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)

Detailed studies tumor cell-associated procoagulants and fibrinolytic factors have strongly suggested that local thrombin and plasmin generation may be important in tumor progression. Given that one target for both these serine proteases is fibrinogen, a logical extension of this hypothesis is that local fibrin deposition and dissolution may be key determinants of tumor growth and/or dissemination. To directly test this concept, we initiated studies of tumor growth, experimental metastasis, and spontaneous metastasis in C57Bl/6-inbred mice with and without fibrinogen. Using two established C57Bl/6-derived tumor cell lines, Lewis lung carcinoma and B16-BL6 melanoma, fibrinogen deficiency was found to strongly diminish, but not prevent, the development of lung metastases in both experimental and spontaneous metastasis assays. This difference was not a consequence of any obvious difference in tumor stroma formation or the growth of primary or secondary tumors. Rather, tumor cell fate studies argued that there is an important role of fibrin(ogen) in the sustained adhesion and/or survival of tumor cell emboli within the lung. The specific thrombin inhibitor, hirudin, was also shown to strongly diminish metastatic potential, consistent with earlier reports. More importantly, hirudin was found to further diminish the already low metastatic potential of tumor cells in fibrinogen-deficient mice. We conclude that fibrin(ogen) is a critical determinant of metastatic potential, but thrombin appears to contribute to tumor cell dissemination through at least one fibrinogen-independent mechanism. Further, these findings suggest that therapeutic strategies directed at several hemostatic factors might be useful in the suppression of metastatic disease.
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PMID:Fibrinogen and tumor cell metastasis. 1199 Apr 65

The complex process of tumor invasion requires the coordinated expression and activity of cell-substratum adhesive interactions and of cell-associated protease systems, which destroy the extracellular matrix (ECM), in order to enable the invading cells to simultaneously grip and destroy the anatomical barriers that control cell spreading. A number of data indicate that such a 'grip and go' process may be performed by an enlarging series of cell membrane-associated serine proteases and serine protease receptors, which provide the invasive cells with a functional unit (the protease and its receptor), able to mediate cell-substratum adhesion through specific receptor domains, to proteolytically degrade ECM and to deliver into the cell signals that up-regulate the expression either of the protease/receptor complex, or of other adhesion molecules, such as integrins. There is evidence that some proteases and protease receptor expression are under the control of tumor hypoxia, which is the result of an imbalance in oxygen supply and demand. The urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA) receptor (u-PAR) is under hypoxic control and cooperates with other serine proteases of the blood coagulation pathways that may extravasate in the tumor milieu as a result of hypoxia-simulated increase of vessel permeability. Other serine proteases and their receptors cooperate with the cell-associated fibrinolytic system to promote cell invasion. Among these, tissue factor and its ligand coagulation factor VII, thrombin and its protease-activated receptors, and type II trans-membrane serine proteases seem to play a crucial role. This Review takes into consideration the complex scenario of the single serine proteases and related receptors that are involved in cell invasion, as well as the protease receptor/adhesion molecule interplay which is necessary to focus the cell surface-driven proteolysis where adhesion provides a grip to the invading cell.
Clin Exp Metastasis 2002
PMID:Multiple pathways of cell invasion are regulated by multiple families of serine proteases. 1206

Osteosarcoma is a rare cancer, which metastasizes to the lung in up to 80% of cases. Thrombin is involved in metastasis and is present in the lungs of patients with pulmonary metastases (PM). To identify its role in PM and osteosarcoma, we measured thrombin levels in the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) of 15 patients. BALF was collected at different stages of the disease and correlated with the diagnosis of PM. We also assessed fibrinogen overexpression in the tumors. We found that 11/15 (73%) patients with high thrombin levels in the lungs developed PM within the first 12 months from primary surgery. The median thrombin concentration in the BALF of these patients increased up to 8x10(-9) M (range, 3x10(-9)M-15x10(-9)M), which represents a more than 100-fold increase compared to patients without PM (p<0.0001). Eight of 15 (53%) primary and 11/15 (73%) metastatic samples showed fibrinogen overexpression. A significant difference between high thrombin levels, fibrinogen overexpression and PM was found compared to patients without PM (p=0.00073 and p=0.025). These results show that thrombin levels are increased in the lungs of patients with primary osteosarcoma and a high risk of developing PM. They suggest that thrombin may be involved in the development of PM.
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PMID:Thrombin is present in the lungs of patients with primary extremity osteosarcoma and pulmonary metastases. 1240 70

Previous studies of tumor cell-associated procoagulants and fibrinolytic factors have strongly suggested that local thrombin and plasmin generation may be important in tumor growth and dissemination. Given that one central target of both of these serine proteases is fibrin(ogen), a logical extension of this hypothesis is that local fibrin deposition and dissolution may be key determinants of tumor progression. In this paper, the role of fibrin(ogen) and its degradation products in the growth and spontaneous metastasis of Lewis lung carcinoma was directly examined by comparative studies of control and fibrinogen-deficient mice. Fibrinogen deficiency was found to have no effect on the time required for the formation of palpable tumors, tumor angiogenesis, overall tumor architecture, or primary (s.c.) or secondary (pulmonary) tumor growth. However, fibrinogen deficiency markedly reduced the incidence of spontaneous macroscopic metastases in the lung and regional lymph nodes, a process that occurred relatively late in tumor development. Furthermore, a significant quantitative reduction in pulmonary micrometastases was observed in fibrinogen-deficient mice. Quantitative analyses of pulmonary micrometastases in primary tumor-bearing mice indicated that spontaneous showering of tumor cell emboli into the lung was robust, regardless of animal genotype. Hence, our results suggest fibrin(ogen) plays an important role in spontaneous metastasis, facilitating the stable adhesion and/or survival of metastatic emboli after tumor cell intravasation. These studies suggest that therapeutic strategies focusing on hemostatic factors may be effective in controlling solid tumor metastasis, particularly if used for the treatment of micrometastatic disease.
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PMID:Spontaneous hematogenous and lymphatic metastasis, but not primary tumor growth or angiogenesis, is diminished in fibrinogen-deficient mice. 1246 Sep 14

In 56 women with a lymph-node-positive breast carcinoma and 28 matched healthy control subjects, the sensitivity to activated protein C (APC-sr) was determined with an APC resistance test that quantifies the effect of APC on thrombin generation initiated via the extrinsic coagulation pathway. Carriers of the Factor V Leiden mutation were excluded from the study. Significant resistance to APC was found in the breast cancer patients: median APC-sr 2.02 vs 1.03 in the healthy control subjects (P < 0.001). No difference in APC-sr was found between patients with metastases and without metastases. In patients with metastases, protein S levels were significantly elevated compared with patients without metastases and healthy control subjects: 108.0%vs 96.0% and 94.5% (P = 0.008 and P = 0.007). The APC-sr correlated with protein S in the control subjects and in patients without metastases but not in patients with metastases. The disturbance of the haemostatic balance probed by the tissue-factor-based APC resistance test might contribute to the cancer-related hypercoagulability.
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PMID:Acquired resistance to activated protein C in breast cancer patients. 1249 86

Clustered presentation of sialyl Lewis X (sLe(X)) on tumor cell mucins is thought to facilitate metastasis through binding to selectin adhesion receptors expressed on platelets, leukocytes and endothelial cells. Thus, interfering with sLe(X) assembly might provide a chemotherapeutic method for treating metastatic disease. Prior studies have shown that peracetylated disaccharides can act in cells as substrates for the assembly of oligosaccharides related to sLe(X) synthesis, and the assembly of oligosaccharides on the disaccharides diverts the assembly of sLe(X) from endogenous cell surface glycoconjugates. Here, we show that treatment of cultured human adenocarcinoma cells with micromolar concentrations of the peracetylated disaccharide, (Ac)(6)GlcNAcbeta1,3Galbeta-O-naphthalenemethanol (AcGnG-NM) reduces the expression of sLe(X) and diminishes binding in vitro to selectin-coated dishes, thrombin-activated platelets, and tumor necrosis factor alpha-activated endothelial cells. Altering glycosylation in this way significantly reduced the ability of tumor cells to distribute to the lungs of wild-type mice over a 3-h period after i.v. injection. No significant difference in biodistribution was noted after the injection of AcGnG-NM-treated tumor cells into P-selectin deficient mice, although the extent of lung seeding was reduced compared with that in wild-type mice. In vitro, we demonstrate that normal mouse platelets, but not P-selectin-deficient platelets, bound to control tumor cells and protected them from leukocyte-mediated cytolysis. Conversely, treatment of tumor cells with disaccharide markedly reduced the ability of normal platelets to protect them from cytolysis. Finally, in an experimental metastasis model, we show that treatment of tumor cells with the disaccharide markedly reduced their lung colonization potential after injection into severe combined immunodeficient mice. These findings suggest that this compound may represent a novel class of chemotherapeutic agents for prevention and treatment of metastatic disease.
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PMID:A disaccharide precursor of sialyl Lewis X inhibits metastatic potential of tumor cells. 1278 82

Tumor/host-generated thrombin (endogenous thrombin) was investigated with tumor growth and metastasis experiments in mice by the use of hirudin, a highly potent specific inhibitor of thrombin. Pretreatment with hirudin inhibited tumor implantation in nude or syngeneic mice, following subcutaneous injection of 2 human and 2 murine tumors. Hirudin induced a considerable lag period in the appearance of tumor growth, compared with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) treatment, but had no effect on established tumor nodule growth in vivo or on tumor growth in vitro. Hirudin treatment induced central necrosis of the tumor nodule compared with no effect with PBS treatment. Greater protection was noted with longer duration of treatment. Tumor seeding into blood was examined with green fluorescent protein (GFP)-labeled tumor cells. Hirudin inhibited seeding into the blood as well as systemic organs which varied from complete protection to 15- to 32-fold in the blood and 17- to 395-fold in the lung. Hirudin inhibited spontaneous metastases from subcutaneously implanted tumor by reducing the number of tumor nodules in the lungs. Mouse survival in animals injected subcutaneously with highly aggressive 4T1 cells revealed 5 of 5 deaths of PBS-treated animals on day 40 compared with no deaths with hirudin treatment, with prolongation of survival with hirudin treatment of 16 days to more than 31 days. Thus, endogenous thrombin contributes to tumor implantation, seeding, and spontaneous metastasis. A potent antithrombin agent should be of clinical benefit to patients with cancer.
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PMID:Role of endogenous thrombin in tumor implantation, seeding, and spontaneous metastasis. 1526 91

It is well known that malignant cells show procoagulant activity, which is associated with their metastatic potential. Thrombin, the key enzyme of the blood coagulation system, is generated around tumor cells, promoting the migration and metastasis of tumor cells. In this study, we evaluated the effect of argatroban, a specific thrombin inhibitor, on the migration and metastasis of B16BL6 melanoma cells. In vitro argatroban dose-dependently inhibited cell migration, the maximum inhibition being observed in the presence of 10 microM argatroban (p < 0.0001). In order to investigate the antimetastatic effect of the thrombin inhibitor, we used an animal model that we have reported previously. C57BL6 mice which had received a bone (femur or tibia) transplanted into the dorsal subcutis were injected with B16 melanoma cells into the left heart ventricle. Intraperitoneal injection of argatroban (9 mg/kg/day for 4 weeks) significantly reduced the number of limbs with metastatic lesions as compared to a placebo (p < 0.05). These results suggest that argatroban was associated with reduced melanoma metastases by inhibiting cell migration. Our results showed that argatroban is effective for treatment of bone metastasis.
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PMID:Thrombin inhibitor, argatroban, prevents tumor cell migration and bone metastasis. 1553 22

A number of studies indicate that coagulation proteases play significant roles in cancer biology. Melanoma is a highly metastatic cancer, and there is evidence that thrombin contributes to this aggressive pattern. However, few studies correlate this type of cancer with formation of the prothrombinase complex, which is responsible for conversion of prothrombin into thrombin in the coagulation system. The aim of this study was to investigate the assembly and regulation of prothrombinase complex on the murine melanoma cell line, B16F10. B16F10 cells were unable to activate prothrombin except when previously incubated with factor Xa. This effect was dependent on factor Xa binding to cell membranes, since no activation was detected with Gla-domainless factor Xa. The thrombin formation by B16F10-bound factor Xa was enhanced approximately 10 fold in the presence of factor Va, indicating the assembly of prothrombinase complex. Differently from platelets, B16F10-assembled prothrombinase complex was inhibited by prothrombin fragment 1 but not by fragment 2. In addition, bothrojaracin, a specific ligand of proexosite I on prothrombin, caused a significant decrease in the zymogen activation. Our data demonstrate that B16F10 melanoma cells generate thrombin by promoting assembly of the prothrombinase complex. This ability might be correlated with the increased metastatic potential of this cell line. Moreover, B16F10-assembled prothrombinase complex seems to be modulated in a different way from that found for the physiological complex assembled on platelets.
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PMID:Assembly and regulation of prothrombinase complex on B16F10 melanoma cells. 1556 63

Metastasis is one of the major causes of mortality in cancer. It is well known that the activities of cell surface serine proteases are especially enhanced in malignant tumors. Proteolytic degradation of the extracellular matrix and basal membrane is a crucial event for tumor cell invasion and metastasis formation. FOY-305 (Foypan), a remedy for tumor pancreatitis, is a broad spectrum synthetic serine protease inhibitor which inhibits enzymatic activities including trypsin, thrombin, kallikrein and plasmin. Using Lewis lung carcinoma cell, we found that FOY-305 inhibited both spontaneous and experimental pulmonary metastasis. Furthermore, the combined treatment of FOY-305 and a traditional anti-cancer drug, 5-FU or bleomycin, resulted in marked enhancement of anti-pulmonary metastatic activity.
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PMID:Antimetastatic activity of a synthetic serine protease inhibitor, FOY-305 (Foypan). 1579 65


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