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)

The protein synthetic machinery is activated by a variety of genetic alterations during tumor progression and represents an attractive target for cancer therapy. The mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) plays an important role in regulating protein translation through phosphorylation of p70 S6 kinase 1 (S6K1), a protein involved in ribosome biogenesis, and 4E-BP1 (eIF-4E binding protein), a translation repressor. It has been shown that mTOR has a direct linkage to the phosphatidylinositol-3'-kinase (PI3K)/PTEN-AKT survival pathway. Recent studies have demonstrated that mTOR inhibition by rapamycin or its analogues have remarkable activity against a wide range of human cancers in vitro and in human tumor xenograft models. Phase I clinical evaluations also suggested an anti-tumor effect of rapamycin analogue such as CCI-779. The clinical challenge for the application of this class of anticancer drug is the ability to prospectively identify which tumors will be sensitive to mTOR inhibition. Recent studies have identified cellular markers that are associated with the in vitro activity of rapamycin or CCI-779. However, there have been no reports on how these cellular markers are expressed together in human tumor specimen. In this study, multiple components of the PI3K/PTEN-AKT-mTOR pathway were evaluated by immunohistochemistry in tissue arrays containing 124 tumors from 8 common tumor types. The results show variable expression of all the signaling proteins. For example, mTOR expression was low in brain tumors, but high in the rest of tumors. High levels of 4E-BP1 were seen in colonic adenocarcinoma and low levels in lymphoma. Phospho-AKT (p-AKT) and phospho-S6K1 (p-S6K1) were the only proteins that had significantly correlated protein expression (rs=0.51, p<0.001). Since low PTEN, high p-AKT and high p-S6K1 expression render tumors sensitive to mTOR inhibition in vitro, these criteria were used to model tumor sensitivity. Overall, 26% of tumors (32/124) are predicted to be sensitive to mTOR inhibition, with variable rates for different tumors (melanoma 0% vs ovarian 41%). This is the first report on the PI3K/PTEN-AKT-mTOR pathway in common human tumors and evaluation of the coordinated expression of different signaling proteins. This study should provide a useful tool for selecting future targeted phase II and III clinical trials in the development of this exciting class of agents.
...
PMID:Pharmacogenomic profiling of the PI3K/PTEN-AKT-mTOR pathway in common human tumors. 1501 Aug 27

Increased cell proliferation, which is a hallmark of aggressive malignant neoplasms, requires a general increase in protein synthesis and a specific increase in the synthesis of replication-promoting proteins. Transient increase in the general protein synthesis rate, as well as preferential translation of specific mRNAs coding for growth promoting proteins (e.g. cyclin D1), takes place during normal mitogenic response. A number of extensively studied growth signal transduction pathways (Ras, PI3K, MAPK, mTOR-dependent pathways) activate the function and expression of various components of the translational machinery. In abnormal situations, constitutive activation of signal transduction pathways (e.g. oncogenic activation of Ras or Myc) leads to continuous upregulation of key elements of translational machinery. On the other hand, tumor suppressor genes (p53, pRb) downregulate ribosomal and tRNA synthesis, and their inactivation results in uncontrolled production of these translational components. During recent years, a significant effort has been dedicated to determining whether expression of translation factors is increased in human tumors using clinical biopsy specimens. The results of these studies indicate that expression of particular translation initiation factors is not always increased in human neoplasms. The pattern of expression is characteristic for a particular tumor type. For example, eIF-4E is usually increased in bronchioloalveolar carcinomas but not in squamous cell carcinomas of the lung. Interestingly, in certain highly proliferative and aggressive neoplasms (e.g. squamous cell carcinoma of the lung, melanoma), the expression of eIF-4E is barely detectable. These findings suggest that mechanisms for increasing general protein synthesis in various neoplasms differ significantly. Finally, the possibility of qualitative alterations in the translational machinery, rather than a simple increase in the activity of its components, is discussed along with the possibility of targeting those qualitative differences for tumor therapy.
...
PMID:The role of translation in neoplastic transformation from a pathologist's point of view. 1509 73

Melanogenesis is a principal parameter of differentiation in melanocytes and melanoma cells. Our recent study has demonstrated that phospholipase D1 (PLD1) regulates the melanogenic signaling through modulating the expression of tyrosinase, the rate-limiting step enzyme in the melanin biosynthesis. The current study was designed to gain more insight into the involvement of PLD1 in the regulation of melanogenesis. To investigate the role of PLD1, we examined the effect of knockdown of endogenous PLD1 by small interference RNA (siRNA) on melanogenesis in B16 melanoma cells. It was shown that the melanin synthesis was induced in PLD1-knockdowned cells, and also that the level of melanin synthesis was well correlated with increases in expression level of tyrosinase and its related proteins (Tyrp1 and Dct). Furthermore, the reduction of expression levels of PLD1 by siRNA transfection was accompanied by diminution of ribosomal S6 kinase 1 (S6K1) phosphorylation. The activity of mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) is essential for phosphorylation of S6K1 and the treatment malanoma cells with rapamycin, a potent inhibitor of mTOR effectively induced melanogenesis. The results obtained here provide possible evidence that PLD1 exerts a negative regulatory role in the melanogenic process through mTOR/S6K1 signaling.
...
PMID:Negative regulation of melanogenesis by phospholipase D1 through mTOR/p70 S6 kinase 1 signaling in mouse B16 melanoma cells. 1589 62

Constitutive activation of Akt characterizes a high percentage of human melanomas and represents a poor prognostic factor of the disease. We show that Akt transforms melanocytes only in a hypoxic environment, which is found in normal skin. The synergy between Akt and hypoxia is HIF1alpha mediated. Inhibition of HIF1alpha decreases Akt transformation capacity in hypoxia and tumor growth in vivo, while overexpression of HIF1alpha allows anchorage-independent growth in normoxia and development of more aggressive tumors. Finally, we show that mTOR activity is necessary to maintain the transformed phenotype by sustaining HIF1alpha activity. Taken together, these findings demonstrate that Akt hyperactivation and HIF1alpha induction by normally occurring hypoxia in the skin significantly contribute to melanoma development.
...
PMID:The hypoxic microenvironment of the skin contributes to Akt-mediated melanocyte transformation. 1646 95

For three decades, clinical trials with chemotherapy in melanoma have failed to show superiority of any one regimen over another. Dacarbazine remains the only "standard" agent. With response rates of <10% and median progression-free survival of 2 months or less in contemporary trials, there is a need to improve systemic therapy. Combination chemotherapy is associated with higher response rates than single-agent therapy but this has not translated into improved survival. An increasing number of potential therapeutic targets have been identified. For some, pharmacologic inhibitors are available, including sorafenib for BRAF, farnesyltransferase inhibitors for NRAS, PD-0325901 for mitogen-activated protein kinase/extracellular signal-regulated kinase kinase, rapamycin analogues for mammalian target of rapamycin, and agents that inhibit either vascular endothelial growth factor or its receptors. Several multitargeted kinase inhibitors have potency against the fibroblast growth factor receptor, c-kit, and platelet-derived growth factor receptor. Small-molecule inhibitors of c-met and Akt are in preclinical development. Another class of agents indirectly affect aberrant signaling, including inhibitors of chaperones and proteasomes. Several targeted agents seem to enhance the cytotoxicity of chemotherapy in preclinical models. The mechanism by which signaling inhibition might synergize with chemotherapy requires more study so that rational combinations move forward. Very few targeted agents have been studied rigorously in this fashion.
...
PMID:Chemotherapy and targeted therapy combinations in advanced melanoma. 1660 60

Angiogenesis is a hallmark of melanoma progression. Antiangiogenic agents have been infrequently tested in patients with advanced melanoma. Experience with most other cancers suggests that single-agent application of angiogenic inhibitors is unlikely to have substantial clinical antitumor activity in melanoma. It is more likely that combinations of antiangiogenic agents with either chemotherapy or other targeted therapy will be needed to produce significant clinical benefit. In melanoma, numerous cellular pathways important to cell proliferation, apoptosis, or metastases have recently been shown to be activated. Activation occurs through specific mutations (B-RAF, N-RAS, and PTEN) or changes in expression levels of various proteins (PTEN, BCL-2, NF-kappaB, CDK2, and cyclin D1). Agents that block these pathways are rapidly entering the clinical setting, including RAF inhibitors (sorafenib), mitogen-activated protein kinase inhibitors (PD0325901), mammalian target of rapamycin inhibitors (CCI-779), and farnesyl transferase inhibitors (R115777) that inhibit N-RAS and proteasome inhibitors (PS-341) that block activation of nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB). It will be a challenge to evaluate these agents alone, in combination with each other, or with chemotherapy in patients with melanoma. Trials with large populations of biologically ill-defined tumors run the risk of missing clinical antitumor activity that is important for a particular yet-to-be-defined subset of patients. To rationally and optimally develop these targeted agents, it will be critical to adequately test for the presence of the presumed cellular target in tumor specimens and the effect of therapy on the proposed target (biological response). Investigators in this field will need to carefully plan these trials so that at the end of the day, we learn from both the failures and successes of targeted therapy.
...
PMID:Molecular targets in melanoma from angiogenesis to apoptosis. 1660 62

Hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF)-1alpha, a global regulator of oxygen homeostasis, plays a crucial role in tumor cell adaptation to the hypoxic microenvironment through transcriptional regulation of its target genes. These genes in turn are involved in a plethora of biochemical as well as cell biological processes, including glucose metabolism, apoptosis and angiogenesis. In melanoma, HIF-1alpha has been implicated in tumor progression with effects upon metastasis and angiogenesis. However, its role in malignant transformation by oncogenes has not been described. Bedogni et al. (Cancer Cell 2005, 8:443-54) report that the hypoxic microenvironment in the skin contributes to melanocyte transformation and tumor growth induced by oncogenes Ras and Akt, which are frequently activated in melanoma. HIF-1alpha activity was found to be required in Akt-induced melanocyte transformation and tumor growth and it was suppressed greatly by mTOR inhibition with rapamycin. Since mTOR regulates HIF-1alpha expression and its transcriptional activity, rapamycin was proposed as a promising hypoxia-related therapeutic approach in melanoma treatment. This study sheds light upon the role of HIF-1alpha in the early stage of melanoma development and highlights the importance of the Akt-mTOR pathway in the regulation of HIF-1alpha.
...
PMID:Hypoxic microenvironment as a cradle for melanoma development and progression. 1662 74

Angiopoietin-1 (ANGPT1), Angiopoietin-4 (ANGPT4), VEGF, FGF2, FGF4, HGF, Ephrin, IL8 and CXCL12 (SFD1) are pro-angiogenic factors (angiogenic activators), while Angiopoietin-2 (ANGPT2), Angiostatin, Endostatin, Tumstatin, Canstatin, THBS1, THBS2, TNFSF15 (VEGI) and Vasohibin (VASH1) are anti-angiogenic factors (angiogenic inhibitors). ANGPT1 and ANGPT2 are ligands for TIE family receptor tyrosine kinases, TIE1 and TIE2 (TEK). Angiopoietin family consists of ANGPT1, ANGPT2, ANGPT4, ANGPTL1 (ANGPT3), ANGPTL2, ANGPTL3 (ANGPT5), ANGPTL4, ANGPTL5, ANGPTL6 and ANGPTL7. TCF/LEF binding sites within the promoter region of human Angiopoietin family members were searched for by using bioinformatics and human intelligence (Humint). Because four TCF/LEF-binding sites were identified within the human ANGPTL7 promoter, comparative genomics analyses on ANGPTL7 orthologs were further performed. ANGPTL7 gene at human chromosome 1p36.22 was located within intron 28 of FRAP1 gene encoding mTOR protein. Chimpanzee ANGPTL7 gene, consisting of five exons, was located within NW_101546.1 genome sequence. Chimpanzee ANGPTL7 showed 99.4% and 86.1% total-amino-acid identity with human ANGPTL7 and mouse Angptl7, respectively. Human ANGPTL7 mRNA was expressed in neural tissues, keratoconus cornea, trabecular meshwork, melanotic melanoma and uterus endometrial cancer, while mouse Angptl7 mRNA was expressed in four-cell embryo, synovial fibroblasts, thymus, uterus and testis. Four TCF/LEF-binding sites within human ANGPTL7 promoter were conserved in chimpanzee ANGPTL7 promoter; however, only an unrelated TCF/LEF-binding site occurred in mouse and rat Angptl7 promoters. Human ANGPTL7, characterized as potent target gene of WNT/ beta-catenin signaling pathway, is a pharmacogenomics target in the fields of oncology and regenerative medicine.
...
PMID:Comparative integromics on Angiopoietin family members. 1668 28

Erythropoietin (Epo) is used commonly to treat cancer and/or therapy-related anemia. Until recently, Epo was considered to be a specific stimulator of erythropoiesis, acting via its receptor, EpoR. It becomes clear, however, that EpoR is expressed in a variety of cell types other than hematopoietic cells, and that Epo is a potent cytoprotective cytokine increasing cell survival under hypoxic conditions. Epo and EpoR are also expressed in various malignant tumors, and EpoR expression shows association with tumor invasion and progression. Recently, a functional Epo autocrine signaling mechanism was also detected in human melanoma cells. In this study, we examined the hypothesis that Epo activates the Akt signaling pathway in human melanoma cells and thus promotes the survival of tumor cells. The Akt signaling pathway in response to Epo was examined in melanoma. Similar to Epo, the expression of EpoR was up-regulated in response to hypoxia and Epo stimulation in melanoma cells. Melanoma cells constitutively expressed Akt with variable expression of mammalian target of rapamycin, and Epo dose-dependently induced their activity. Epo increased Akt kinase activity, which was abrogated by co-treatment with LY294002, a specific blocker of phosphoinositide 3-kinase. LY294002 also inhibited the cytoprotective effects of Epo in melanoma cells under both normoxic and hypoxic conditions. Our results suggest that Epo promotes melanoma cell survival by activating an Akt-dependent signaling pathway.
Melanoma Res 2006 Aug
PMID:Erythropoietin activates the phosphoinositide 3-kinase/Akt pathway in human melanoma cells. 1684 23

After decades of successful organ transplantation clinicians continue to be troubled by the increasing incidence of cancers under maintenance immunosuppression. In this study, we examined rates of malignancies in 2419 renal transplant recipients transplanted in our institution between 1978 and 2005. In renal transplant recipients the cumulative incidence of cancer after 25 years was 49.3% for all tumors and 39.7% excluding non-melanoma skin cancers, compared with 21% for a normal sex- and age-matched population. The most frequent tumors observed were non-melanoma skin cancers (20.5%), kidney cancers (12.0%), and cancers of the pharynx, larynx, or oral cavity (8.2%). The general increase of cancer risk was 4.3-fold. Independent risk factors for the development of a tumor were male gender, older recipient age, the presence of preformed antibodies before transplantation, and the time on immunosuppression. Interestingly, the use of IL-2-receptor antagonists significantly reduced the tumor risk of transplant recipients. The tumor risk between immunosuppressive drugs typically used for maintenance immunosuppression was not significantly different. However, mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) inhibitor-based immunosuppressive protocols showed a clear tendency for lower malignancy rates. De novo malignancies following renal transplantation represent a serious problem endangering the prognosis of otherwise successfully transplanted patients. Future studies will have to address whether optimized immunosuppressive regimens including mTOR-inhibitors are capable of reducing the incidence or preventing the development of posttransplant malignancies.
...
PMID:The janus face of immunosuppression - de novo malignancy after renal transplantation: the experience of the Transplantation Center Munich. 1755 50


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