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:C0026764 (
multiple myeloma
)
36,148
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Osteocalcin is synthesized by osteoblasts and its concentration in serum is increased when bone metabolism is raised. Radioimmunoassay of serum from 88 healthy adults gave a mean osteocalcin value for the whole group of 4.11 +/- 1.43 ng/ml. The level rose with age. In seven patients with primary hyperparathyroidism the mean value was markedly raised to 19.37 +/- 9.2 ng/ml, in 23 with metastasizing carcinoma of the breast it was elevated to 6.57 +/- 2.98 ng/ml. Serial measurements in 14 female patients over seven months revealed different changes in osteocalcin and alkaline phosphatase in some of them. In patients with
breast cancer
and soft-tissue metastases or without metastases both osteocalcin and alkaline phosphatase levels were normal. Three of 17 patients with
multiple myeloma
had increased osteocalcin levels. These results indicate that it is clinically helpful to know osteocalcin levels in primary hyperparathyroidism. Determination of osteocalcin concentration, in addition to that of alkaline phosphatase, can be of value in the postmastectomy management of patients with
breast cancer
, especially in the early recognition of bone metastases. The diagnostic value of osteocalcin levels in
multiple myeloma
remains undecided.
...
PMID:[Osteocalcin, a marker in diseases with elevated bone metabolism]. 387 69
The Mr 52,000 glycoprotein is regulated by estrogen and released by
breast cancer
cells in culture (B. Westley and H. Rochefort, Cell, 20: 352-362, 1980). This rare protein was partially purified from 25 liters of medium conditioned by MCF7 cells and injected into Biozzi's selected mice. The spleen lymphocytes of one immunized mouse was fused with the murine
myeloma
P3-X63-Ag8-653. Sixteen hybridomas producing monoclonal antibodies to the Mr 52,000 protein were isolated, and seven of them were cloned and purified. The seven monoclonal antibodies were all of the immunoglobulin G1 isotype, and their dissociation constants ranged from 0.35 to 2.3 nM. The antibodies specifically recognized the secreted Mr 52,000 protein as evidenced by double immunoprecipitation and by immunoblotting after electrophoretic separation and transfer. Double-determinant immunoradiometric assay indicated that the seven purified monoclonal antibodies recognized three distinct regions of the Mr 52,000 protein, and it was used to assay the Mr 52,000 protein in biological fluids. These antibodies did not react with the external plasma membrane of MCF7 cells, as shown by immunofluorescence analysis. By contrast, the cytoplasm of MCF7 cells (but not T47D and RBA cells) was stained by the peroxidase-immunoperoxidase complex after plasma membrane permeation, indicating that the protein is secreted by exocytosis rather than shed from the plasma membrane.
...
PMID:Characterization of monoclonal antibodies to the estrogen-regulated Mr 52,000 glycoprotein and their use in MCF7 cells. 388 Nov 71
Monoclonal antibody AB/3 was produced from a fusion of spleen cells of a human
breast cancer
cell-primed BALB/c mouse with the murine
myeloma
cell line P3-NS1-Ag4-1. The antibody reacted strongly with the plasma membrane of human
breast cancer
cells. Tissue sections of both malignant and benign human mammary carcinomas and tumors of non-breast origin as well as apparently normal tissues were tested with immunoperoxidase. Ninety-six of 124 (77%) primary human breast cancers, 12 of 14 (86%) metastatic breast lesions, and 12 of 44 (27%) benign breast lesions reacted positively. Little or no appreciable reactivity was observed with apparently normal human tissues and carcinomas of non-breast origin, with the exception of colon carcinoma. Antibody AB/3 did not immunoprecipitate any identifiable protein from radiolabeled extracts of the immunizing cell line.
...
PMID:A monoclonal antibody (AB/3) reactive with human breast cancer. 389 78
The treatment of hypercalcemia remains a common problem in the management of many patients with cancer. We have used intravenously administered etidronate disodium as a therapy for hypercalcemia in 26 patients with malignant disease. Patients with persistent hypercalcemia despite adequate hydration and a serum creatinine level less than or equal to 1.5 mg/dL were allowed on study. Treatment consisted of intravenously administered etidronate disodium at 7.5 mg/kg/day in 250 mL of saline infused over two hours on 1, 2, 3, or 4 consecutive days. The serum calcium level in 19 (73%) of 26 patients returned to the normal range with a mean response time of 3 +/- 2 days. Similar response rates were seen in patients with a variety of tumors, including
breast cancer
, non-small-cell lung cancer, and
multiple myeloma
. Intravenously administered etidronate appears to be safe and effective therapy for hypercalcemia in patients with malignant disease.
...
PMID:Intravenous etidronate in the management of malignant hypercalcemia. 391 67
An estrogen-responsive murine Leydig cell tumor (M5480A) was examined for the presence of cross-reactive proteins to a monoclonal antibody directed against a Mr 24,000 estrogen-regulated protein in human
breast cancer
cells. Human breast tumor biopsies were used as controls for the cytosol preparations, sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and Western blot conditions used in these experiments. The estrogen-regulated Mr 24,000 protein was detected in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels of cytosols from four human breast tumor biopsies examined. Larger amounts of the Mr 24,000 protein were present in the two estrogen-progesterone receptor-positive tumor biopsies in comparison to the two estrogen-progesterone receptor-negative samples. In addition, the two receptor-positive samples demonstrated an additional, less intense immunoreactive band at Mr 21,000. Under identical conditions, the same monoclonal antibody bound to two major protein bands from sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels of Leydig cell tumor cytosols at Mr 56,000 and Mr 86,000. Antibodies prepared from BALB/c mouse ascites fluid of animals bearing the parent
myeloma
cell line (P3X63NS1) exhibited no immunoreactivity against the human breast or Leydig cell tumor proteins. In light of the high degree of specificity which this monoclonal antibody exhibits, our results suggest that similar antigenic determinants may exist in these proteins from two distinct tumors.
...
PMID:Cross-reactivity of a monoclonal antibody directed against an estrogen-induced protein in MCF-7 human breast cancer cells with murine Leydig cell tumor proteins. 394 Jan 99
Two women are described in whom, on the basis of prior therapy for
breast cancer
and the presence of painful, lytic bone lesions, an initial diagnosis of metastatic breast cancer was made. Further evaluation established the diagnosis of
multiple myeloma
in both patients. Neither had evidence of recurrent breast cancer. These cases indicate that women with a history of
breast cancer
in whom lytic bone lesions develop without evidence of extraskeletal metastases should have the diagnosis of
multiple myeloma
excluded.
...
PMID:Multiple myeloma masquerading as metastatic breast cancer. 394 26
Mouse
myeloma
cells were fused with spleen cells from BALB/c mice immunized with the MCF-7 human mammary carcinoma cell line. Among hybridomas, two (3B18 and 15A8) were selected and cloned. Hybridoma 3B18 produces kappa-IgG1 antibodies that react with a cytoplasmic component of MCF-7 cells. In immunoperoxidase assays, 3B18 reacts with 27 of 31 specimens of human mammary carcinoma. It reacts most consistently with poorly differentiated and infiltrating ductal breast cancers, but it also reacts with isolated cells in 3 of 5 benign mammary pathological lesions with a variable distribution. The antibody does not react with normal mammary epithelium. It does not react with any normal human tissues, and it reacts with only one of 19 other cancers tested. Hybridoma 15A8 produces kappa-IgG1 antibodies that react with the surface membranes of the cells of two human
breast cancer
cell lines but not with a human fibroblast cell line. In immunoperoxidase assays, the antibody reacted with 28 out of 31 human mammary carcinomas. The antibody also reacts more weakly with normal human epithelial cells of breast, renal proximal tubule, skin, esophagus, and salivary gland, but no other normal tissue. The antibody was unreactive with 14 of 18 other malignant tissues tested. Since 3B18 and 15A8 detect antigens found predominantly in human mammary carcinomas and, possibly, distinguish overlapping categories of human mammary carcinomas, they may prove useful in determining the cellular lineage from which human mammary carcinomas arise, or they may have other clinical applications in
breast cancer
.
...
PMID:Two monoclonal antibodies selective for human mammary carcinoma. 397 77
Nonactivated (8.5S) rabbit uterine progestin receptor was enriched 10- to 30-fold by chromatography on columns of spheroidal hydroxylapatite and DEAE-cellulose. A total of approximately 25 micrograms of receptor (purity approximately 1%) was injected at multiple sites into a BALB/c mouse. After several injections, splenic lymphocytes were fused with P3x63Ag8.653 mouse
myeloma
cells. This fusion produced in excess of 240 hybridomas, which were screened by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), solid-phase radioimmunoassay, and sucrose gradient centrifugation. One colony (KN 382/EC1) produced a mouse immunoglobulin G1 which bound rabbit 8.5S uterine progestin receptor. The cell line has been repeatedly cloned under conditions of limiting dilution and expanded in mice as ascitic tumors. Antibody was purified by (NH4)2SO4 precipitation, DEAE-cellulose chromatography, and affinity chromatography with protein A - Sepharose CL-4B. Specificity of the antibody was determined by sucrose gradient centrifugation and solid-phase radioimmunoassay. The antibody bound to progestin receptors from rabbit uterus and MCF-7
breast cancer
cells. It did not react with progestin receptors from rat uterus, guinea pig uterus, or chick oviduct, nor did it bind to estrogen receptors from any of the tissues we tested.
...
PMID:Development of a monoclonal antibody to the rabbit 8.5S uterine progestin receptor. 398 62
Ten women with
breast cancer
and hematological malignancy (nine with double malignancy and one with triple malignancy) were analyzed. Mastectomy was performed on all patients in our hospital between July 1959 and June 1982 (23 years). Diagnoses of hematological malignancy were seven acute leukemias (five AML, two AMMoL), one CML, two lymphomas and one
myeloma
. Irradiation and chemotherapy were postoperative treatments in eight and three patients, respectively. The median interval between the first diagnosis and the second was four years and 10 months (one year and five months to 21 years and seven months). The median survival time from the first diagnosis was five years and eight months, while that from the second was six and a half months. In a clinical setting, it is difficult to ascertain the causative factors of multiple malignancy. Accumulation of additional patients is needed for further analysis.
...
PMID:[Breast cancer and hematological malignancy in the same patients]. 399 89
Balb/c mice were immunized with membrane preparations of primary and metastatic breast carcinomas or with live
breast cancer
cell lines. Sixty-two fusions were performed between immune splenocytes and SP2/0 mouse
myeloma
cells, and 107 hybridomas were cloned that produced antibody reactive with
breast cancer
membrane extract, cell lines, and frozen sections, but not with normal tissue membrane extracts or a human fibroblast line. Ninety-four monoclonal antibodies were purified and tested for binding to 16 normal tissue frozen sections and five blood cell types. Thirty-five of the 94 antibodies were also tested on
breast cancer
sections from 21 patients, 14
breast cancer
cell lines, and 11 nonbreast tumor sections. Two of 94 antibodies showed no reactivity to any of the 21 normal tissues or 11 nonbreast neoplasms studied. These two antibodies, 451B7 and 452F2, bound 60% of the
breast cancer
cell lines and 25% of the
breast cancer
tissue sections. Eight additional antibodies bound three or fewer of 21 normal tissues. These antibodies bound 25-85% of
breast cancer
sections, 0-75% of
breast cancer
cell lines, and many of the nonbreast cancers. A comparison of normal tissues and nonbreast tumors bound by the
breast cancer
-reactive antibodies indicated that most of the cross-reacting normal tissue structures were epithelial in origin, and that the most cross-reactive nonbreast cancers were those of secondary sex organs (uterus, prostate, ovary).
...
PMID:Tissue distribution of breast cancer-associated antigens defined by monoclonal antibodies. 402 Mar 86
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>