detected.
...
PMID:Acute and subacute toxicity of chemotactic conjugates between monoclonal antibody and fMet-Leu-Phe in humans: a phase I clinical trial. 200 48
We evaluated the immediate and long-term effects on immune function measures of a 6-week structure psychiatric group intervention for patients with
malignant melanoma
. Along with a reduction in levels of psychological distress and greater use of active coping methods, the following immune changes were seen at the 6-month assessment point in the intervention-group patients (n = 35) compared with controls (n = 26): significant increases in the percent of large granular lymphocytes (defined as CD57 with
Leu
-7) and natural killer (NK) cells (defined as CD16 with
Leu
-11 and CD56 with NKH1) along with indications of increase in NK cytotoxic activity; and a small decrease in the percent of CD4 (helper/inducer) T cells. At the 6-week follow-up point, the majority of these changes were not yet observable. The results indicate that a short-term psychiatric group intervention in patients with
malignant melanoma
with a good prognosis was associated with longer-term changes in affective state, coping, and the NK lymphoid cell system. Affective rather than coping measures showed some significant correlations with immune cell changes.
...
PMID:A structured psychiatric intervention for cancer patients. II. Changes over time in immunological measures. 214 62
Recent data from studies of experimental murine tumors and certain human tumors (primarily
melanoma
) suggest that tumor-infiltrating T-lymphocytes (T-cell TILs) represent a highly potent and specific host antitumor response. We conducted an immunohistochemical analysis of the T-cell TIL subpopulations in frozen tissue sections taken from 82 consecutive B-cell diffuse large cell lymphoma (DLCL) patients. Initially, we analyzed the relationship in these patients between relapse-free survival (RFS) and their T-cell TIL characteristics. Nineteen patients had a low percentage (less than 6% of
Leu
-2+ (suppressor/cytotoxic) T-cell TILs, and 63 patients had a high percentage (greater than 6%) of
Leu
-2+ TILs. We found that a low percentage of
Leu
-2+ TILs correlated with a reduction in RFS: at 20 mo follow-up, all 19 low
Leu
-2+ patients had relapsed, whereas 70% of the 63 high
Leu
-2+ patients remained relapse-free (P = 0.008). No significant correlations appeared between patients' T-cell TIL subsets and overall survival. The percentage of newly diagnosed tumors with low counts of
Leu
-4+ (pan-T) TILs was marginally greater among interleukin-2 (IL-2) receptor-positive tumors than among IL-2 receptor-negative tumors (50 versus 28%, P = 0.098), which suggests that specific phenotypic characteristics of B-cell DLCL may modulate the host T-cell TIL response. Our results indicate that the host's T-cell TIL response in B-cell DLCL can be quantitated from frozen tissue sections and that this response may be related to disease course. Further related TIL studies may lead to new immunorestorative therapeutic approaches for patients with deficient or aberrant cytotoxic T-lymphocyte host responses.
...
PMID:Tumor-infiltrating T-lymphocytes in B-cell diffuse large cell lymphoma related to disease course. 219 16
ME1 is a monoclonal antibody reactive in frozen tissue sections with normal mesothelial cells and malignant mesotheliomas. In this immunoperoxidase study, ME1 reacted with all 40 epithelial type malignant mesotheliomas. Fifty percent or more of the mesothelioma cells were stained in all cases and the staining intensity was strong in 32 and moderate in eight. In contrast, all 19 well- and moderately differentiated pulmonary adenocarcinomas were completely negative, and of the total 88 non-mesotheliomatous malignancies studied, staining comparable to the mesotheliomas was seen in only 6 tumors (2 pulmonary adenocarcinomas, 2 adenocarcinomas of the breast, 1 adenocarcinoma of the pancreas, and 1
melanoma
), although limited, weaker staining was seen in additional cases. Five of the six strongly to moderately positive nonmesotheliomatous tumors had immunoreactivity for complementary immunoreactants (CEA,
Leu
-M1, S-100 protein, HMB-45). Our results with ME1, the first monoclonal antibody that recognizes malignant mesothelial cells, provides a basis for using this reagent in the differential diagnosis of tumors of the pleura and peritoneum.
...
PMID:ME1. A monoclonal antibody that distinguishes epithelial-type malignant mesothelioma from pulmonary adenocarcinoma and extrapulmonary malignancies. 230 35
In previous studies, we have found that combined treatment with BCNU and sodium cyanate could have a greater effect on the survival of mice bearing B16
melanoma
than treatment with either agent alone. With rat hepatoma and human colon cancer cells in culture, we have obtained evidence that the inhibition of cell proliferation by sodium cyanate is greater at pH 6.6 than at pH 7.4. In the present work, the effects of combination treatments on the proliferation of cancer cells were studied with cyanate, pH, BCNU, and hyperthermia. With HT29 human colon cancer cells, the inhibitory effect of BCNU (50-100 micrograms/ml) was greater when the cells were treated at pH 6.6 than at pH 7.4. The influence of pH appeared to be absent or minimal at lower or higher concentrations of BCNU. We confirmed our previous observation that the inhibition of proliferation of LS174T human colon cancer cells is greater at pH 6.6 than at pH 7.4, and we observed an inhibitory effect of BCNU (50 or 200 micrograms/ml). However, no more than additive effects were seen with combination treatment. An inhibitory effect of hyperthermia was seen for the incorporation of [3H]-
leucine
into protein of rat hepatoma cells (HTC) and for that of [3H]-thymidine into DNA of human colon cancer (HT29) cells. In neither case was the effect of hyperthermia significantly enhanced by treatment with sodium cyanate beyond that seen with one of the treatments alone. The data confirmed that the inhibitory effect of sodium cyanate on cell proliferation can be enhanced by a low pH but did not provide evidence for synergistic effects in combination with BCNU or hyperthermia.
...
PMID:Combined effect of pH and sodium cyanate on the inhibition of tumor cell proliferation and metabolism by BCNU and hyperthermia. 236 91
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>