Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0027627 (metastases)
103,950 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Metastasis in children with neuroblastoma (NB) is a poor prognostic factor despite intensive therapy. In the near future, stem cell factor (SCF) is likely to be used clinically to accelerate bone marrow (BM) recovery after high-dose chemotherapy in patients with advanced NB. The high frequency of BM metastases in NB could be secondary to BM-derived human growth factors (HGF) modulating the adhesion, secondary growth (or both) of circulating metastatic NB cells. To test this hypothesis, we studied the in vitro effects on NB cell lines grown in chemically defined medium of SCF, interleukin (IL)-1 beta, IL-3, IL-6, basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF), transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) used alone or in combination. The antigenic expression of NB-associated cell adhesion molecules (CAM) HLA class 1, intercellular CAM-1, neural-CAM and CD44 were assayed by monoclonal antibodies and flow cytometry, and DNA synthesis by 3H-thymidine uptake. The expression of CAM was not modulated by SCF or other HGFs. An increase in thymidine uptake was induced by bFGF alone in IMR-32 cells, while SCF and other HGFs had no notable effect. Our results indicate that SCF and other BM-derived HGFs are unlikely to have a generalised effect on the expression of adhesion molecules by NB cells or proliferation. The clinical administration of recombinant human SCF to children with NB should be safe.
...
PMID:Effects of stem cell factor and other bone marrow-derived growth factors on the expression of adhesion molecules and proliferation of human neuroblastoma cells. 757 47

The large family of CD44 splice variants are likely to serve multiple functions in the embryo and in the adult organism. This is reflected in their complex patterns of expression. In molecular terms these functions are largely unknown. Certain splice variants (CD44v) can promote the metastatic behaviour of cancer cells. In human colon and breast cancer the presence of epitopes encoded by exon v6 on primary resected tumour material indicates poor prognosis. Metastasis-promoting splice variants differ from those that seem not to have a role in the induction of metastasis by the formation of homomultimeric complexes in the plasma membrane of cells. This may increase their affinity to ligands such as hyaluronate. The affinity can be further regulated over a range from low to very high by cell-specific modification. The fact that CD44v epitopes are found on normal epithelial cells such as skin, cervical epithelium and bladder enforces cautious evaluation of the significance of CD44v expression in human cancer. Nevertheless, certain epitopes can serve as tools in early diagnosis of certain cancers and will facilitate the development of specific targeted therapy.
...
PMID:The role of CD44 splice variants in human metastatic cancer. 758 29

CD44 cell-surface receptor expresses multiple isoforms, some of which are believed to play a role in tumor growth and metastasis. The CD44 gene is composed of 19 exons, of which 9 (exons 6 to 14) are alternatively spliced to form inclusions in the intervening membrane proximal region. Sequences present in the shortest metastatic variant cloned from a rat metastatic cell line have been shown to correspond to human exons 10 and 11, also called exons v6 and v7. Using RT-PCR, we have addressed in detail the CD44 isoforms produced in human breast and colon tumors. We analyzed 53 breast-tumor- and 58 colon-tumor-related samples as well as 1 benign mastopathy, 1 normal breast, 4 non-invaded lymph nodes and 8 normal colon tissues. All tumors analyzed expressed the hemopoietic CD44 (CD44H) isoform (no alternatively spliced exons added), whereas 81% expressed the CD44E form (addition exons 12, 13 and 14). Furthermore, 85% of tumors presented complex patterns of expression, with an average number of 5 to 6 bands detected. In view of their implication in the metastatic process, we investigated in greater detail the isoforms containing exons 10 and 11 (v6 and v7). Exon 10 was more frequently expressed than exon 11, 80% and 57% of the samples respectively. The great majority of cases showed ladder-like patterns starting from the shortest forms (exons 5-10 or 5-10-11) and larger-molecular-weight bands corresponding predominantly to sequential inclusions of exons from 3' to 5'. Exon-10 and exon-11 variants were also found in one benign mastopathy. The majority of normal tissues (1 breast and 6/8 colon) expressed only the CD44H isoform. These data indicate that expression of metastatic variants is common in human breast and colon tumors and can occur early during cancer progression, as testified by their presence in a benign breast tumor. While expression of exon-10 variants were correlated with presence of distal metastases in colon tumors, exon-11 variants were not (metastatic events were too rare in our breast-tumor series to reach significance). This suggest that exon 10 may correspond to the minimal sequences required to favor metastatic events.
...
PMID:CD44 expression patterns in breast and colon tumors: a PCR-based study of splice variants. 759 9

To examine whether renal cell carcinoma displays altered CD44 expression we performed reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) analysis of CD44 in 38 specimens from renal cancer, normal kidney and metastases of 19 patients and 6 renal cancer cell lines. To detect the CD44 variants, we utilized the RT-PCR Southern blot method. One out of 19 (5.3%) renal cancer specimens expressed a larger molecular weight band than 1 kb by RT-PCR analysis, in contrast to previous findings in colon and breast cancer. The band patterns in RT-PCR were different in 14/17 (82.4%) cases between normal kidney and tumors, and a band of about 700 bp was especially marked in 12/17 (70.6%) tumor specimens and 4/6 (66.7%) cell lines. By cloning and sequencing of the 700 bp band, we found that this variant is identical to the CD44 variant sharing only exon v10. Examination by Northern blot analysis has revealed that all tumors express a higher level of CD44 mRNA than paired normal kidneys. These findings suggested that the CD44 variants sharing exon v10 play some role in renal cancer.
...
PMID:High-level expression of the CD44 variant sharing exon v10 in renal cancer. 759 62

The adhesion to mesothelial monolayers of eight cultured ovarian tumour cell lines was studied in multiwell plates as a model for some of the interactions of ovarian cancer in the peritoneal cavity. When only the upper half of the conditioned medium (CM) from a confluent mesothelial cell culture was aspirated, the adhesion of the tumour cells was low (3.5%-36%). When the medium was removed completely the adhesion increased. The tumour cell lines showing the greatest enhancement of adhesion were those which had previously been shown to express the highest amounts of CD44. By adding erythrocyte suspensions to mesothelial cells it was shown that there was a pericellular coat around the mesothelial cells that could be destroyed by aspirating the medium, or by treating the medium with hyaluronidase (Hase). Treatment of the CM with Hase also considerably increased tumour cell adhesion. Furthermore, CM was shown to contain high amounts of hyaluronic acid (HA). HA blocked adhesion in the absence of CM, but the effect was not as large as that produced by the pericellular coat. It is proposed that pericellular HA produced by mesothelial cells has an important role in the invasion of ovarian tumour cells in the peritoneal cavity.
Clin Exp Metastasis 1995 Sep
PMID:Hyaluronic acid secreted by mesothelial cells: a natural barrier to ovarian cancer cell adhesion. 764 21

Specific CD44 variant glycoproteins are overexpressed at particular stages of colorectal tumor progression. Some variants of the CD44 glycoprotein without exon v6 sequences appear at the earliest stage of tumorigenesis, i.e., in early adenomas. Expression of variants containing exon v6 sequences is largely restricted to the advanced stages of tumor development and in addition is more prevalent and intense in metastatic (Dukes C/D) than in nonmetastatic (Dukes A/B) carcinomas. The observation that CD44 variants containing a protein domain of CD44 that confers full metastatic potential to rat carcinoma and sarcoma cell lines is increasingly expressed during colorectal tumor progression indicates that this domain may have an important role in tumor progression and metastasis in humans. Information on v6 expression, which can be obtained by routine immunohistochemistry, may prove of important prognostic value, particularly in carcinomas (Dukes A and B) that have not yet given rise to detectable metastases.
...
PMID:Expression of CD44 variant proteins in human colorectal cancer is related to tumor progression. 769 4

We have examined the cell surface molecule CD44, which is attracting interest because of reports that isoforms are associated with metastasis. The prognostic value of CD44 expression has yet to be assessed for a solid tumour. Benign (59) and malignant (primary 61, metastatic 59) gastric tissues were examined with antibodies directed at epitopes common to known CD44 isoforms. Normal mucosa was CD44 negative. In atrophic gastritis and intestinal metaplasia expression was restricted to the epithelial cells of the basal glands and was positively correlated with an increased leucocyte infiltrate and with the expression of HLA DR by mucosal cells. These observations suggest a role for chronic inflammation in the induction of CD44 expression on benign mucosa. No such association was observed between inflammatory infiltrate and CD44 expression on gastric tumours. CD44 expression, observed in only 49% of primary tumours, was associated with distant metastases at time of diagnosis and, among 31 curatively resected patients, with tumour recurrence (p = 0.0014) and increased mortality (p = 0.001) during follow-up averaging 17 months. When we used an antibody directed against the CD44 variant exon 9v, we found a good correlation between the expression of total CD44 and of exon 9v containing isoforms, and 9v expression in primary tumours was significantly and positively associated with tumour recurrence and mortality.
...
PMID:De-novo expression of CD44 and survival in gastric cancer. 769

Although human glioblastomas are highly invasive tumors intracerebrally, only rarely do they metastasize outside the central nervous system. In contrast, the brain is a major target for metastatic spread of many systemic tumors. Recently, it was demonstrated that expression of splice variants of CD44 (CD44v), but not standard CD44 (CD44s), was sufficient to confer metastatic potential to low- or nonmetastatic rat tumor cells. Because CD44 is expressed in brain tumors, we examined whether differential expression of CD44 isoforms was correlated with the metastatic behavior of these tumors. We compared CD44s and CD44v expression in 17 human glioblastomas, 18 glioma cell lines, and metastases of 15 other tumors to the brain by reverse transcription/polymerase chain reaction, Northern blotting, and immunocytochemistry. These experiments showed that 0 of 17 glioblastomas and 0 of 18 glioma cell lines expressed CD44v as compared to 12 of 15 brain metastases. These data show a correlation between CD44v expression and the metastatic ability of the tumors analyzed (P < 0.01). This suggests (a) that the biological significance of the lack of CD44v expression in human glioblastomas warrants further examination with regard to their inability to metastasize extraneurally and (b) that CD44v expression may play a role in the intracerebral spread of about 80% [corrected] of the brain metastases. Therefore, CD44v expression should be further considered as a potential marker for differential diagnosis and prognosis of patients with brain metastases.
...
PMID:Variant CD44 adhesion molecules are expressed in human brain metastases but not in glioblastomas. 769 37

We previously reported that a derivative of the interleukin-6 (IL-6)-dependent B9 B-cell hybridoma (B9/LPNU1L) constitutively expressing an interleukin-1 alpha (IL-1 alpha) gene introduced by retrovirus-mediated gene transfer preferentially metastasized to bone marrow following intravenous injection into unirradiated syngeneic BALB/c mice. B9/LPNU1L cells recovered from the femoral marrow of a recipient with hind limb paralysis (denoted B9/BM1) retained their IL-6-dependency yet displayed enhanced metastatic capacity during serial transplantation in vivo. In contrast, autonomously-growing B9 variants spontaneously arising in vitro or IL-6-independent B9 derivatives created by infection with recombinant IL-6 retroviruses rarely gave rise to experimental metastases in syngeneic BALB/c or nude mice. Examination of cell adhesion molecule profiles by immunofluorescence flow cytometry has revealed high levels of CD44, moderate levels of VLA-4 and low levels of LFA-1 on all B9-series cells. By comparison, ICAM-1 expression was significantly elevated on B9/BM1 cells, with independent isolates stably expressing about 4-fold higher levels which were paralleled by corresponding increases in the steady-state levels of ICAM-1 mRNA. L-Selectin was not expressed by any of the cell lines. Despite higher ICAM-1 levels, cell aggregation assays revealed that LFA-1-ICAM-1 adhesive interactions were not involved in the homotypic adhesion of B9/BM1 cells but rather that binding of CD44 to endogenously-synthesized hyaluronan was responsible. Furthermore, B9/BM1 cells expressing high levels of ICAM-1 were found to be less susceptible to cytolysis by natural killer (NK) cells than their weakly metastatic or nonmetastatic counterparts.
Clin Exp Metastasis 1993 Mar
PMID:Association between ICAM-1 expression and metastatic capacity of murine B-cell hybridomas. 809 98

CD44 is a cell surface adhesion molecule postulated to control lymphocyte recirculation by facilitating entry into lymphoid tissue. Tumour cells transfected to overexpress the epithelial variant CD44R1 readily gain access to lymph nodes and distant metastatic sites in animal models, possibly by mimicking circulating lymphocytes. To investigate if human tumours display altered CD44 expression we performed reverse transcriptase a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis of CD44 in 49 specimens from normal colonic mucosa, primary colon and rectal tumours, normal liver, and metastases of 20 patients. The haematopoietic variant CD44H was the principal isoform amplified in all of the specimens, However, 12/14 primary tumours and 16/16 metastatic potential. Moreover, the relative increase with only 2 of 13 normal mucosa specimens. This increase in CD44R1 relative to CD44H expressed by human colon carcinoma cells may increase their metastatic potential. Moreover, the relative increase in PCR amplification of CD44R1 compared with that of CD44H may provide a sensitive method for detecting primary and metastatic colon carcinoma cells in small biopsy specimens.
...
PMID:Expression of CD44R1 adhesion molecule in colon carcinomas and metastases. 809 28


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>