Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The
MET
protooncogene, c-
MET
, encodes a cell surface tyrosine kinase receptor. The ligand for c-
MET
is hepatocyte growth factor (HGF), also known as scatter factor (SF), which is known to affect proliferation and motility of primarily epithelial cells. Recently, HGF/SF was also shown to affect haemopoiesis. Studies with epithelial and transfected NIH3T3 cells indicated that the HGF/SF-c-
MET
interaction promotes invasion in vitro and in vivo. We previously demonstrated that HGF/SF induces adhesion of c-
MET
-positive B-lymphoma cells to extracellular matrix molecules, and promoted migration and invasion in in vitro assays. Here, the effect of HGF/SF on tumorigenicity of c-
MET
-positive and c-
MET
-negative human B-lymphoma cell lines was studied in C.B-17 scid/scid (severe combined immune deficient) mice. Intravenously (i.v.) injected c-
MET
-positive (BJAB) as well as c-
MET
-negative (Daudi and Ramos cells) B-lymphoma cells formed tumours in SCID mice. The B-lymphoma cells invaded different organs, such as liver, kidney, lymph nodes, lung, gonads and the central nervous system. We assessed the effect of human HGF/SF on the dissemination of the B-lymphoma cells and found that administration of 5 microg HGF/SF to mice, injected (i.v.) with c-
MET
-positive lymphoma cells, significantly (P = 0.018) increased the number of
metastases
in lung, liver and lymph nodes. In addition, HGF/SF did not significantly influence dissemination of c-
MET
-negative lymphoma cells (P = 0.350 with Daudi cells and P= 0.353 with Ramos cells). Thus the effect of administration of HGF/SF on invasion of lymphoma cells is not an indirect one, e.g. via an effect on endothelial cells. Finally, we investigated the effect of HGF/SF on dissemination of c-
MET
-transduced Ramos cells. In response to HGF/SF, c-
MET
-transduced Ramos cells showed an increased migration through Matrigel in Boyden chambers compared to wild-type and control-transduced Ramos cells. The dissemination pattern of c-
MET
-transduced cells did not differ from control cells in in vivo experiments using SCID mice. Also no effect of HGF/SF administration could be documented, in contrast to the in vitro experiments. From our experiments can be concluded that the HGF/SF-c-
MET
interaction only plays a minor role in the dissemination of human B-lymphoma cells.
...
PMID:HGF/SF and its receptor c-MET play a minor role in the dissemination of human B-lymphoma cells in SCID mice. 1048 11
Mutations of the
RET
gene, encoding a receptor tyrosine kinase, have been associated with the inherited cancer syndromes MEN 2A and MEN 2B. They have also further been associated with both familial and sporadic medullary thyroid carcinomas. Missense mutations affecting cysteine residues within the extracellular domain of the receptor causes constitutive tyrosine kinase activation through the formation of disulfide-bonded homodimers. We have recently reported that a somatic 6 bp in-frame deletion, originally coding for Glu632-Leu633, potently activates the
RET
gene. This activation is increased with respect to the frequent MEN 2A-associated missense mutation Cys634Arg. This finding specifically correlated to the clinic behavior of the corresponding tumor, which was characterized by an unusually aggressive progression with both multiple and recurrent
metastases
. By examining the possibility that this deletion acts in a manner similar to cysteine substitution, we have analysed the molecular mechanism by which this oncogenic activation occurs. Phosphorylated dimers of the deleted Ret receptor were detected in immunoprecipitates separated under non-reducing conditions. Like other Cys point mutations, this 6 bp deletion affecting two amino acid residues between two adjacent Cys, is capable of activating the transforming ability of Ret by promoting receptor dimerization. These results suggest that alteration to cysteine residue position or pairing is capable of inducing ligand independent dimerization. Furthermore, we present data demonstrating that the processing and sorting of the Ret membrane receptor to the cell surface is affected by mutation type.
...
PMID:The Glu632-Leu633 deletion in cysteine rich domain of Ret induces constitutive dimerization and alters the processing of the receptor protein. 1049 Aug 16
Various mechanisms of epithelial cell plasticity in morphogenesis have been studied at the genetic and molecular levels. Several control genes have been identified including genes encoding transcription factors and growth factor receptors. These mechanisms may be reactivated during the progression of carcinomas. One of the mechanisms underlying epithelial plasticity is the epithelial-mesenchymal transition. This process has been extensively studied using the NBT-II bladder carcinoma cell line. Cells of this line undergo a reversible transition following exposure to several growth factors including FGF-1, EGF, TGFalpha and SF/HGF, which activate tyrosine kinase surface receptors. Two separate transduction pathways have been identified. The transient activation of c-Src is involved in cytoskeleton remodeling whereas the Ras pathway controls the transcription of genes such as the transcription factor Slug which is involved in the internalization of desmosomes. These two pathways cooperate to induce the morphological transition, scattering and locomotion of fibroblast-like cells. Growth/scatter factor-producing NBT-II cells are more invasive than cells that do not contain this factor, in orthotopic confrontation assay. In vivo, these cells are very tumorigenic and may confer a more malignant phenotype on parental cells via a community effect. The role of several growth factors and their receptors has been investigated in human bladder carcinomas. A subset of these tumors with poor outcomes produce low levels of
FGFR2
-IIIb. The synthesis of this receptor de novo in bladder cell lines reduces proliferation in vitro and tumor growth in nude mice.
FGFR2
-IIIb functions as a tumor suppressor, consistent with the differentiation-inducing capacities of FGF receptors in the suprabasal cells of the skin.
FGFR2
-IIIb signaling may be involved in the maintenance of E-cadherin, the prototype epithelial adhesion molecule, which is only downregulated in a fraction of tumors with low
FGFR2
-IIIb synthesis. Human bladder tumors may also activate autocrine loops such as that for
EGFR
and their ligands, as already demonstrated for murine bladder tumors. Therefore, our results suggest that multifunctional growth factors and their receptors are involved in cell proliferation and epithelial cell plasticity, acting either as positive or negative regulators of tumor progression. The effect on the morphological transition is also clearly relevant to the mechanism governing dissemination and the formation of micrometastatic tumor cells. The extrapolation of these discoveries to human carcinomas should provide markers facilitating the more accurate prediction of the biological behavior of a given tumor and identify clinically and pathologically significant parameters. The identification of critical changes in the growth factor pathways involved in tumor progression will not only provide insight into the genetic and molecular basis of this process, but should also identify targets for new therapies.
Cancer
Metastasis
Rev 1999
PMID:Epithelial cell plasticity in development and tumor progression. 1050 44
Most cervical carcinomas appear to arise from cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) lesions. In addition to infection with high-risk human papilloma viruses, which is indicative of an increased risk of progression, alterations of oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes play a role. Genetic studies of CIN lesions, primary cervical carcinoma, and
metastases
may shed light on the relative importance of various genetic alterations involved in the progression of CIN to invasive carcinoma. We examined tumor material from 10 patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the uterine cervix and synchronous CIN lesions and lymph node
metastases
. The CIN component, invasive carcinoma, and lymph node
metastases
were analyzed separately for loss of heterozygosity (LOH) on the following loci: VHL (3p21), HLA region (6p22-23), PGL (11q 22-24), E6 associated protein (15q11-13), TP53 (17p13), DCC (18q21.1), and chromosomes 1, 2, 4, 9, 20, and X. Using immunohistochemistry, the expression of the EGF receptor,
ERBB2
, and TP53 was determined. In CIN lesions, frequent LOH was found at chromosome arms 3p, 6p, and 11q. Primary invasive carcinoma showed additional LOH at chromosome arms 6q, 17p, and 18q. In lymph node
metastases
, an additional locus on the X chromosome displayed LOH. All carcinomas and synchronous lesions but one showed high expression levels of the EGF receptor. TP53 staining, when present, was found in all synchronous lesions. Focal staining of
ERBB2
was found in one CIN lesion, two invasive carcinomas, and four
metastases
. The molecular alterations accumulated in a fashion that paralleled the progression of the tumors. These results indicate that cervical tumorigenesis occurs in a stepwise fashion, including infection and integration of oncogenic HPV and several specific genetic alterations. Genes Chromosomes Cancer 26:346-354, 1999.
...
PMID:Genetic alterations during the progression of squamous cell carcinomas of the uterine cervix. 1053 70
Increased vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) expression is associated with colon cancer
metastases
. We hypothesized that inhibition of VEGF receptor activity could inhibit colon cancer liver metastases. BALB/c mice underwent splenic injection with CT-26 colon cancer cells to generate
metastases
. Mice received daily i.p. injections of vehicle, tyrosine kinase inhibitor for Flk-1/
KDR
(SU5416) or tyrosine kinase inhibitor for VEGF, basic fibroblast growth factor, and platelet-derived growth factor receptors (SU6668). SU5416 and SU6668 respectively inhibited
metastases
(48.1% and 55.3%), microvessel formation (42.0% and 36.2%), and cell proliferation (24.4% and 27.3%) and increased tumor cell (by 2.6- and 4.3-fold) and endothelial cell (by 18.6- and 81.4-fold) apoptosis (P<0.001). VEGF receptor inhibitors increased endothelial cell apoptosis, suggesting that VEGF may serve as an endothelial survival factor.
...
PMID:Antiangiogenic therapy targeting the tyrosine kinase receptor for vascular endothelial growth factor receptor inhibits the growth of colon cancer liver metastasis and induces tumor and endothelial cell apoptosis. 1055 7
We conducted a phase I pharmacokinetic dose escalation study of a recombinant humanized anti-p185HER2 monoclonal antibody (MKC-454) in 18 patients with metastatic breast cancer refractory to chemotherapy. Three or six patients at each dose level received 1, 2, 4 and 8 mg kg(-1) of MKC-454 as 90-min intravenous infusions. The first dose was followed in 3 weeks by nine weekly doses. Target trough serum concentration has been set at 10 microg ml(-1) based on in vitro observations. The mean value of minimum trough serum concentrations at each dose level were 3.58 +/- 0.63, 6.53 +/- 5.26, 40.2 +/- 7.12 and 87.9 +/- 23.5 microg ml(-1) respectively. At 2 mg kg(-1), although minimum trough serum concentrations were lower than the target trough concentration with a wide range of variation, trough concentrations increased and exceeded the target concentration, as administrations were repeated weekly. Finally 2 mg kg(-1) was considered to be sufficient to achieve the target trough concentration by the weekly dosing regimen. One patient receiving 1 mg kg(-1) had grade 3 fever, one at the 1 mg kg(-1) level had severe fatigue defined as grade 3, and one at 8 mg kg(-1) had severe bone pain of grade 3. No antibodies against MKC-454 were detected in any patients. Objective tumour responses were observed in two patients; one receiving 4 mg kg(-1) had a partial response in lung metastases and the other receiving 8 mg kg(-1) had a complete response in soft tissue
metastases
. These results indicate that MKC-454 is well tolerated and effective in patients with refractory metastatic breast cancers overexpressing the
HER2
proto-oncogene. Further evaluation of this agent with 2-4 mg kg(-1) weekly intravenous infusion is warranted.
...
PMID:Dose escalation and pharmacokinetic study of a humanized anti-HER2 monoclonal antibody in patients with HER2/neu-overexpressing metastatic breast cancer. 1060 42
We analyzed eight samples of xenografted human pancreatic tumors and two
metastases
developed in mice by comparative genomic hybridization (CGH). The most recurrent changes were: gains on chromosomes 8 (8q24-qter; 7/8 cases), 15 (15q25-q26; 6/8 cases), 16 (16p in 6/8 cases; 16q in 5/8 cases), 20 (20q; 6/8 cases), and 19 (19q; 5/8 cases); and losses on chromosomes 18 (18q21; 6/8 cases), 6 (6q16-q21 and 6q24-qter; 5/8 cases each), and 9 (9p23-pter; 5/8 cases). The two
metastases
maintained the aberrations of the original pancreatic tumor plus gain of 11q12-q13 and 22q. Loss of heterozygosity analysis was carried out for 10p14-pter, a region that was lost in 3/8 samples. All of them presented allelic imbalance for all the informative loci. Fluorescence in situ hybridization and Southern analysis were performed to test some candidate oncogenes in 8q24 (MYC) and 15q25-qter (
IGF1R
and FES). Two of seven tumors showed high-level amplification of MYC relative to the centromere (> 3-fold), another two tumors had low-level amplification (1.5- to 3.0-fold), and one displayed 5.5 MYC signals/cell. In relation to the FES gene, low-level amplification was found in three tumors. Southern analysis showed five cases with a low-level amplification of
IGF1R
. Our data suggest that either few extra gene copies may be enough for cancer progression or other genes located in these regions are responsible for the amplifications found by CGH.
...
PMID:DNA copy number changes and evaluation of MYC, IGF1R, and FES amplification in xenografts of pancreatic adenocarcinoma. 1064 Jan 45
Rearrangements of
NTRK1
proto-oncogene were detected in 'spontaneous' papillary thyroid carcinomas with a frequency varying from 5 to 25% in different studies. These rearrangements result in the formation of chimaeric genes composed of the tyrosine kinase domain of
NTRK1
fused to 5' sequences of different genes. To investigate if the
NTRK1
gene plays a role in radiation-induced thyroid carcinogenesis, we looked for the presence of
NTRK1
-activating rearrangements in 32 human thyroid tumours (16 follicular adenomas, 14 papillary carcinomas and two lymph-node
metastases
of papillary thyroid carcinomas) from patients who had received external radiation, using the reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction, Southern blot and direct sequencing techniques. These data were compared with those obtained in a series of 28 'spontaneous' benign and malignant thyroid tumours, collected from patients without a history of radiation exposure and four in vitro culture cell lines derived from 'spontaneous' thyroid cancers. Our results concerning the radiation-associated tumours showed that only rearrangements between
NTRK1
and TPM3 genes (
TRK
oncogene) were detected in 2/14 papillary carcinomas and in one lymph-node metastasis of one of these papillary thyroid carcinomas. All the radiation-associated adenomas were negative. In the 'spontaneous' tumours, only one of the 14 papillary carcinomas and one of the four in vitro culture cell lines, derived from a papillary carcinoma, presented a
NTRK1
rearrangement also with the TPM3 gene. Twenty-five of this series of radiation-associated tumours were previously studied for the ras and
RET
/PTC oncogenes. In conclusion, our data: (a) show that the overall frequency of
NTRK1
rearrangements is similar between radiation-associated (2/31: 6%) and 'spontaneous' epithelial thyroid tumours (2/32: 6%). The frequency, if we consider exclusively the papillary carcinomas, is in both cases 12%; (b) show that the
TRK
oncogene plays a role in the development of a minority of radiation-associated papillary thyroid carcinomas but not in adenomas; and (c) confirm that
RET
/PTC rearrangements are the major genetic alteration associated with ionizing radiation-induced thyroid tumorigenesis.
...
PMID:Search for NTRK1 proto-oncogene rearrangements in human thyroid tumours originated after therapeutic radiation. 1064 82
We report on a rare distinctive variant of infiltrating ductal carcinoma characterized by sebaceous differentiation of tumor cells. The neoplasm was identified in a lumpectomy specimen from a 45-year-old woman with extensive
metastatic disease
. In addition to conventional in situ and invasive ductal components, approximately half of the tumor cells exhibited a phenotype resembling tumors of the sebaceous skin appendage with coarsely vacuolated cytoplasm and peripherally displaced nuclei. The sebaceous moiety was also present in the distant metastatic deposits. There was no evidence of mucin production by tumor cells. Ultrastructurally, empty-appearing non-membrane bound vacuoles attested to the sebaceous cells' lipid content. The immunoprofile of the lesion included positivity for cytokeratin and epithelial membrane antigen. Vimentin, S100 protein and carcinoembryonic antigen were not expressed. Most tumor cell nuclei reacted with antibodies to oestrogen and progesterone receptors but failed to show overexpression of the
HER2
/neu protein. The MIB-1 labeling index averaged 16%. At variance with sebaceous breast carcinomas on record, the present case is notable for its prolonged clinical course.
...
PMID:Sebaceous carcinoma of the breast. 1069 80
Head and neck squamous cell carcinomas (HNSCCs) are characterized by a marked propensity for local invasion and dissemination to cervical lymph nodes, with distant
metastases
developing in 30-40% of cases. Overexpression of the epidermal growth factor receptor (
EGFR
/c-erbB-1) and/or its ligands and high levels of certain matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) have been associated with poor prognosis. The aim of this study was to examine the effects of
EGFR
ligands on gelatinase expression and invasion in HNSCC cell lines. We tested epidermal growth factor (EGF), transforming growth factor alpha, betacellulin, heparin-binding EGF, and amphiregulin and measured expression of gelatinases MMP-9 and MMP-2 in an established squamous carcinoma cell line (Detroit-562) and in two cell lines newly derived from patients with head and neck cancers (SIHN-005A and SIHN-006). Incubation of the cell lines with EGF-like ligands up-regulated MMP-9 (but not MMP-2) expression as measured by semiquantitative reverse transcription-PCR in a dose-dependent manner, with the effects being most marked in cells with high
EGFR
levels and undetectable in cells with low levels. Maximum stimulation was obtained in a concentration range of 10-100 nM. In addition, we confirmed by zymography that gelatinolytic activity consistent with MMP-9 (Mr 92,000) was up-regulated in parallel with increases in gene expression. Betacellulin (which binds both to
EGFR
and c-erbB-4 receptors) consistently increased MMP-9 expression and activation to a significantly greater degree than the other four ligands when tested at equimolar concentrations. In parallel with MMP-9 up-regulation, all EGF-like ligands increased tumor cell invasion through Matrigel in in vitro Transwell assays. These activities were independent of ligand effects on cell proliferation. Antagonist (ICR62) or agonist (ICR9) anti-
EGFR
monoclonal antibodies, respectively, inhibited or potentiated MMP-9 activity and tumor cell invasion induced by all ligands. Furthermore, a monoclonal antibody that neutralizes MMP-9 activity (Abl) also inhibited ligand-induced invasion of HNSCC. We confirmed that tumor cell lines used in these studies (and a larger series not reported here) generally expressed multiple c-erbB receptors and ligands. These results indicate that autocrine or paracrine signaling through
EGFR
potentiates the invasive potential of HNSCC via the selective up-regulation and activation of MMP-9. Furthermore, ligands such as betacellulin (which is commonly expressed in HNSCC), which can bind to and activate other c-erbB receptors, may be especially potent in this regard.
...
PMID:Epidermal growth factor-like ligands differentially up-regulate matrix metalloproteinase 9 in head and neck squamous carcinoma cells. 1070 34
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10