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 cellular origin of estrogen-induced kidney tumors in male Syrian hamsters has been repeatedly the subject of controversy. Several authors have proposed that the tumors arise from proximal tubules, from a combination of tubular and interstitial stromal cells, or solely from interstitial cells. Because of the model character of this tumor for hormone-associated cancer, it was further investigated in this study with respect to morphology, enzyme and intermediate filament pattern, the expression of alpha-smooth muscle actin and the extracellular matrix proteins fibronectin and tenascin. These analyses were carried out with early and late tumors as well as metastases to determine possible changes in expression of biochemical parameters during the development and progression of this neoplasm. The enzyme histochemical and intermediate filament patterns were usually the same as those described previously for proliferative foci and early tumors, i.e. highly elevated activities of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, adenylate cyclase and alkaline phosphatase, a lack of glucose-6-phosphatase and gamma-glutamyltransferase and coexpression of vimentin and desmin, alpha-smooth muscle actin could not be detected in early lesions. In five of 24 advanced tumors inclusions of kidney tubules were found which showed various degrees of alteration in their morphology and enzyme histochemical pattern, but were often directly connected with tubular segments of normal appearance outside the tumor. Like the normal tubules, the enclosed tubular segments were strongly positive for cytokeratin but never expressed vimentin or desmin. Among the 24 tumors studied, two contained cysts which expressed cytokeratin and sometimes also vimentin but not desmin. The enzyme histochemistry of the cells lining the cysts was similar to that of the surrounding tumor mass, except adenylate cyclase was lacking and alkaline phosphatase was not uniformly distributed. In tumors containing cytokeratin-positive cysts, there often were cytokeratin-positive, vimentin-negative and desmin-negative tumor formations in close contact to these cysts. With the exception of cyst formation, the pattern of metastases were identical to that of the primary tumors. All large tumors and the main component of the metastases expressed vimentin, desmin and fibronectin. Mesothelia surrounding metastatic tumor complexes were positive for vimentin, desmin, alpha-smooth muscle actin, fibronectin, cytokeratin and tenascin. It was concluded from these and previous observations on early stages of tumor development that the estrogen-induced hamster kidney tumor originates from mesenchymal interstitial cells (probably pericytes) which may rarely acquire an epithelial phenotype by metaplastic transformation during tumor progression.
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PMID:Changes in the cellular phenotype and extracellular matrix during progression of estrogen-induced mesenchymal kidney tumors in Syrian hamsters. 171 81

Epithelial cell islets in primary monolayer cultures of human breast biopsies were characterized by combined immuno-, enzyme- and DNA cytochemistry as well as by analysis of attachment-, spread- and growth patterns. For cultivation we used explants from reduction mammoplasties, benign lesions, primary carcinomas and metastases. Milk fat globule membrane antigen (MFGM-A) was detected with a monoclonal antibody, and the tetrazolium reaction for glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH) as well as DNA content of the cultured cells were quantified. Spreading and growth of individual islets were studied by image analysis. Fibroblast-like cells did not express MFGM-A, and whereas epithelial (MFGM-A positive) cell islets of normal and benign origin showed cells with no or low G6PDH reaction, respectively, the majority of epithelial cell islets from 11 out of 21 carcinomas showed strong reaction. Cell islets with strong G6PDH reaction were sometimes hyperdiploid. Moreover, whereas cell islets with no or low reaction from both benign lesions and carcinomas readily attached and spread in a serum-free medium and showed population doubling times of 30 to 110 h, cell islets with strong reaction from carcinomas and metastatic lesions required serum for attachment and their growth rate was too low to be determined.
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PMID:Characterization of epithelial cell islets in primary monolayer cultures of human breast carcinomas by the tetrazolium reaction for glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase. 286 41

Mice were given i.v. injections of various tumor cell lines and, beginning 24 h later exposed for 3 weeks to 70% oxygen. Hyperoxia reduced the number of lung colonies derived from MT-7 cells (originally a mammary carcinoma) and of the lung-tumor derived cell lines 498 and Line-1 early passage. Lung colonies derived from Line-1 late passage, lines M109, B16-F10 and Lewis lung carcinoma were oxygen resistant. Lung metastases following i.m. injection of MT-7 cells were oxygen-sensitive and metastases derived from B16-F10 cells or Lewis lung carcinoma were oxygen resistant. Pre-exposure of mice for 48 h to 100% oxygen enhanced colony formation for all cell lines examined whereas exposure to 100% oxygen after i.v. injection only curtailed the growth of the cell lines previously shown to be sensitive to 70% oxygen. There was no correlation between oxygen sensitivity or resistance and the levels of total glutathione or activities of superoxide dismutase (SOD), glutathione reductase or peroxidase or glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase in the cell lines. However, upon injection in mice a resistant cell line increased its anti-oxidant defense mechanisms while growing in vivo whereas a sensitive cell line failed to show such adaptation.
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PMID:Effects of hyperoxia on growth of experimental lung metastasis. 334 81

Primary breast cancers from 85 patients undergoing post-surgical adjuvant chemotherapy were analyzed for five glycolytic enzymes: lactate dehydrogenase (LDH); phosphohexose isomerase (PHI); glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G-6PD); pyruvate-kinase (PK); and 6-phospho-gluconate dehydrogenase (6-PGD). The purpose of this study was to determine whether biochemical parameters could offer a prognostic index to determine outcome of therapy. The patients were followed up to a maximum of 54 months; during this period 30 of them developed recurrent or metastatic disease. The enzyme activities were expressed by the three following reference parameters: units/g proteins, units/g tissue weight and units/mg DNA. Two methods of analysis were compared: firstly, univariate analysis using life tables; and secondly, multivariate analysis using the Cox's model, where enzyme levels were tested for each mode of expression in addition to node status, histological features, receptor and menopausal status. Life table analyses appear limited when subsets of patients were studied because the sample size tends to become too small to warrant firm conclusions. Using the Cox's model, a prognostic index 1 was proposed, including the number of involved nodes and the product of logarithms of G-6PD and 6-PGD expressed as units/mg DNA. Compared to the number of involved nodes, this index gives a slightly better discrimination of the patients at 2 yr after mastectomy.
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PMID:Tissue glycolytic enzymes in primary breast cancer patients receiving adjuvant chemotherapy. 395 56

Oestrogen receptor content, lactoferrin, hexokinase, and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase levels were measured in cytosol from 25 primary breast cancers and 3 fibroadenomas. Both hexokinase and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity were higher in malignant tissue as compared to benign breast lesions. Oestrogen receptor concentration and lactoferrin content failed to predict the development of metastatic disease, while glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity was significantly higher in cytosol from those tumours which subsequently metastasized compared to those which remained localized.
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PMID:Relative value of oestrogen receptor assay, lactoferrin content, and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity as prognostic indicators in primary breast cancer. 396 58

A pretherapeutical multi-step-check method of the diagnosis of malignancy is suggested as a basis of an individual therapy of tumours. It must comprise clinical tumour diagnosis (staging)--the tumour localizations, size and spreading of metastases--histopathological and histochemical grading of malignancy, and histological classification. Results of these diagnostic methods of 186 squamous-cell carcinomas of the head and neck were related to the survival rate. Histochemical LDH and G6PDH reactions and histopathological grading (G 1-group and G 3-group) are important criteria for prognosis.
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PMID:[Multifactorial malignancy analysis--modern knowledge in the practical diagnosis of head and neck tumors]. 649 60

A neurofibroma, a fibroma, a primary neurofibrosarcoma, and four neurofibrosarcoma metastases from a woman with hereditary neurofibromatosis who was heterozygous (GdB/GdA-) for the X-linked enzyme glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase were studied to determine the number of cells from which the tumors developed. Both enzyme types were observed in the benign tumors in proportions similar to those present in seven different normal tissues studied. These findings indicated that the benign tumors arose from many cells. In marked contrast, only type A activity was detected in the primary neurofibrosarcoma and in all of the metastases. Two or more steps probably were involved in the development of neurofibrosarcoma in this patient: the inherited genetic mutation producing neurofibromatosis and a rare event or combination of events that permitted a single cell to undergo malignant proliferation.
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PMID:Probable clonal origin of neurofibrosarcoma in a patient with hereditary neurofibromatosis. 681 62

We used the oxygen sensitivity of the histochemical reaction to detect glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH) activity based on neotetrazolium (NT) reduction to discriminate cancer cells from normal cells. Formazan generation was strongly reduced in normal but not in malignant cells when the incubation was performed in oxygen instead of nitrogen. Competition for reductive equivalents between NT and oxygen via superoxide dismutase (SOD) has been suggested. Since SOD activity is usually decreased in cancer cells, NT reduction would not be hampered in these cells. We tested this hypothesis by demonstrating NAD-dependent lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) activity instead of NADP-dependent G6PDH activity in normal rat liver and colon, in human colon carcinoma, and in experimentally induced metastases of colon carcinoma in rat livers. Reactions for both enzymes were determined cytophotometrically in an atmosphere of pure oxygen or nitrogen. G6PDH acted as described previously, showing distinct activity in cancer cells but strongly reduced activity in normal cells after incubation in oxygen, but this was not the case with LDH because formazan was also generated in normal tissue in oxygen. It appeared that after 5 min of incubation at 37 degrees C the residual activity of G6PDH in an atmosphere of oxygen compared with nitrogen was 0% in normal liver tissue and 15% in normal colon epithelium, whereas in colon carcinoma and in colon carcinoma metastasis in liver it was 48% and 33%, respectively. The residual activity of LDH in oxygen was 30% in normal female rat liver, 75% in normal male rat liver, and 38% in normal colon epithelium, whereas the residual activity in colon carcinoma and metastases in liver was 54% and 24%, respectively. These experiments clearly indicate that the oxygen sensitivity phenomenon is not solely an effect of competition for reducing equivalents between NT and oxygen via SOD, because NADPH generated by G6PDH and NADH generated by LDH have a similar redox potential. Apparently the system is more complex. The role of specifically NADPH-converting cellular systems such as NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase was excluded because incubations in the presence of exogenous NADPH as substrate for these systems revealed oxygen sensitivity. Involvement of NADPH-dependent lipid peroxidation in the oxygen sensitivity test is discussed.
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PMID:The histochemical G6PDH reaction but not the LDH reaction with neotetrazolium is suitable for the oxygen sensitivity test to detect cancer cells. 793 May 18

Using immunohistochemical and enzyme biochemical methods we investigated the expression of L- and M2-pyruvate kinase (PK) in normal renal tissue, renal cell carcinomas (RCCs; of clear cell, chromophilic cell and mixed cell type) and RCC metastases. L-PK was expressed in the proximal tubules of normal renal tissue and, to a variable extent, in 23/25 primary RCCs, in 1 RCC recurrence and in 10 RCC metastases. Staining intensity and percentage of stained tissue did not correlate with tumour grade. One renal oncocytoma and all extrarenal malignancies examined lacked L-PK immunoreactivity. M2-PK was mainly expressed in the distal tubules of the normal kidney and was found in all renal tumours as well as extrarenal malignancies. Quantitative biochemical investigations yielded a two- to seventeen-fold increase in PK activity in RCCs compared to the normal renal cortex taken from the same patient, whereas fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase and cytosolic glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase activity was dramatically lower in RCCs. Otherwise, the activity of all other enzymes investigated (glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, enolase and lactate dehydrogenase) was not significantly changed in the RCCs. The immunocytochemical results suggest that L-PK is a useful marker for RCC and its metastases, if acetone-fixed tissue is available. The quantitative changes of the concentration of PK and other enzymes in RCCs when compared with normal renal tissue probably reflect metabolic alterations related to tumour growth.
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PMID:L- and M2-pyruvate kinase expression in renal cell carcinomas and their metastases. 818 Jul 80

Metastases in rat liver were generated experimentally by intraportal injection of colon cancer cells to investigate the effects of cancerous growth on the metabolism of surrounding liver tissue. Maximum activities (capacity) of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, phosphogluconate dehydrogenase, lactate dehydrogenase, succinate dehydrogenase, alkaline phosphatase, 5'-nucleotidase, xanthine oxidoreductase, purine nucleoside phosphorylase and adenosine triphosphatase have been determined. Two types of metastases were found, a small type surrounded by stroma and a larger type in direct contact with hepatocytes. Both types affected the adjacent tissue in a similar way suggesting that the interactions were not mediated by stroma. High capacity of the degradation pathway of extracellular purines released from dead cells of either tumours or host tissue was found in stroma and sinusoidal cells. Metastases induced both an increase in the number of Kupffer cells and proliferation of hepatocytes. The distribution pattern in the liver lobulus of most enzymes investigated did not change distinctly. However, activity of alkaline phosphatase, succinate dehydrogenase and phosphogluconate dehydrogenase was increased in hepatocytes directly surrounding metastases. These data imply that the overall metabolic zonation in liver lobuli is not dramatically disturbed by the presence of cancer cells despite the fact that various metabolic processes in liver cells are affected.
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PMID:Experimentally induced colon cancer metastases in rat liver increase the proliferation rate and capacity for purine catabolism in liver cells. 822 8


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