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)

In advanced stages of malignant melanoma (MM), metastases to the CNS are frequently observed. Few results are available on trophic factors and immunological features involved in the process of invasion and adhesion of circulating metastatic cells into the CNS. A direct comparison of remote metastases found in different locations of the same patient might help to identify such properties. For this purpose, we screened a panel of MM cell cultures, which had been established from patients with surgically removed MM lesions of the CNS, for expression and regulation of immunorelevant molecules. The results were compared with standard controls and cultures established from non-CNS metastatic lesions of the same patients. No significant differences were observed for expression of HLA-I, HLA-II, ICAM-1 and the melanoma-associated antigens Mage-3, MelanA and tyrosinase. Constitutive expression of the neuronal cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) was found in all CNS-derived samples and in fewer than 50% of non-CNS derived cultures. IFN-gamma was found to have a weak up-regulating effect in all non-CNS-derived cultures, except normal melanocytes. However, in 6/7 CNS-derived cultures, pre-treatment with IFN-gamma reduced expression of NCAM to 28% to 77% of the level in untreated cultures. The presence and regulation of NCAM differs between MM cells derived from CNS metastases and non-CNS-derived melanocytic cells. Thus, NCAM might be a candidate immunoregulating molecule involved in the formation of CNS metastases of MM.
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PMID:Inverse regulation of neuronal cellular adhesion molecule (NCAM) by IFN-gamma in melanoma cell cultures established from CNS lesions. 1044 20

Cell adhesion molecules belonging to the integrin, cadherin and immunoglobulin superfamilies have been implicated in tumor progression in cutaneous melanoma. Expression of the alpha v beta 3 integrin first appears with the change from radial to vertical growth, a step which is associated with the development of metastatic potential. VLA-4 expression is characteristic of advanced primary tumors and may mediate interaction of the tumor cells with VCAM-1 on vascular endothelium. Expression of these integrins is a marker of poor prognosis in patients and can confer invasive (alpha v beta 3) and metastatic (VLA-4) properties to human melanoma cells injected into nude mice. Expression of the immunoglobulin superfamily molecules MUC18/MCAM and ICAM-1 are associated with primary tumors and metastases. MUC18/MCAM expression confers metastatic potential and increased tumorigenicity to human melanoma cells. Expression of ICAM-1 has been shown to be a marker of poor prognosis in stage I tumors and interfering with its expression inhibits experimental metastasis by melanomas in nude mice. E-cadherin is used by epidermal melanocytes to interact with neighboring keratinocytes. Changes in E-cadherin expression and cellular localization is first observed in the radial growth phase, the earliest stage in melanoma development. Loss of E-cadherin function is associated with upregulation or induction of MUC18/MCAM and alpha v beta 3 in melanocytic cells in vitro and with alterations in the levels and cellular distribution of the transcriptional regulator beta-catenin in melanomas in vivo. These observations suggest that disturbances in E-cadherin function is not only important in carcinomas but may also be a critical event in melanoma tumor progression.
Cancer Metastasis Rev 1999
PMID:Cell adhesion molecules in the development and progression of malignant melanoma. 1072 89

Peritoneal metastasis is a frequent complication of gastrointestinal malignancy. We have developed a three-dimensional model of the human peritoneum that simulates the metastatic process in vitro. Peritoneal fibroblasts were incorporated into collagen lattices, allowed to contract, then overlaid with mesothelial cells. Scanning and transmission electron microscopy showed the model to have similar physical properties to human peritoneum. Mesothelial expression of the beta1 integrin family, the basement membrane proteins fibronectin, laminin, collagen types III and IV, and the cell adhesion molecules ICAM-1, VCAM-1 and PECAM were assessed and showed similar results to in vivo tissue. Gastrointestinal tumour cells seeded onto the model exhibited mesothelial adhesion, cell spreading and vesicle formation, and invasion of the mesothelial monolayer on scanning electron microscopy. Two distinct patterns of tumour cell growth were observed using light microscopy: a superficial spreading layer, and discrete invasive deposits. Invasion was accompanied by disruption of the mesothelial monolayer, degradation and re-orientation of the matrix, and rudimentary tumour cell differentiation. We believe the use of this in vitro peritoneal model will facilitate the study of the molecular mechanisms involved in the metastatic process.
Clin Exp Metastasis 1999
PMID:A three-dimensional in-vitro model for the study of peritoneal tumour metastasis. 1076 18

Eighteen metastatic nodes derived from the wild-type (GR9) and from 4 different clones (G2, D8, B10, and B9) obtained from a fibrosarcoma were analyzed for H-2 class I and II expression, as well as for adhesion molecules (CD44, CDIIb, CD18, CD49, and CD54). When metastatic nodes were cultured, typed for H-2 antigens, and compared with the H-2 expression of the inducing tumor cell, H-2 Kd and Dd class I expression was greater in most nodes analyzed. In contrast, the Ld molecule remained negative, or showed a minor increase. Class II expression was negative in the wild-type and the tumor clones, and remained so in the metastatic colonies. Analysis of the adhesion molecules revealed no differences between the inducing tumor cells and the metastatic nodes. The only molecule expressed was CD44, which was present in all cells studied and was also inducible by interferon-gamma. The increase in H-2K and H-2D expression was associated with resistance to natural killer cytotoxicity, as observed in the G2 tumor clone and some autologous metastases, such as B9MP2, G2MK2, and G2MLI. In three independent clones of this tumor system (D8, BIOMP6, and B9MP6) we found that tumor cells treated with interferon-gamma had the same altered phenotype, i.e., a selective lack of response of the Ld molecule to induction. These findings add a cautionary note to the well-established idea that tumor cells may lose all class I antigens during tumor progression, and suggest that sometimes this may not be the case. The selective downregulation of Ld and upregulation of Kd and Dd class I expression may give some tumor cells means of escaping both cytotoxic lymphocyte and natural killer immune surveillance.
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PMID:Selective upregulation of MHC class I expression in metastatic colonies derived from tumor clones of a murine fibrosarcoma. 1078 79

The actual mechanisms by which carcinoma cells metastasize to lymph nodes are still unclear, and there is a need to establish in vivo experimental models suitable for the investigation of lymph node metastasis. For the purpose, we established a highly lymph node-metastasizing line, designated AZL5G, derived from a human gastric cancer cell line, AZ521, which had low capacity for lymph node metastasis. AZL5G cells transplanted orthotopically in the nude mouse stomach metastasize predominantly to the regional lymph nodes, showing little potential for hematogenous metastasis. AZL5G tumors developing in the stomach and regional lymph nodes showed poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma with medullary growth, and their histologic appearance strongly resembled that of parental AZ521. The growth activities in vitro of low-metastatic AZ521 and high-metastatic AZL5G were almost the same, but the tumorigenicity in vivo of AZL5G was significantly higher than that of AZ521. AZL5G cells also showed clearly higher abilities of cell locomotion and adhesion to type IV collagen and fibronectin in vitro as compared with AZ521 cells. Flow cytometric analysis demonstrated that the expression of integrin beta1 subfamily except for alpha6 integrin was generally increased in AZL5G cells than in AZ521 cells. Especially, the expression of alpha1 and alpha2 integrins in AZL5G cells was clearly higher than in AZ521, while alpha(v)beta3 integrin, E-cadherin, ICAM-1 and CD44H were not expressed by either cell line. The cell adhesion blocking assay showed that DGEA-containing peptide, which is composed of alpha2 integrin recognition sequence, significantly reduced the adhesiveness of AZL5G cells to type IV collagen as well as to type I collagen and laminin. Furthermore, the administration of anti-alpha2 integrin mAb or DGEA peptide in AZL5G-transplanted nude mice produced a significant reduction in the number of lymph node metastases. These data suggest that the up-regulation of alpha2 integrin expression by gastric cancer cells may play a critical role in the process of lymph node metastasis through the increased adhesiveness to type IV collagen. In conclusion, we established a gastric cancer cell line, AZL5G, with a highly metastatic potential to lymph nodes. This well-characterized line and its in vivo experimental model should be useful for investigation of the mechanisms of lymph node metastasis and for establishment of a new therapeutic approach for human gastric cancer.
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PMID:Establishment and characterization of a human gastric carcinoma cell line that is highly metastatic to lymph nodes. 1084 Sep 45

In previous work, we established the B9/BM1 syngeneic murine bone marrow metastasis model. Interleukin (IL)-6-dependent. IL-1-producing B9/BM1 cells, which colonize the vertebral and femoral marrow after i.v. injection, show great similarity in cell surface phenotype to human myeloma cells, especially the expression of 3 adhesion molecules, CD44, VLA-4 and ICAM-1. Here we investigated the function of these adhesion molecules by binding and transendothelial invasion assays using a newly established bone marrow-derived endothelial cell line (BMEC). A combination of monoclonal antibodies against CD44 and VLA-4 significantly inhibited the adherence of B9/BM1 cells to BMEC and anti-CD44 mAb especially blocked B9/BM1 transendothelial invasion of unstimulated BMEC cells. Results of additional experiments, in which the cells were treated with anti-CD44 and hyaluronidase, demonstrated that the interaction of CD44 molecules on B9/BM1 cells with hyaluronan on BMEC cells was a critical factor in both adhesion and transendothelial invasion in this model. However, stimulation of BMEC with TNFalpha resulted in increased invasion by B9/BM1 cells, which was completely suppressed by anti-VCAM-1 mAb, implicating a significant role of this adhesion molecule in this process during inflammation.
Clin Exp Metastasis 1999
PMID:Significance of VLA-4-VCAM-1 interaction and CD44 for transendothelial invasion in a bone marrow metastatic myeloma model. 1084 62

Systemic effects on T-cell-mediated antitumor immunity, on expression of T-cell adhesion/homing receptors, and on the promotion of T-cell infiltration of neoplastic tissue may represent key steps for the efficacy of immunological therapies of cancer. In this study, we investigated whether these processes can be promoted by s.c. administration of low-dose (0.5 microg/kg) recombinant human interleukin-12 (rHuIL-12) to metastatic melanoma patients. A striking burst of HLA-restricted CTL precursors (CTLp) directed to autologous tumor was documented in peripheral blood by a high-efficiency limiting dilution analysis technique within a few days after rHuIL-12 injection. A similar burst in peripheral CTLp frequency was observed even when looking at response to a single tumor-derived peptide, as documented by an increase in Melan-A/Mart-1(27-35)-specific CTLp in two HLA-A*0201+ patients by limiting dilution analysis and by staining peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBLs) with HLA-A*0201-melanoma antigen-A/melanoma antigen recognized by T cells (Melan-A/Mart)-1 tetrameric complexes. The CTLp burst was associated, in PBLs, with enhanced expression of T-cell adhesion/homing receptors CD11a/CD18, CD49d, CD44, and with increased proportion of cutaneous lymphocyte antigen (CLA)-positive T cells. This was matched by a marked increase, in serum, of soluble forms of the endothelial cell adhesion molecules E-selectin, vascular cell adhesion molecules (VCAM)-1 and intercellular adhesion molecules (ICAM)-1. Infiltration of neoplastic tissue by CDS+ T cells with a memory and cytolytic phenotype was found by immunohistochemistry in eight of eight posttreatment metastatic lesions but not in five of five pretreatment metastatic lesions from three patients. Increased tumor necrosis and/or fibrosis were also found in several posttherapy lesions of two of three patients in comparison with pretherapy metastases. These results provide the first evidence that rHuIL-12 can boost the frequency of circulating antitumor CTLp in tumor patients, enhances expression of ligand receptor pairs contributing to the lymphocyte function-associated antigen-1/ICAM-1, very late antigen-4/VCAM-1, and CLA/E-selectin adhesion pathways, and promotes infiltration of neoplastic lesions by CD8+ memory T cells in a clinical setting.
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PMID:Peripheral burst of tumor-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes and infiltration of metastatic lesions by memory CD8+ T cells in melanoma patients receiving interleukin 12. 1091 69

We recently developed a method for the isolation and purification of tumour-derived endothelium. In this study the phenotypic and functional properties of human tumour-derived microvascular endothelial cells (TdMEC) were examined. Endothelium obtained from human adrenal gland specimens (HAMEC) was used as a reference microvascular endothelial cell population. TdMEC formed a confluent monolayer with the typical morphological appearance of endothelium and were positive for endothelial markers such as Ulex-1 lectin, CD31 antigen, von Willebrand Factor and VE-cadherin. The addition of acidic Fibroblast Growth Factor (aFGF), basic FGF (bFGF) or Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor (VEGF) substantially improved proliferation of TdMEC; and kidney carcinoma derived endothelial cells were more responsive to FGFs, whereas glioblastoma derived endothelial cells greatly responded to VEGF TdMEC expressed high levels of the VEGF receptors, KDR/flk-1 and Flt-1, as shown by northern blot analysis. TdMEC expressed the adhesion molecules ICAM-1, VCAM-1 and E-selectin that could be further increased by exposing TdMEC culture to interleukin-1. All the TdMEC expressed interleukin-8 mRNA. These findings show that TdMEC in vitro maintain several of the features described for microvasculature. Thus, TdMEC represent a useful tool to study markers for tumor vasculature.
Clin Exp Metastasis 1999
PMID:Phenotypic and functional characteristics of tumour-derived microvascular endothelial cells. 1091 10

Adhesion and stabilization of circulating tumor cells to endothelial cells in target blood vessels play an important role in the complex process of metastasis. We examined the cell surface receptors involved in the liver-metastatic adhesive interactions of murine RAW117 large-cell lymphoma cells to unstimulated hepatic sinusoidal endothelial cells (HSE) under physiological flow conditions. Flow cytometric analysis indicated that VCAM-1, ICAM-1 and PECAM-1 are constitutively expressed on the surfaces of both HSE and RAW117 cells. However, monoclonal antibody (mAb) blockade studies showed that ICAM-1 and PECAM-1 affected neither the attachment nor the stabilization step of the adhesion of RAW117 cells to HSE cell monolayers under flow. In contrast, RAW117 cells required a significantly lower shear stress to establish adhesion to HSE cells when VCAM-1 receptors on HSE cells were blocked with mAb. Furthermore, the presence of the anti-VCAM-1 mAb significantly decreased the extent of adhesion compared to that of the control, without affecting adherent cell stabilization times. Blocking the alpha4 integrin subunits present mainly on RAW117 cells produced similar results to those previously observed with anti-VCAM-1 mAb. Although constitutively present mainly on the surfaces of RAW117 cells, MAdCAM-1 and beta7 integrin subunit do not appear to play a role in either the arrest or stabilization of RAW117 cells on HSE cell monolayers. However, blocking the beta1 integrin subunit on the RAW117-H10 cells reduced adhesion to the same extent as anti-alpha4 and anti-VCAM-1 treatments. These observations suggest that an interaction of integrin alpha4/beta1 on RAW117 cells with liver endothelial VCAM-1 occurs during the early stages of the adhesion process and may be important in liver metastasis.
Clin Exp Metastasis 1999
PMID:Integrin alpha4beta1/VCAM-1 pathway mediates primary adhesion of RAW117 lymphoma cells to hepatic sinusoidal endothelial cells under flow. 1091 12

There is considerable evidence for a relationship between hemostasis and malignancy. Since platelet adhesion to tumor cells has been implicated in the metastatic process and plasma levels of fibrinogen (Fg) and soluble fibrin (sFn) monomer are increased in cancer, we hypothesized that these molecules might enhance tumor-platelet interaction. We therefore studied binding of sFn monomer to tumor cells in a static microplate adhesion assay and determined the effect of pre-treating tumor cells with sFn on tumor cell-induced thrombocytopenia and experimental metastasis. Soluble fibrin (produced by adding thrombin to FXIII- and plasminogen-free Fg in the presence of Gly-Pro-Arg-Pro-amide (GPRP-NH2) significantly increased platelet adherence to tumor cells. This effect was primarily mediated by the integrins alphaIIb beta3 on the platelet and CD 54 (ICAM-1) on the tumor cells. Platelets adhered to untreated A375 cells (28 +/- 8 platelets/tumor cell) and this was not significantly affected by pre-treatment of the tumor cells with fibrinogen or GPRP-NH2. Although thrombin treatment increased adherence, pre-incubation of the tumor cells with sFn resulted in a further increase in platelet binding to tumor cells. In contrast to untreated tumor cells, intravenous injection of sFn-treated A 375 cells reduced the platelet count in anticoagulated mice, supporting the in vitro finding that sFn enhanced tumor cell-platelet adherence. In a more aggressive model of experimental metastasis, treating tumor cells with sFn enhanced lung seeding by 65% compared to untreated cells. Extrapolation of our data to the clinical situation suggests that coagulation activation, and subsequent increase in circulating Fn monomer, may enhance platelet adhesion to circulating tumor cells and thereby facilitate metastatic spread.
Clin Exp Metastasis 1999
PMID:Soluble fibrin augments platelet/tumor cell adherence in vitro and in vivo, and enhances experimental metastasis. 1091 17


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