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)

Chromosomal and genome abnormalities of 3p are frequent events in many epithelial tumours, including lung cancer. Several critical regions with high frequency of hemi--and homozygous deletions in tumours were detected on 3p and more then 20 different cancer-related genes were identified in 3p21.3 locus. Real-time PCR was used to measure mRNA level of tumour-suppressor genes and candidates in 3p21.3 (RBSP3/CTDSPL, NPRL2/G21, RASSF1A, ITGA9, HYAL1 and HYAL2 in basic types of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC)--squamous cell lung cancer (SCC) and lung adenocarcinoma (AC). Significant (from 2 to 100 times) and frequent (from 44 to 100%) mRNA level decrease was shown in NSCLC. Level and frequency of mRNA decrease for all genes depended on histological type of NSCLC. Down-regulation of RASSF1A and ITGA9 was associated significantly with AC progression, the same tendency was found for genes RBSP3/CTDSPL, NPRL2/G21, HYAL1 and HYAL2. On the contrary, down-regulation of all genes in SCC was not associated with clinical stages, tumor cells differentiation and metastases in lymph nodes. Significant decrease of RBSP3/CTDSPL, NPRL2/G21, ITGA9, HYAL1 and HYAL2 mRNA levels (on average, 5-13 times) with high frequency (83-100%) was already shown at the first stage of SCC. Simultaneous decrease of all six genes mRNA level was found in the same tumor samples and was not depended on their localization on 3p21.3 and functions of the proteins. Spearman's correlation coefficient r(s) was from 0.63 to 0.91, P < 0.001. Co-regulation of gene pairs ITGA9 and HYAL2, HYAL1 and HYAL2, which mediate cell-cell adhesion and cell-matrix interaction, was suggested based on the obtained data. It was shown that genetic and epigenetic mechanisms were important for down-regulation of RBSP3/CTDSPL and ITGA9 genes. These results supported the hypothesis on simultaneous inactivation of cluster cancer-related genes in extended 3p21.3 locus during development and progression of lung cancer and other epithelial tumors. Significant and frequent decrease of mRNA level of six genes in SCC could be important for development of specific biomarker sets for early SCC diagnosis and new therapeutic approaches/strategies for NSCLC.
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PMID:[Down-regulation of RBSP3/CTDSPL, NPRL2/G21, RASSF1A, ITGA9, HYAL1 and HYAL2 genes in non-small cell lung cancer]. 1914 Mar 16

NPRL2, one of the tumor suppressor genes residing in a 120-kb homozygous deletion region of human chromosome band 3p21.3, has a high degree of amino acid sequence homology with the nitrogen permease regulator 2 (NPR2) yeast gene, and mutations of NPRL2 in yeast cells are associated with resistance to cisplatin-mediated cell killing. Previously, we showed that restoration of NPRL2 in NPRL2-negative and cisplatin-resistant cells resensitize lung cancer cells to cisplatin treatment in vitro and in vivo. In this study, we show that sensitization of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) cells to cisplatin by NPRL2 is accomplished through the regulation of key components in the DNA-damage checkpoint pathway. NPRL2 can phosphorylate ataxia telangiectasia mutated (ATM) kinase activated by cisplatin and promote downstream gamma-H2AX formation in vitro and in vivo, which occurs during apoptosis concurrently with the initial appearance of high-molecular-weight DNA fragments. Moreover, this combination treatment results in higher Chk1 and Chk2 kinase activity than does treatment with cisplatin alone and can activate Chk2 in pleural metastases tumor xenograft in mice. Activated Chk1 and Chk2 increase the expression of cell cycle checkpoint proteins, including Cdc25A and Cdc25C, leading to higher levels of G2/M arrest in tumor cells treated with NPRL2 and cisplatin than in tumor cells treated with cisplatin only. Our results therefore suggest that ectopic expression of NPRL2 activates the DNA damage checkpoint pathway in cisplatin-resistant and NPRL2-negative cells; hence, the combination of NPRL2 and cisplatin can resensitize cisplatin nonresponders to cisplatin treatment through the activation of the DNA damage checkpoint pathway, leading to cell arrest in the G2/M phase and induction of apoptosis. The direct implication of this study is that combination treatment with NPRL2 and cisplatin may overcome cisplatin resistance and enhance therapeutic efficacy.
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PMID:NPRL2 sensitizes human non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) cells to cisplatin treatment by regulating key components in the DNA repair pathway. 2070 Apr 84