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)

It has previously been shown that changes in the activity of focal adhesion kinase (FAK), and its binding to beta-1-integrin, accompany genistein-induced adhesion of prostate cells. Consumption of genistein world wide is associated with a lower incidence of metastatic prostate cancer. Early human clinical trials of genistein are under way to evaluate genistein's potential causal role in this regard. Though an important cell adhesion-associated signaling molecule, FAK's role in regulating prostate cell adhesion was not clear. Elucidation of this process would provide important information relating to both biology and potential clinical endpoints. It was hypothesized that FAK activation and complex formation are temporally related in prostate cells, and can thus be separated. Significant activation of FAK was demonstrated when cells adhered to fibronectin, as compared to poly-L-lysine, thus demonstrating that beta-1-integrin plays a significant role in activating FAK. Neither FAK activation, nor FAK-integrin complex formation, required beta-1-integrin ligand. However, disruption of the cellular cytoskeleton by cytochalasin D prevented FAK activation, but did not block genistein-induced complex formation. In the face of a disrupted cytoskeleton, signaling through FAK could not be restored through either integrin cross linking, or re-establishment of tensile forces via attachment to solid matrix. These studies demonstrate that FAK-beta-1-integrin complex formation does not require FAK activation, suggesting that it is an early event in prostate cell adhesion. An intact cytoskeleton is necessary for FAK activation. The functional importance of beta-1-integrin in prostate cells is demonstrated. Current findings support plans to test genistein in prostate cancer.
Clin Exp Metastasis 2000
PMID:Focal adhesion kinase (FAK) phosphorylation is not required for genistein-induced FAK-beta-1-integrin complex formation. 1131 93

Current evidence indicates that tumor cell adhesion to the microvasculature in host organs during formation of distant metastases is a complex process involving various types of cell adhesion molecules. Recent results have shown that stabilization of tumor cell adhesion to the microvascular vessel wall is a very important step for successful tumor cell migration and colonization of host organs. We are beginning to understand the influences of fluid flow and local shear forces on these adhesive interactions and cellular responses within the circulation. Mechanosensory molecules or molecular complexes can transform shear forces acting on circulating tumor cells into intracellular signals and modulate cell signaling pathways, gene expression and other cellular functions. Flowing tumor cells can interact with microvascular endothelial cells mediated mainly by selectins, but the strength of these bonds is relatively low and not sufficient for stable cell adhesions. Integrin-mediated tumor cell adhesion and changes in the binding affinity of these adhesion molecules appear to be required for stabilized tumor cell adhesion and subsequent cell migration into the host organ. Failure of the conformational affinity switch in integrins results in breaking of these bonds and recirculation or mechanical damage of the tumor cells. Various cell signaling molecules, such as focal adhesion kinase, pp60src or paxillin, and cytoskeletal components, such as actin or microtubules, appear to be required for tumor cell adhesion and its stabilization under hydrodynamic conditions of fluid flow.
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PMID:Tumor cell adhesion under hydrodynamic conditions of fluid flow. 1146 96

(-)-Epigallocatechin-3-gallate (EGCG), a major polyphenol in green tea, was shown to have cancer chemopreventive activity. In this study, we examined the antimetastatic effects of EGCG or the combination of EGCG and dacarbazine on B16-F3m melanoma cells in vitro and in vivo. First, the antimetastatic potentials of five green tea catechins were examined by soft agar colony formation assay, and the results show that EGCG was more effective than the other catechins in inhibiting soft agar colony formation. Second, EGCG dose-dependently inhibited B16-F3m cell migration and invasion by in vitro Transwell assay. Third, EGCG significantly inhibited the spread of B16-F3m cells on fibronectin, laminin, collagen, and Matrigel in a dose-dependent manner. In addition, EGCG significantly inhibited the tyrosine phosphorylation of focal adhesion kinase (FAK) and the activity of matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9). In animal experiments, EGCG alone reduced lung metastases in mice bearing B16-F3m melanomas. However, a combination of EGCG and dacarbazine was more effective than EGCG alone in reducing the number of pulmonary metastases and primary tumor growths, and increased the survival rate of melanoma-bearing mice. These results demonstrate that combination treatment with EGCG and dacarbazine strongly inhibits melanoma growth and metastasis, and the action mechanisms of EGCG are associated with the inhibition of cell spreading, cell-extracellular matrix and cell-cell interactions, MMP-9 and FAK activities.
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PMID:Inhibition of melanoma growth and metastasis by combination with (-)-epigallocatechin-3-gallate and dacarbazine in mice. 1174 6

Src has been implicated in the development and progression of human colon cancer. Because the capacity for tumor cells to dissociate from the primary tumor is a critical step in the development of metastases, the effect of a naturally occurring, activated Src-531 on intercellular adhesion was examined. Homotypic adhesion was assessed using dissociation assays on Src-transformed rat fibroblasts and human colon cancer cell lines. The data indicate that both rodent and human cells expressing the mutant Src protein display up to 7-fold less homotypic adhesion than do wild-type cells (P < 0.01). Experiments demonstrated that cadherin was phosphorylated in cells transfected with activated Src and that cadherin/catenin complexes were disrupted as a result. Experiments using dominant negative (DN) Src or an Src-specific inhibitor (PD 180970), demonstrated that adhesion was restored when Src activity was inhibited in Src-531 transfectants, confirming that Src is a causal factor in the decreased homotypic adhesion observed. In addition, DN Ras, DN focal adhesion kinase (FAK), but not Stat3beta, restored intercellular adhesion, which suggested that Ras and FAK may be downstream effectors of Src-mediated homotypic adhesion. Collectively, these data support a role for Src, Ras, and FAK in the regulation of intercellular adhesion, which may in turn regulate metastatic potential of human colon cancer cells.
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PMID:Increased Src activity disrupts cadherin/catenin-mediated homotypic adhesion in human colon cancer and transformed rodent cells. 1198 Jun 66

Integrin alpha(v)beta(3) is involved in varied cell biological activities, including angiogenesis, cell adhesion, and migration on several extracellular matrix components. Although alpha(v)beta(3) is not typically expressed in epithelial cells, it is expressed in macrophages, activated leukocytes, cytokine-stimulated endothelial cells, osteoclasts, and certain invasive tumors. Interestingly, the adhesion and migration of breast cancer cells on bone matrix are mediated, in part, by alpha(v)beta(3). Similar to breast cancer cells, prostate cancer cells preferentially metastasize to the bone. The biological events that mediate this metastatic pattern of prostate cancer are not well defined. This review discusses the role alpha(v)beta(3) plays in prostate cancer progression, with specific emphasis on bone metastasis and on alpha(v)beta(3) signaling in prostate cancer cells. The data suggest that alpha(v)beta(3), in part, facilitates prostate cancer metastasis to bone by mediating prostate cancer cell adhesion to and migration on osteopontin and vitronectin, which are common proteins in the bone microenvironment. These biological events require the activation of focal adhesion kinase and the subsequent activation of PI-3 kinase/Akt signaling pathway.
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PMID:The role of alpha(v)beta(3) in prostate cancer progression. 1198 38

In cloning tyrosine kinase genes in dog prostate cells, a fragment of the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) receptor 1 or Flt-1 was sequenced. To test for a functional protein, Flt-1 antibodies were used to probe immunoprecipitated tyrosine phosphorylated proteins. Western blotting revealed a major 170-180 kDa band and a few bands below 116 kDa in dog prostate and human prostatic carcinoma PC-3 cells, with higher levels in PC-3. Similar results were obtained with human placental membranes used as a source of Flt-1. That the major Flt-1 tyrosine phosphorylated protein was likely VEGF-R1 and part of VEGF signaling pathways was shown by enhanced level of only this protein when PC-3 cells were exposed to VEGF. Accordingly specific cell surface receptor complexes, displaced by VEGF but not EGF and compatible with Flt-1 in size, were revealed by chemical cross-linking after 125I-VEGF binding. Similarly to the prostatic neuroproduct, gastrin-releasing peptide/bombesin, VEGF directly triggered the tyrosine phosphorylation of focal adhesion kinase and stimulated PC-3 cell motility. The titration of prostate tissue sections with VEGF-A antibodies revealed a confined staining in chromogranin A and/or serotonin positive neuroendocrine (NE) cells, including in primary tumors and lymph node metastases. Given that NE differentiation is associated with advanced disease, that NE cells are a significant source of VEGF in prostatic tumors, and that VEGF directly act on prostate cancer cells in vitro, VEGF-A may be more than angiogenic in prostate cancer and hence favor progression by affecting tumor cells.
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PMID:Vascular endothelial growth factor and signaling in the prostate: more than angiogenesis. 1203 75

Hamster tumor cell lines obtained with the Rous sarcoma virus and characterized by a high metastatic activity in vitro were transfected with the gene for C2+/calmodulin-dependent serine-threonine death-associated protein kinase (DAPk). Expression of DAPk in tumor cells dramatically reduced their survival in the blood of syngenic animals and their ability to produce metastases, but did not affect their tumorigenicity or the primary tumor growth. The DAPk-induced change in the metastatic phenotype was not accompanied by substantial changes in production and phosphorylation of v-Src or focal adhesion proteins (focal adhesion kinase and paxilline). The resulting system of transfected cells with a modulated metastatic potential provide a convenient model to study the molecular mechanisms of tumor progression at various steps.
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PMID:[Suppression of the metastatic potential of oncogene v-src-transformed cells as a result of activity of the exogenous DAP kinase]. 1206 33

Since its initial discovery as a substrate and binding partner for the Src oncogene, a role for the focal adhesion kinase (FAK) in cancer has been speculated. In this review the clinical evidence correlating FAK overexpression with cancer and the experimental evidence demonstrating that FAK can control some phenotypes associated with cancer will be discussed. In addition, the emerging theme of interactions between the FAK and growth factor signaling pathways will be described. The evidence presented in this review provides a compelling case for a role for FAK in the pathology of human cancer.
Cancer Metastasis Rev 2003 Dec
PMID:FAK regulates biological processes important for the pathogenesis of cancer. 1288 11

CLCA (chloride channel, calcium-activated) proteins are novel pulmonary vascular addresses for blood-borne, lung-metastatic cancer cells. They facilitate vascular arrest of cancer cells via adhesion to beta4 integrin and promote early, intravascular, metastatic growth. Here we identify the interacting binding domains of endothelial CLCA proteins (e.g. hCLCA2, mCLCA5, mCLCA1, and bCLCA2) and beta4 integrin. Endothelial CLCAs share a common beta4-binding motif (beta4BM) in their 90- and 35-kDa subunits of the sequence F(S/N)R(I/L/V)(S/T)S, which is located in the second extracellular domain of the 90-kDa CLCA and near the N terminus of the 35-kDa CLCA, respectively. Using enzyme-linked immunosorbent, pull-down, and adhesion assays, we showed that glutathione S-transferase fusion proteins of beta4BMs from the 90- and 35-kDa CLCA subunits bind to the beta4 integrin in a metal ion-dependent manner. Fusion proteins from fibronectin and the integrins beta1 and beta3 served as negative controls. beta4BM fusion proteins competitively blocked the beta4/CLCA adhesion and prevented lung colonization of MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells. A disrupted beta4BM in hCLCA1, which is not expressed in endothelia, failed to interact with beta4 integrin. The corresponding CLCA-binding domain of the beta4 integrin is localized to the specific determining loop (SDL). Again enzyme-linked immunosorbent, pull-down, and adhesion assays were used to confirm the interaction with CLCA proteins using a glutathione S-transferase fusion protein representing the C-terminal two-thirds of beta4 SDL (amino acids 184-203). A chimeric beta4 integrin in which the indicated SDL sequence had been replaced with the corresponding sequence from the beta1 integrin failed to bind hCLCA2. The dominance of the CLCA ligand in beta4 activation and outside-in signaling is discussed in reference to our previous report that beta4/CLCA ligation elicits selective signaling via focal adhesion kinase to promote metastatic growth.
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PMID:The interacting binding domains of the beta(4) integrin and calcium-activated chloride channels (CLCAs) in metastasis. 1451 19

Askin tumor is a malignant small round cell tumor that originates from the thoracopulmonary region and is a member of Ewing sarcoma family of tumors (ESFT). Only a few Askin tumor cell lines have been established. An Askin tumor cell line, designated MP-ASKIN-SA, was established from the left thoracic tumor of a 13-year-old Japanese boy. ESFT is known to have a high rate of distant metastases at diagnosis. The genes controlling the spread of ESFT cells, however, have not been elucidated. G-banding chromosome analysis revealed that the MP-ASKIN-SA cell line has complex chromosomal abnormalities including trisomy 8. The EWS/FLI1 chimeric transcript and c-myc overexpression were revealed by the reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction and Northern blot analysis. Furthermore, we investigated the expression of the focal adhesion kinase (FAK) gene in the ESFT cell lines using Northern blot analysis. In addition to the MP-ASKIN-SA cell line, six Ewing sarcoma cell lines, one peripheral nerve sheath tumor cell line, and two Askin tumor cell lines were analyzed. All ESFT cell lines, including MP-ASKIN-SA, expressed five- to twenty-eight-fold-increased values of FAK, as compared with fibroblasts obtained from the bone marrow of a healthy volunteer. These results raise the possibility that the overexpression of c-myc and FAK are involved in the poor prognosis of ESFT.
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PMID:Newly established Askin tumor cell line and overexpression of focal adhesion kinase in Ewing sarcoma family of tumors cell lines. 1455 43


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