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)

Gadolinium chloride (5 mg/kg) administered to mice 24 h before intravenous transplantation of HA-1 hepatoma cells decreased the volume density of tumor implants in the liver, reduced the intensity of degenerative and necrotic changes developing under the effect of growing tumor metastases, and prolonged the life span of tumor-bearing mice. Development of metastases was not associated with changes in cathepsin B activity in the liver, while activity of cathepsin L decreased only during the early period (4 days) after injection of gadolinium chloride. Injection of gadolinium chloride led to labilization of liver cell lysosomes because of overload with gadolinium chloride particles. The positive effect of gadolinium chloride was probably associated with depression of liver macrophages at the stage of tumor cell invasion and with subsequent migration of monocytes/macrophages preventing the growth of formed metastatic nodes in the liver.
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PMID:Effect of liver macrophage depression on the development of liver metastases of HA-1 tumor in mice. 1545 91

Tumour cell lines and in vivo growing tumours are heterogeneous, comprising different cell clones. To understand why some cells primarily invade a tissue, while others are more apt to metastasize, several clones from the established B16F10-Nex2 cell line were isolated and 10 viable cells of each clone were injected intravenously into C57Bl/6 and Balb/c mice. Two cell clones (Nex2B and Nex2D) showed contrasting metastatic abilities. Clone 2D rather than clone 2B colonized the lungs of both mice after intravenous injection. Surprisingly, clone 2B grew more rapidly than 2D after subcutaneous implantation, significantly reducing the survival of injected mice. Clearly, dissociation between subcutaneous growth and metastatic ability was observed in clones from the same tumour cell lineage. Clone Nex2B continuously released proteolytic activity, including cathepsin B, and showed a greater capacity to invade Matrigel than clone Nex2D. Clone Nex2D accumulated cathepsins B, D and L intracellularly and released a moderate proteolytic activity in vitro that was inhibited with the time of incubation. E-64-treated Nex2B cells injected subcutaneously showed a significant delay in tumour development and increased survival of challenged animals. A similar result was obtained on treatment of clone 2B with chagasin, a cysteine proteinase inhibitor from Trypanosoma cruzi, even at 2 microM. Clone Nex2D was less sensitive to pretreatment with inhibitors of cysteine proteases for tumour development in vivo. Our results suggest that, in a tumour cell population, cells dissociate into metastatic and non-metastatic subtypes, and that release or accumulation of cathepsins can be a differential trait of these cells.
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PMID:Melanoma heterogeneity: differential, invasive, metastatic properties and profiles of cathepsin B, D and L activities in subclones of the B16F10-NEX2 cell line. 1545 88

We aimed to validate an analytical approach based on proteomics on gastric cancer specimens for the identification of new putative diagnostic or prognostic markers. Primary screening was performed on gastrectomy specimens obtained from ten consecutive patients with gastric cancer. Gastric epithelial cells were obtained with an epithelial cell enrichment technique, homogenized and then separated by two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (2-D PAGE). The differential protein expression pattern was verified stepwise by Western blotting and immunohistochemistry on samples from 28 and 46 cancer patients, respectively. The putative clinical applicability and prognostic use were tested by an enzyme-linked immunoabsorbent assay on serum samples obtained from 149 cancer patients. One hundred-ninety-one differentially expressed protein spots were found by 2-D PAGE and identified by mass spectrometry, including cathepsin B, which was over-expressed in six (60%) patients. Western blotting confirmed that the active form of cathepsin B is over-expressed, while immunohistochemistry showed strong cytoplasmic staining in cancer tissues of 45 (98%) patients. The serum level of cathepsin B was increased in patients with gastric cancer compared to healthy controls (P = 0.0026) and correlated with T-category and the presence of distant metastases (P < 0.05). Serum levels above 129 pmol x L(-1) were associated with a reduced survival rate (P = 0.0297). Proteome analysis is a valuable tool for the identification of prognostic markers in gastric cancer: Increased cathepsin B serum levels are associated with advanced tumor stages and progressive disease, which enables the classification of some gastric cancer patients into a subgroup that should undergo aggressive therapy.
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PMID:Overexpression of cathepsin B in gastric cancer identified by proteome analysis. 1578 41

Prostate cancers metastasize to bone leading to osteolysis. Here we assessed proteolysis of DQ-collagen I (a bone matrix protein) and, for comparison, DQ-collagen IV, by living human prostate carcinoma cells in vitro. Both collagens were degraded, and this degradation was reduced by inhibitors of matrix metallo, serine, and cysteine proteases. Because secretion of the cysteine protease cathepsin B is increased in human breast fibroblasts grown on collagen I gels, we analyzed cathepsin B levels and secretion in prostate cells grown on collagen I gels. Levels and secretion were increased only in DU145 cells--cells that expressed the highest baseline levels of cathepsin B. Secretion of cathepsin B was also elevated in DU145 cells grown in vitro on human bone fragments. We further investigated the effect of the bone microenvironment on cathepsin B expression and activity in vivo in a SCID-human model of prostate bone metastasis. High levels of cathepsin B protein and activity were found in DU145, PC3, and LNCaP bone tumors, although the PC3 and LNCaP cells had exhibited low cathepsin B expression in vitro. Our results suggest that tumor-stromal interactions in the context of the bone microenvironment can modulate the expression of the cysteine protease cathepsin B.
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PMID:Bone microenvironment modulates expression and activity of cathepsin B in prostate cancer. 1579 21

Metastasis of malignant tumor cells involves cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions, which regulate the expression and localization of proteolytic enzymes. In the present study, we investigated the expression and localization of the lysosomal cysteine proteinase cathepsin B and its natural inhibitors cystatin A, B and C in high- (MV3), intermediate- (SKmel28) and low-invasive (SKmel23, WM164) human melanoma cell lines grown on plastic or in contact with monomeric or fibrillar collagen type I. Neither the transcript levels of cathepsin B nor those of the natural inhibitors, cystatin B and C, were altered by the interaction of melanoma cells with collagen type I. However, protein expression and cellular localization of cathepsin B and its inhibitors were markedly affected. In contrast to low-invasive cells, high-invasive cells constitutively released procathepsin B when cultured on plastic. In addition, contact of invasive cells with fibrillar collagen type I resulted in the release of both mature forms of the protease. Perturbation studies using inhibitory antibodies against the beta1 subunit of the integrin receptor indicated a role for the beta1 integrin receptor family in the regulation of cathepsin B release. Cystatin B protein expression was much lower in high-invasive cells in both culture conditions, when compared to low-invasive cells. Cystatin C expression was comparable in all cells, but cell contact to fibrillar collagen type I induced its expression. These results strongly implicate a pivotal role of cell-matrix interactions for the regulation of cathepsin B localization and activity in melanoma cells.
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PMID:Contact of high-invasive, but not low-invasive, melanoma cells to native collagen I induces the release of mature cathepsin B. 1638 Oct 7

Extracellular pH (pH(e)) is lower in many tumors than in the corresponding normal tissue. The significance of acidic pH(e) in the development of metastatic disease was investigated in the present work. Human melanoma cells (A-07, D-12, and T-22) were cultured in vitro at pH(e) 6.8 or 7.4 (control) before being inoculated into the tail vein of BALB/c nu/nu mice for formation of experimental pulmonary metastases. Cell invasiveness was studied in vitro by using Matrigel invasion chambers and angiogenesis was studied in vivo by using an intradermal assay. Protein secretion was measured by ELISA and immunocapture assays. Cells cultured at acidic pH(e) showed increased secretion of proteinases and proangiogenic factors, enhanced invasive and angiogenic potential, and enhanced potential to develop experimental metastases. Acidity-induced metastasis was inhibited by treatment with the general matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) inhibitor GM6001, the general cysteine proteinase inhibitor E-64, or blocking antibody against vascular endothelial growth factor-A (VEGF-A) or interleukin-8 (IL-8). Our study indicates that acidic pH(e) promotes experimental pulmonary metastasis in A-07, D-12, and T-22 human melanoma cells by a common mechanism involving acidity-induced up-regulation of the proteolytic enzymes MMP-2, MMP-9, cathepsin B, and cathepsin L and acidity-induced up-regulation of the proangiogenic factors VEGF-A and IL-8. One consequence of this observation is that treatment strategies involving deliberate tumor acidification to improve the efficacy of chemotherapy, photodynamic therapy, and hyperthermia should be avoided. Moreover, the possibility that the pH(e) of the primary tumor may be an important prognostic parameter for melanoma patients merits clinical investigation.
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PMID:Acidic extracellular pH promotes experimental metastasis of human melanoma cells in athymic nude mice. 1681 44

Using the clinically relevant 4T1-derived syngeneic murine model of spontaneous mammary metastasis to bone, we have identified the cysteine cathepsin inhibitor Stefin A as a gene differentially expressed in primary and metastatic mammary tumours. In primary tumours, Stefin A expression correlated inversely with metastatic potential in 4T1-derived lines and was not detected in tumour cells in culture, indicating induction only within the tumour microenvironment. Enforced expression of Stefin A in the highly metastatic 4T1.2 cell line significantly reduced spontaneous bone metastasis following orthotopic injection into the mammary gland. Consistent with the mouse data, Stefin A expression correlated with disease-free survival (absence of distant metastasis) in a cohort of 142 primary tumours from breast cancer patients. This was most significant for patients with invasive ductal carcinoma expressing Stefin A, who were less likely to develop distant metastases (log rank test, p = 0.0075). In a multivariate disease-free survival analysis (Cox proportional hazards model), Stefin A expression remained a significant independent prognostic factor in patients with invasive ductal carcinoma (p = 0.0014), along with grade and progesterone receptor (PR) status. In human lung and bone metastases, we detected irregular Stefin A staining patterns, with expression often localizing to micrometastases (<0.2 mm) in direct contact with the stroma. We propose that Stefin A, as a cysteine cathepsin inhibitor, may be a marker of increased cathepsin activity in metastases. Using immunohistology, the cathepsin inhibitor was detected co-expressed with cathepsin B in lung and bone metastases in both the murine model and human tissues. We conclude that Stefin A expression reduces distant metastasis in breast cancer and propose that this may be due to the inhibition of cysteine cathepsins, such as cathepsin B.
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PMID:Primary tumour expression of the cysteine cathepsin inhibitor Stefin A inhibits distant metastasis in breast cancer. 1798 32

Degradation components of basement membrane could be crucial for tumor invasion. A key role in this process has been assigned to cysteine proteases, i.e. cathepsins and matrix metalloproteinases. The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship of the expression of MMP-9 and cathepsin B with tumor aggressiveness expressed by lymph node metastases and survival rates in gastric carcinoma patients. Slides of 5 mum-thick serial sections from 91 patients with primary gastric carcinoma were prepared and analyzed for MMP-9 and cathepsin B expression using anti-human monoclonal antibody (NCL-MMP-9 clone; dilution 1:40 and NCL-CATH-B clone; dilution 1:40). The patients were clinically monitored for 84 months. We found no association between the expression of MMP-9 and cathepsin B in main mass of tumor and patients' gender, tumor location, Lauren's classification or histological differentiation. Also no correlation was observed between the expression of MMP-9 in main mass of tumor and depth of invasion. A strong statistically significant association was found between the expression of MMP-9 and cathepsin B in main mass of tumor and lymph node involvement (p<0.001; p<0.001, respectively). However, we observed no correlation between the expression of MMP-9 and cathepsin B in main mass of tumor and lymph node involvement or 5-year overall survival. Our results may suggest that the expression of matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9) and cathepsin B is correlated with lymph node metastasis in advanced gastric carcinoma, but not with patients' postoperative survival.
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PMID:The expression of matrix metalloproteinase 9 and cathepsin B in gastric carcinoma is associated with lymph node metastasis, but not with postoperative survival. 1829 64

The external pH of solid tumors is acidic as a consequence of increased metabolism of glucose and poor perfusion. Acid pH has been shown to stimulate tumor cell invasion and metastasis in vitro and in cells before tail vein injection in vivo. The present study investigates whether inhibition of this tumor acidity will reduce the incidence of in vivo metastases. Here, we show that oral NaHCO(3) selectively increased the pH of tumors and reduced the formation of spontaneous metastases in mouse models of metastatic breast cancer. This treatment regimen was shown to significantly increase the extracellular pH, but not the intracellular pH, of tumors by (31)P magnetic resonance spectroscopy and the export of acid from growing tumors by fluorescence microscopy of tumors grown in window chambers. NaHCO(3) therapy also reduced the rate of lymph node involvement, yet did not affect the levels of circulating tumor cells, suggesting that reduced organ metastases were not due to increased intravasation. In contrast, NaHCO(3) therapy significantly reduced the formation of hepatic metastases following intrasplenic injection, suggesting that it did inhibit extravasation and colonization. In tail vein injections of alternative cancer models, bicarbonate had mixed results, inhibiting the formation of metastases from PC3M prostate cancer cells, but not those of B16 melanoma. Although the mechanism of this therapy is not known with certainty, low pH was shown to increase the release of active cathepsin B, an important matrix remodeling protease.
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PMID:Bicarbonate increases tumor pH and inhibits spontaneous metastases. 1927 90

Castration resistance in prostate cancer (PCa) constitutes an advanced, aggressive disease with poor prognosis, associated with uncontrolled cell proliferation, resistance to apoptosis, and enhanced invasive potential. The molecular mechanisms involved in the transition of PCa to castration resistance are obscure. Here, we report that the nonselective cationic channel transient receptor potential vanilloid 2 (TRPV2) is a distinctive feature of castration-resistant PCa. TRPV2 transcript levels were higher in patients with metastatic cancer (stage M1) compared with primary solid tumors (stages T2a and T2b). Previous studies of the TRPV2 channel indicated that it is primarily involved in cancer cell migration and not in cell growth. Introducing TRPV2 into androgen-dependent LNCaP cells enhanced cell migration along with expression of invasion markers matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) 9 and cathepsin B. Consistent with the likelihood that TRPV2 may affect cancer cell aggressiveness by influencing basal intracellular calcium levels, small interfering RNA-mediated silencing of TRPV2 reduced the growth and invasive properties of PC3 prostate tumors established in nude mice xenografts, and diminished expression of invasive enzymes MMP2, MMP9, and cathepsin B. Our findings establish a role for TRPV2 in PCa progression to the aggressive castration-resistant stage, prompting evaluation of TRPV2 as a potential prognostic marker and therapeutic target in the setting of advanced PCa.
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PMID:Role of cationic channel TRPV2 in promoting prostate cancer migration and progression to androgen resistance. 2010 38


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