Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (metastases)
103,950 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The mechanisms leading to rapid invasive growth of malignant gliomas are poorly understood. Expression of the hyaluronic acid (HA) receptor CD44 and adhesion to HA are involved in invasive properties. Our previous studies have shown that malignant glioma cells are able to adhere to extracellular HA. Here we investigated expression of the hyaluronic acid receptor CD44 protein in five human (T98G, A172, U87MG, 86HG39, 85HG66) and two rat (C6, 9L) glioma cell lines. Influence of anti-CD44 antibody and hyaluronidase-preincubation on the HA-binding was determined using HA/BSA (bovine serum albumin)-coated culture plates. While all gliomas were highly positive for CD44 with no differences in the number of positive staining cells, median fluorescence intensity decreased as follows: C6>T98G>9L>85HG66> 86HG39>A172>U87MG. Using HA/BSA coated culture plates the relative levels of specific adhesion to HA were determined as T98G>A172>9L>86HG39>U87MG> 85HG66. C6 cells failed to bind HA specifically. Incubation with anti-human-CD44 MAb significantly decreased HA-adhesion of T98G, A172, 85HG66 and U87MG human glioma cells. However the binding capacity was completely blocked only in 85HG66 cells. The three other cell lines kept a specific HA-adhesion after saturation of the receptor. Hyaluronidase pretreatment markedly enhanced HA-adhesion of C6 and 9L rat glioma cells. These results suggest that (i) HA-adhesion of malignant glioma cells is mainly, but not only, mediated by CD44, (ii) expression of CD44 does not correspond with adhesion capacity and (iii) cell-bound glycosaminoglycans may influence glioma cell adhesion to extracellular HA.
Clin Exp Metastasis 1999 Feb
PMID:CD44 expression and hyaluronic acid binding of malignant glioma cells. 1039 Jan 50

The presence of lymphatic metastases is a strong indicator for poor prognosis in patients with ductal pancreatic cancer. In order to better understand the mechanisms controlling lymphatic growth and lymph node metastasis in human ductal pancreatic cancer, we analyzed the expression pattern of the vascular endothelial growth factor-D (VEGF-D), its receptor VEGF-receptor-3 (VEGFR-3) and the lymphatic endothelium-specific hyaluronan receptor LYVE-1 in a panel of 19 primary human ductal pancreatic tumors and 10 normal pancreas specimens. We further addressed the biological function of VEGF-D for induction of lymphatic metastasis in a nude mouse xenograft model using two human ductal pancreatic cancer cell lines with overexpression of VEGF-D. Compared to normal human pancreas, pancreatic cancer tissue showed overexpression of VEGF-D and VEGFR-3 in conjunction with a high lymphatic vascularization as determined by immunohistochemistry and in situ hybridization. Tumors derived from VEGF-D-overexpressing cells had a higher microvessel density compared to their mock-controls, as determined based on CD31 immunohistochemistry. Importantly, these tumors also revealed a significant induction of intra- and peritumoral lymphatics, as judged from immunohistochemical detection of LYVE-1 expression. This was associated with a significant increase in lymphatic vessel invasion by tumor cells and an increased rate of lymphatic metastases, as indicated by pan-cytokeratin reactive cells in lymph nodes. Our results suggest that VEGF-D plays a pivotal role in stimulating lymphangiogenesis and lymphatic metastasis in human ductal pancreatic cancer, and therefore represents a novel therapeutic target for this devastating disease.
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PMID:Vascular endothelial growth factor-D induces lymphangiogenesis and lymphatic metastasis in models of ductal pancreatic cancer. 1607 15

Lymphangioleiomyomatosis (LAM), a rare multisystem disease found primarily in women of childbearing age, is characterized by the proliferation of abnormal smooth muscle-like cells, LAM cells, that form nodules in the pulmonary interstitium. Proliferation of LAM cells results, in part, from dysfunction in tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) genes TSC1 (hamartin) and/or TSC2 (tuberin). Identification of LAM cells in donor lungs, their isolation from blood, and their presence in urine, chylous ascites, and pleural effusions are consistent with their ability to metastasize. Here, we investigated the presence on LAM cells of the hyaluronic acid receptor CD44 and its splice variants associated with metastasis. The heterogeneous populations of cells grown from lungs of 12 LAM patients contain cells expressing mRNA for the variant CD44v6. Histologically, CD44v6 was present in LAM lung nodules, but not in normal vascular smooth muscle cells. CD44v6-positive sorted cells showed loss of heterozygosity at the TSC2 locus; binding of CD44v6 antibody resulted in loss of cell viability. Levels of CD44 were higher in cultured Eker rat (Tsc2-/-) cells than in Tsc2+/+ cells, but unlike human LAM cells, the Tsc2-/- Eker rat cells did not contain CD44v6 splice variant mRNA. CD44 splicing and signaling is regulated by osteopontin. Plasma from LAM patients contained higher concentrations of osteopontin than plasma of healthy, age-, and sex-matched volunteers (P = 0.00003) and may be a biomarker for LAM. The cell surface receptor CD44 and its splice variant CD44v6 may contribute to the metastatic potential of LAM cells.
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PMID:TSC2 loss in lymphangioleiomyomatosis cells correlated with expression of CD44v6, a molecular determinant of metastasis. 1797 2

CD44 is a transmembrane hyaluronic acid receptor gene that encodes over 100 different tissue-specific protein isoforms. The most ubiquitous, CD44 standard, has been used as a cancer stem cell marker in ovarian and other cancers. Expression of the epithelial CD44 variant containing exons v8-10 (CD44v8-10) has been associated with more chemoresistant and metastatic tumors in gastrointestinal and breast cancers, but its role in ovarian cancer is unknown; we therefore investigated its use as a prognostic marker in this disease. The gene expression profiles of 254 tumor samples from The Cancer Genome Atlas RNAseqV2 were analyzed for the presence of CD44 isoforms. A trend for longer survival was observed in patients with high expression of CD44 isoforms that include exons v8-10. Immunohistochemical (IHC) analysis of tumors for presence of CD44v8-10 was performed on an independent cohort of 210 patients with high-grade serous ovarian cancer using a tumor tissue microarray. Patient stratification based on software analysis of staining revealed a statistically significant increase in survival in patients with the highest levels of transmembrane protein expression (top 10 or 20%) compared to those with the lowest expression (bottom 10 and 20%) (p = 0.0181, p = 0.0262 respectively). Expression of CD44v8-10 in primary ovarian cancer cell lines was correlated with a predominantly epithelial phenotype characterized by high expression of epithelial markers and low expression of mesenchymal markers by qPCR, Western blot, and IHC. Conversely, detection of proteolytically cleaved and soluble extracellular domain of CD44v8-10 in patient ascites samples was correlated with significantly worse prognosis (p<0.05). Therefore, presence of transmembrane CD44v8-10 on the surface of primary tumor cells may be a marker of a highly epithelial tumor with better prognosis while enzymatic cleavage of CD44v8-10, as detected by presence of the soluble extracellular domain in ascites fluid, may be indicative of a more metastatic disease and worse prognosis.
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PMID:CD44 Splice Variant v8-10 as a Marker of Serous Ovarian Cancer Prognosis. 2725 18