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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To evaluate critically the merit of utilizing a wound model for growing human tumors, a series of increasingly difficult human tumor types were tested for growth at sites of trauma in athymic nude mice. In vitro tumor lines as well as fresh tumors from the breast, colon, rectum, lung, and a metastasis from an unknown primary were intraperitoneally injected into mice subjected to intra-abdominal organ injury. Successful xenografts were obtained from nine of 10 cell lines and 14 of 24 fresh tumors. The latter included five of six (83%) colon cancers, one lung tumor, metastatic tumor of unknown primary, three of four (75%) metastatic breast cancers and four of six (67%) estrogen receptor (ER)-negative breast primary tumors. Six ER-positive breast tumors tested failed to grow in mice without estrogen supplementation. Xenografts from two breast, two colon and the lung cancers formed spontaneous
metastases
and all xenografts tested were able to yield serial transplants in the surgical wound model. Histologically, all xenografts and their
metastases
were identical to their respective donor tumors. Transplantability in mice without exogenous estrogen supplementation was linked to the absence of estrogen and progesterone receptors in breast tumors. Transplantability of the cell lines was associated with the expression of cell surface receptors for fibronectin and
hyaluronic acid
. Receptors for other extracellular matrix components, namely, laminin, vitronectin, collagen, fibrinogen or von Willebrand factor were not associated with transplantability. These results demonstrate that a large proportion of human tumors, including the breast tumors, can be successfully xenografted into athymic mice by providing them with a healing wound environment, and that such xenografts grown at ectopic sites exhibit metastatic ability.
Clin Exp
Metastasis
1995 Jan
PMID:Growth and metastasis of human breast cancers in athymic nude mice. 782 Sep 53
An autopsy case of malignant mesothelioma with asbestosis caused by asbestos exposure for 17 years is reported. Autopsy revealed that mesothelioma spread extensively in all serosal tissues including pleura, pericardium, diaphragm, peritoneum and tunica vaginalis testis. Histopathologically, most of the tumor showed an epithelial form, but sarcomatous and microcystic patterns were also observed. The tumor cells had abundant glycogen and
hyaluronic acid
and, immunohistochemically, they were positive for cytokeratin, vimentin and epithelial membrane antigen (EMA). Long, slender microvilli were characteristically observed in these tumor cells. All of these data were compatible with malignant mesothelioma. Procollagen type I (procol.l) immunostaining was performed to reveal the mesenchymal character of mesothelioma. Both epithelial-type cells and sarcomatous-type cells showed positive staining for procol.l, although the latter showed stronger immunoreactivity. Immunostaining for procol.l was found to be one of the useful tools for distinguishing mesothelioma from adenocarcinoma. Using an extraction method for asbestos fibers, asbestos bodies were found in many tissues including lymph nodes, liver, small intestine, spleen, kidney, testis and pleura, in addition to lung parenchyma. Although multiple tumor
metastases
from an undetermined primary site is not ruled out, 'multifocal tumorigenesis' is suspected from the widespread deposit of asbestos fibers.
...
PMID:An autopsy case of malignant mesothelioma associated with asbestosis. 783 80
The expression of CD44 isoforms (CD44std, CD44v6, CD44v10) was investigated by an immunohistochemical technique in 42 basal cell carcinomas (BCC) of the superficial and nodular variety. All BCCs studied displayed very low amounts of CD44std, a receptor for
hyaluronic acid
. Except for single CD44std-positive cells located preferentially in the central parts of the BCC nests, the bulk of the tumour formations were CD44std-negative. CD44v6 showed a heterogeneous distribution pattern accentuated in the peripheral palisading tumour cells. In superficial BCCs, the labelling intensity for CD44v6 increased with the size of the tumour nests. CD44v10 was not detectable in BCCs. Our findings support the notion that CD44v6 is not linked to the metastatic proclivity of tumours originating from keratinocytes. We suggest that the very low expression of the receptor for
hyaluronic acid
(CD44std) may be one of the factors which block the formation of
metastases
from BCCs.
...
PMID:Expression of CD44 isoforms in basal cell carcinomas. 873 70
Our previous studies have suggested that the interaction between
hyaluronic acid
(HA) on peritoneal mesothelial cells and the membrane adhesion molecule, CD44, on ovarian tumour cells could be important in ovarian cancer metastasis. In order to study this further, adhesion of six ovarian tumour lines to HA coated on to a plastic surface was investigated. Four lines bound to the HA coat and two lines did not. The adhesive lines were those that expressed high amounts of CD44, but the degree of adhesion was not closely correlated with CD44 expression. The results suggested that different tumour lines had different affinities for HA. Treatment of the HA coat with hyaluronidase substantially reduced adhesion. Adhesion was also partially reduced if the tumour cells were preincubated with either soluble HA, or anti-CD44 antibodies directed against the HA binding region. An antibody against a non-HA binding region only slightly blocked adhesion at high antibody concentrations. Only the CD44H isoform was detected by immunoprecipitation on the tumour cells. These results suggest that ovarian tumour cells can attach to immobilised HA via CD44H on the cell membrane.
Clin Exp
Metastasis
1996 Sep
PMID:Human ovarian tumour cells can bind hyaluronic acid via membrane CD44: a possible step in peritoneal metastasis. 887 6
Primary brain tumors lack the metastatic behavior that is in part believed to be promoted by the extracellular matrix (ECM) components of the basement membrane. This study was intended to examine the influence of the ECM components present in the basement membrane that may act as natural barriers to tumor cell invasion. We examined the effect of type I and type IV collagens, fibronectin, laminin, and
hyaluronic acid
on the migration and invasion of four established glioblastoma cell lines, SNB19, U251, UWR1, and UWR2. Lower concentrations of all the ECM components induced the migration and invasion of all the cell lines. However, in the case of SNB19, laminin inhibited both migration and invasion in a concentration-dependent manner. We have also examined the influence of individual ECM components on the migration of cells from a spheroid to a monolayer on ECM component-coated coverslips. Consistent with the invasion studies using the modified Boyden chamber assays, lower concentrations of ECM components induced the migration of cells from spheroids to monolayer. Again, laminin inhibited the migration of cells from SNB19 spheroids. These results indicate that ECM components induce the invasion of glioma cells, apart from components like laminin, which may act as natural inhibitors.
Clin Exp
Metastasis
1996 Sep
PMID:Role of extracellular matrix proteins in regulation of human glioma cell invasion in vitro. 887 10
In a previous report, we observed by light microscopy the extracellular matrix in 51 vulvar squamous carcinomas and found that some tumors has a prominent stromal response in the form of a regional or diffuse zone of extracellular myxoid matrix containing immature collagen and fibroblasts at the tumor-stromal junction. These tumors were associated with clitoral involvement, ulcerative nonexophytic growth pattern, older age groups, poorer survival rate, and more extensive lymph node
metastases
than when prominent fibromyxoid stromal response (PFSR) was absent. This behavior was demonstrated despite the fact that these tumors were not larger, more deeply invasive, or of higher grade than when PFSR was absent. In the current immunohistochemical study, we examined cytokine, cell adhesion receptor, and tumor suppressor gene expression in 50 vulvar squamous carcinomas using a panel of antibodies to identify any potential role of these proteins in the development of a PFSR. Semiquantification of expression into none, focal (< 25% of cells showing expression), regional (25-50%), and diffuse (> 50%) patterns revealed PFSR to be statistically associated with high CD44, transforming growth factor (TGF) beta 3, and p53 protein expression, but not with fibroblast growth factor, epidermal growth factor, epidermal growth factor receptor, or E-cadherin expression. When expression of CD44 and either stromal or tumor TGF-beta 3 expression was high, i.e., regional or diffuse in distribution, 15 (50%) of 30 cases were associated with PFSR. In contrast, only 1 (7%) of 14 cases was associated with PFSR when expression was high for only one of these two proteins and none of 3 cases was associated with response when expression was low for both proteins (p = 0.005). Furthermore, in cases showing high expression for both TGF-beta 3 and CD44, PFSR was found in 13 (72%) of 18 cases when p53 expression was diffuse compared with 2 (17%) of 12 cases when expression was less (p = 0.01). Since TGF-beta acts mitogenically for fibroblasts and has been shown to be an inhibitor of epithelial cell growth, its high expression in a carcinoma with PFSR would suggest loss of effect on the epithelial component but an intact effect on the stroma. Since CD44 is known to act as a receptor for
hyaluronic acid
, which is a prominent stromal component and known to play an important role in cell mobility and tumor aggressiveness, its high expression in association with PFSR would suggest a role of CD44 overexpression in altered hyaluronate metabolism with accelerated tumor cell migration and subsequent distal spread. The current study demonstrates that alterations in cytokine and cell adhesion receptor status variably occur in vulvar squamous carcinoma and that such alterations may affect tumor morphology and behavior.
...
PMID:Cytokine, cell adhesion receptor, and tumor suppressor gene expression in vulvar squamous carcinoma: correlation with prominent fibromyxoid stromal response. 888 79
Chondroitin sulfate dipalmitoylphosphatidylethanolamine (CS-PE), when immobilized onto substratum, inhibited the adhesion of B16F10 mouse melanoma cells to fibronectin-coated dishes (anti-adhesion activity). CS-PE showed the most potent anti-adhesion activity for the melanoma cells among various GAG-PEs. CS-PE also inhibited the adhesion of B16F10 cells to Matrigel and the invasion of the cells into Matrigel. In the in vivo system of experimental metastasis, administration of B16F10 cells with CS-PE into C57BL/6 mice significantly inhibited lung metastasis. The inhibition degree of CS or
hyaluronic acid
-PE was lower than CS-PE. CS-PE administered intravenously into mice before the injection of B16F10 cells also inhibited metastasis. Pretreatment of B16F10 cells with CS-PE caused some but a lower degree of inhibition. When CS-PE was injected intravenously into mice, more binding in the lung was found than when CS was injected. CS-PE but not CS inhibited the retention in the lung of fluorochrome-labeled B16F10 cells when injected intravenously into mice. Since there was no significant effect of CS-PE on the viability and growth of B16F10 cells, the results suggest that CS-PE immobilized onto the subendothelial matrix may prevent melanoma cells from adhering to the subendothelial substrata of lung capillaries and inhibit subsequent invasion processes of metastasis.
Clin Exp
Metastasis
1997 Mar
PMID:Inhibition of experimental metastasis and cell adhesion of murine melanoma cells by chondroitin sulfate-derivatized lipid, a neoproteoglycan with anti-cell adhesion activity. 906 84
CD44 is a ubiquitous multistructural and multifunctional cells surface adhesion molecule involved in cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions. Twenty exons are involved in the genomic organization of this molecule. The first five and the last 5 exons are constant, whereas the 10 exons located between these regions are subjected to alternative splicing, resulting in the generation of a variable region. Differential utilization of the 10 variable region exons, as well as variations in N-glycosylation, O-glycosylation, and glycosaminoglycanation (by heparan sulfate or chondroitin sulfate), generate multiple isoforms (at least 20 are known) of different molecular sizes (85-230 kDa). The smallest CD44 molecule (85-95 kDa), which lacks the entire variable region, is standard CD44 (CD44s). As it is expressed mainly on cells of lymphohematopoietic origin, CD44s is also known as hematopoietic CD44 (CD44H). CD44s is a single-chain molecule composed of a distal extracellular domain (containing, the ligand-binding sites), a membrane-proximal region, a transmembrane-spanning domain, and a cytoplasmic tail. The molecular sequence (with the exception of the membrane-proximal region) displays high interspecies homology. After immunological activation, T lymphocytes and other leukocytes transiently upregulate CD44 isoforms expressing variant exons (designated CD44v). A CD44 isform containing the last 3 exon products of the variable region (CD44V8-10, also known as epithelial CD44 or CD44E), is preferentially expressed on epithelial cells. The longest CD44 isoform expressing in tandem eight exons of the variable region (CD44V3-10) was detected in keratinocytes.
Hyaluronic acid
(HA), an important component of the extracellular matrix (ECM), is the principal, but by no means the only, ligand of CD44. Other CD44 ligands include the ECM components collagen, fibronectin, laminin, and chondroitin sulfate. Mucosal addressin, serglycin, osteopontin, and the class II invariant chain (Ii) are additional, ECM-unrelated, ligands of the molecule. In many, but not in all cases, CD44 does not bind HA unless it is stimulated by phorbol esters, activated by agonistic anti-CD44 antibody, or deglycosylated (e.g., by tunicamycin). CD44 is a multifunctional receptor involved in cell-cell and cell-ECM interactions, cell traffic, lymph node homing, presentation of chemokines and growth factors to traveling cells, and transmission of growth signals. CD44 also participates in the uptake and intracellular degradation of HA, as well as in transmission of signals mediating hematopoiesis and apoptosis. Many cancer cell types as well as their
metastases
express high levels of CD44. Whereas some tumors, such as gliomas, exclusively express standard CD44, other neoplasms, including gastrointestinal cancer, bladder cancer, uterine cervical cancer, breast cancer and non-Hodgkin's lymphomas, also express CD44 variants. Hence CD44, particularly its variants, may be used as diagnostic or prognostic markers of at least some human malignant diseases. Furthermore, it has been shown in animal models that injection of reagents interfering with CD44-ligand interaction (e.g., CD44s- or CD44v-specific antibodies) inhibit local tumor growth and metastatic spread. These findings suggest that CD44 may confer a growth advantage on some neoplastic cells and, therefore, could be used as a target for cancer therapy. It is hoped that identification of CD44 variants expressed on cancer but not on normal cells will lead to the development of anti-CD44 reagents restricted to the neoplastic growth.
...
PMID:CD44: structure, function, and association with the malignant process. 911 68
Intrinsic tumours of the central nervous system (CNS) are generally derived from the glial cells: the astrocytes, oligodendrocytes and ependymal cells. Although such tumours rarely
metastasize
to distant organs, they show a marked propensity for local invasion of the surrounding nervous tissue. Sub-populations of neoplastic glia may migrate several millimetres away from main tumour mass into the contiguous CNS parenchyma, resulting in poor demarcation of the tumour. These migratory, so-called "guerrilla" cells give rise to recurrent tumours following surgical debulking and adjuvant radio- and chemo-therapeutic intervention. As in other organs, tumour cell invasion is, in part, facilitated by interaction with the extracellular matrix (ECM); however, apart from the vascular basal lamina and the glia limitans externa, the CNS lacks a well-defined ECM. Invading neoplastic cells must, therefore, provide their own ECM, a process which may be stimulated by such agents as gangliosides or growth factors. Glioma cell-derived laminin and
hyaluronic acid
may provide the most important substrates for invasion, cell adhesion to these substrates being achieved largely through integrin receptors (the function of which may be determined by interaction with cell surface gangliosides) and CD44, respectively. Modulation of these ECM components is facilitated by a variety of proteinases including the matrix metalloproteinases and hyaluronidase, the activity of which is also thought to stimulate angiogenesis. Interference with the mechanisms which promote glioma cell adhesive properties may provide suitable targets for novel anti-invasive therapies. These might include ECM components, growth factors, gangliosides, integrin receptors and proteases and their inhibitors.
...
PMID:The role of the extracellular matrix in neoplastic glial invasion of the nervous system. 918 Oct 59
We investigated hyaluronidase activity in gynaecological normal and malignant tissues. Hyaluronidase activity in culture medium of tissue specimens was detected by
hyaluronic acid
zymography and quantified by densitometry. Hyaluronidase activity was shown as one dominant band (molecular weight 65 kDa) at pH 3.5. Hyaluronidase activity was significantly higher in normal ovary (P < 0.05) and normal endometrium (P< 0.05) than in normal cervix. One dominant 65-kDa hyaluronidase was expressed in 100% (14 out of 14) of ovarian cancer tissues and in 91% (10 out of 11) of endometrial cancer tissues. However, hyaluronidase activity was not observed in cervical cancer tissues. Hyaluronidase activity was significantly higher in ovarian (P < 0.001) and endometrial (P < 0.01) cancer tissues than in cervical cancer tissue and was significantly higher in ovarian cancer tissue than in endometrial cancer tissue (P < 0.05). These facts suggest that the cancer cells make use of the original characteristic of the organ to invade and
metastasize
. Moreover, these results reflect the difference in metastatic forms and are suggestive of a strong relationship between hyaluronidase activity and invasion and metastasis of ovarian and endometrial cancers compared with cervical cancer.
...
PMID:Hyaluronidase activity in gynaecological cancer tissues with different metastatic forms. 919 86
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