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)

Alterations in expression of the CD44 adhesion protein have been implicated in colorectal tumourigenesis. Overexpression of variant high molecular weight isoforms (especially CD44v6), as well as down-regulation of standard CD44 (CD44s), are postulated to result in increased tumourigenicity. We studied the metastatic phenotype produced by the expression of CD44s by stable transfection into a human colorectal carcinoma cell line, SW620, that shows absence of any CD44 expression. Splenic injection of 2 x 10(6) SW620 colon cancer cells into SCID mice was used to produce hepatic metastases. The animals were sacrificed at 6 weeks after injection and morphological end-points relating to macrometastases and micrometastases were studied CD44s expression was associated with decreased development of macroscopic tumours (0.9 vs 3.0 tumours/ mouse liver, p = 0.004), less extensive tumour replacement of the liver (2.6% vs 12.8%, p = 0. 04) and decreased numbers of micrometastases (3.8 x 10(-8) vs 7.9 x 10(-8) micrometastases/ microm2, p = 0.2). This study is the first to demonstrate the mitigating effect of CD44s expression on the hepatic metastatic phenotype in a colorectal carcinoma cell line that does not ordinarily express CD44.
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PMID:CD44s expression mitigates the phenotype of human colorectal cancer hepatic metastases. 1172 45

The organ-specific metastasis characterizes several human cancers, including colon carcinoma, a disease that frequently involves metastases in the liver. The data on the molecular mechanisms of liver metastasis would therefore be highly useful for prognostic purposes. Although the upregulation/amplification of the hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) receptor, c-met, has been frequently observed in colon cancer metastasis, the actual functional significance of the feature in the liver metastatization is not yet known. We have used three human colon carcinoma cell lines (HT29, HT25 and WiDr), characterized by different liver metastatic potentials in SCID mice, to analyze the expression of c-met and the biological effects of HGF. We found that HGF induces scattering in in vitro liver-metastatic cell lines (HT25 and WiDr) only at doses which are non-mitogenic (1-20 ng/ml). Analysis of the c-met expression revealed that the metastatic cell lines express authentic c-met gene and protein material, unlike the non-metastatic HT29 cell line, which expresses only the c-terminal cytoplasmic domain of the c-met beta-chain. Interestingly, c-met was found to be localized in the substrate-attached peripheral membrane and partially colocalized with phosphotyrosine-proteins in the metastatic cells only when kept on fibronectin. On the other hand, we have analyzed 86 primary human colon cancers in Dukes' B (invasive but non-metastatic) and C (invasive and lymph node metastatic) stages. Western blotting of the proteins isolated from the tumor tissues and immunohistochemical control study on the paraffin samples of a third of these cases (25/86) all indicated a significant upregulation of the c-met protein in the Dukes' C tumor glands compared to the Dukes' B stages (P < 0.001 and P < 0.05, respectively). Since the two stages differ in the involvement of the regional lymph nodes but not in the invasion depth, the clinicopathological data and our experimental findings further support the notion that the c-met expression in human colon cancer can be considered as a marker of the metastatic potential due to its involvement in the generation of the motility signal.
Clin Exp Metastasis 2000
PMID:Experimental and clinicopathologic studies on the function of the HGF receptor in human colon cancer metastasis. 1182 67

The herpes simplex virus (HSV) thymidine kinase gene (tk) forms the basis of a widely used strategy for suicide gene therapy. A library of HSV thymidine kinase enzyme (TK) active site mutants having different affinities for guanosine analog prodrugs was developed. We sought to determine the optimal combination of tk variant and prodrug specifically for prostate cancer gene therapy, using in vitro and in vivo studies of adenovirally infected CL1, DU-145, and LNCaP tumor lines carrying wild-type tk, tk30, tk75, and sr39tk mutants expressed by a strong, constitutive cytomegalovirus promoter and treated with ganciclovir and acyclovir. In vitro experiments involving prostate cancer (CaP) cell line infection were carried out with a broad range of prodrug concentrations, and cell killing was determined by limiting dilution (colony-forming), MTT, and propidium iodide assays. In vivo studies based on CL1-GFP xenograft experiments were carried out to examine the ability of each TK variant to prevent tumor formation and to inhibit tumor growth and development of metastases in established orthotopic and subcutaneous tumors in SCID mice. Both in vitro and in vivo studies suggest improved killing with the sr39tk variant. Thus, the results suggest that the use of sr39tk in future trials of prostate cancer tk suicide gene therapy may be beneficial.
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PMID:Optimizing prostate cancer suicide gene therapy using herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase active site variants. 1197 45

The objective of this study was to present an orthotopic SCID mouse model using two newly established human cell lines derived from squamous cell carcinomas of the lung. GO-LCC1 cells (1 x 10(6)) and GO-LCC2 cells (3 x 10(6)) were implanted orthotopically into the right lungs of 10 C.B. 17 scid/scid mice. In both groups, aggressive tumor growth with partial infiltration of the thoracic wall, heart and diaphragm was observed. In only one case distant metastases in the contralateral lung were detected, while all animals developed tumors at the site of inoculation. Xenografted GO-LCC1 cells showed enhanced tumor propagation compared to GO-LCC2 cells. Our data underscore the usefulness of the SCID mouse model to study the biological behaviour of cultuved human tumor cells and furthemore demonstrate the clinical applicability of xenograft techniques using human tumor cell lines derived from pneumonectomy specimens of squamous lung carcinomas.
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PMID:Orthotopic SCID mouse model with two newly established human lung squamous carcinoma cell lines. 1201 78

Motility of tumor cells is the rate limiting potential of metastatic cells and is regulated by autocrine and paracrine factors. Autocrine motility factor/neuroleukin/phosphohexose isomerase (AMF) is one of the best characterized autocrine motogenic cytokines. Here we have studied its in vitro effects on several human melanoma cell lines and found that neither cell line exhibited mitogenic response to AMF at a concentration where motogenic response could be initiated. Similar to previous studies on murine melanoma, activation of the AMF receptor upregulated beta3 while it downregulated beta1 integrins at the cell surface, inducing an integrin phenotype characteristic for invasive/metastatic melanoma. The gp78/AMF receptor protein expression in human melanoma cell lines correlated to their in vivo spontaneous metastatic potential. Furthermore, in two out of three human melanoma lines the expression significantly increased in the primary tumor when spontaneous metastases developed (immunosuppressed newborn rat model versus SCID mice). In a prospective study we have also analyzed AMF receptor protein expression in primary tumors of 54 skin melanoma patients using IHC. These studies revealed three types of AMF receptor phenotype: weak, heterogenous and strong expression profile. While in thin tumors weak/heterogenous AMFR expression predominated, in thick tumors the strong expression profile was predominant. The connection between AMFR expression and the invasive/metastatic potential of melanoma was further supported by our observation that SSM melanoma in the vertical growth phase expressed this motility receptor more strongly than tumors in the radial growth phase.
Clin Exp Metastasis 2002
PMID:Expression and function of the AMF receptor by human melanoma in experimental and clinical systems. 1206 3

To provide investigative tools for the study of neuroblastoma (NB) biology and therapy, we have characterized five orthotopic (adrenal) human xenograft models of NB. Initial experiments compared subcutaneous (heterotopic) with adrenal (orthotopic) injections of two NB cell lines (SK-N-AS and SMS-KCNR) in Beige-SCID mice. These studies demonstrated more relevant tumor biology, including angiogenic phenotype, and enhanced spontaneous distant metastasis for orthotopic versus heterotopic tumors. RNase protection assay demonstrated differences in the expression of angiogenesis-associated genes (flt1, TIE1, angiopoietin, and endoglin) between adrenal and subcutaneous xenografts. Orthotopic models were used to define and characterize the three remaining NB cell lines (SH-SY5Y, LA-1-15N, and IMR32). The pattern of angiogenesis was distinctive for each xenograft model and included a variety of vascular structures. The sites for metastases were distinct for each cell line and included lymph nodes, liver, ovaries, lungs, bone marrow and local bone extension. These well characterized, relevant, highly angiogenic, and metastatic orthotopic models of NB will be a valuable resource to improve our understanding of the biology and treatment of NB.
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PMID:Biologically relevant orthotopic neuroblastoma xenograft models: primary adrenal tumor growth and spontaneous distant metastasis. 1207 75

It is well accepted that an increase in the expression of cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2), a key inducible enzyme involved in the production of prostaglandins and other eicosanoids, may play a significant role in carcinogenesis in addition to its well-known role in inflammatory reactions. Whereas previous studies were largely confined to colorectal tumorigenesis, we have shown that a significantly increased expression of COX-2 may also play a role in the development of lung cancer. COX-2 expression was found to be frequently elevated in lung cancer, especially in adenocarcinoma, and the proportion of lung cancer cells with marked COX-2 expression was much higher in lymph node metastases than in the corresponding primary tumors. It was also shown that early stage adenocarcinoma patients with increased COX-2 expression who were surgically treated had a shorter survival. Our studies, which used high- and low-metastatic human lung cancer cell sublines established in our laboratory, revealed an association between metastatic capabilities and COX-2 expression levels: COX-2-specific inhibitors could inhibit in vitro the invasion of the highly metastatic NCI-H460-LNM35 clone through Matrigel-containing basement membrane components as well as the spontaneous in vivo metastasis in SCID mice. Taken together, these findings suggest that an increase in COX-2 expression maybe associated with the development of lung cancer and possibly with the acquisition of an invasive and metastatic phenotype.
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PMID:Increased expression of COX-2 in the development of human lung cancers. 1208 4

Lung cancer is the most prevalent malignant tumor in the world. Metastasis of the disease causes death in lung cancer patients. Recent study has shown that multiple cascades of gene defects occur in lung cancer. In this report, we established a novel H1299/EGFP tumor model to determine whether H1299 transfected with the enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) gene in vitro and xenotransplanted into SCID mouse lung would permit the detection of lung cancer micrometastasis in vivo. We demonstrated that EGFP-transduced H1299 cells maintained stable high-level EGFP expressions during their growth in vivo. EGFP fluorescence clearly demarcated the primary seeding place and readily allowed for the visualization of distant micrometastasis and local invasion at the single-cell level. Small metastatic and locally invasive foci, including those immediately adjacent to the tumor's leading invasive edge, were almost undetectable by routine hematoxylin and eosin staining and immunohistochemistry. The GFP tagged lung cancer model is superior for the detection and study of physiologically relevant patterns of lung cancer invasion and metastasis in vivo.
Clin Exp Metastasis 2002
PMID:Establishment of fluorescent lung carcinoma metastasis model and its real-time microscopic detection in SCID mice. 1209 Apr 77

The microcirculation of primary uveal melanomas, their precursors, and their metastases is distinctive. Medium-sized and even large primary uveal melanomas typically lack significant zones of necrosis, suggesting that either these tumors are relatively well perfused or they are capable of growth in a severely blood-deprived microenvironment. In addition to normal choroidal vessels that are incorporated into nevi and most primary uveal melanomas, aggressive primary and metastatic uveal melanomas tend to contain patterns of extracellular matrix that surround spheroidal or cylindrical packets of tumor cells. Some components of this branching, looping, and interconnected system of matrix may be perfused. It is now known that the generation of this patterning is a characteristic of genetically dysregulated melanoma cells (nonaggressive tumor cells do not form these patterns and melanomas lacking branching, looping, or interconnected matrix patterns tend to follow a relatively indolent course). We developed an orthotopic model of an aggressive human uveal melanoma by injecting suspensions of the primary human choroidal melanoma cell line (OCM1) into the subretinal space of one eye of 20 SCID mice. All mice were examined daily for tumor growth and tumors developed in every eye within 3 weeks of injection. The tumors were characterized by extraocular extension and the development of looping matrix patterns characteristic of those seen in aggressive human uveal melanoma. As in human uveal melanomas, these patterns were perfused by blood in areas. The orthotopic injection of human uveal melanoma cells into the SCID mouse eye generates a model reproducing the matrix-associated microcirculatory patterns of aggressive primary human uveal melanomas. This model can be used to explore the molecular pathogenesis and modulation of this novel circulation in vivo, to facilitate our understanding of the blood flow to these tumors providing insight into perfusion and drug delivery, to enable testing of pharmacologic modulation of pattern formation and intratumoral blood flow, and to refine noninvasive methods such as confocal scanning laser ophthalmoscopy to detect the presence of these patterns by which ophthalmologists might assess the biological behavior of tumors as noninvasive substitute for biopsy.
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PMID:An orthotopic model for human uveal melanoma in SCID mice. 1220 44

Melanoma incidence is growing at a faster rate than any other human malignancy. Wild-type (wt) p53 is important in both G(1) and G(2) cell cycle arrest, and cyclin D1 (CD1) is necessary for G(1)-->S progression in melanoma cells. We reported that an adenoviral vector containing wt p53 significantly reduced [(3)H]thymidine uptake in melanoma cells containing mutant but not wt p53. Subsequently we showed that CD1 decreased melanoma proliferation and increased apoptosis. We now extend these findings by evaluating the effect on preformed melanomas of (1) intratumoral therapy with wt p53 alone, (2) wt p53 in combination with antisense (AS) CD1, both short (< or =14 days) and longer term, and (3) doubling the dose or repeat doses of wt p53 or AS CD1. Two melanoma cells lines that metastasize in SCID mice (451 and 1205) were used, one containing a p53 mutation (451) and the other a normal p53 gene sequence (1205). Compared to injection with a control adenoviral vector containing beta-galactosidase (LacZ), intratumoral injection of wt p53 slowed the growth of tumors formed from 451 cells. Using 5 x 10(8) plaque forming units as our standard intratumoral dose, neither doubling the dose of LacZ, p53 or AS CD1, nor repeat doses of the vectors, was as effective as combined therapy with wt p53+AS CD1, which resulted in the shrinkage of all tumors treated and 4/7 (57%) tumors vanished. No tumors treated with wt p53 or AS CD1 alone vanished. Wt p53+AS CD1 treatment resulted in significantly more cells undergoing apoptosis compared to either therapy alone. In summary, combining the separately effective treatment vectors p53 and AS CD1 led to an enhanced growth-suppressive and apoptotic effect, supporting a role for combination gene therapy to treat human malignant melanoma.
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PMID:p53 alone or in combination with antisense cyclin D1 induces apoptosis and reduces tumor size in human melanoma. 1222 20


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