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)

Melanomas tend to become less pigmented in the course of malignant progression. Thus, as proliferation increases, the tumors are decreasingly characterized by the tissue-specific phenotype of normally differentiated melanocytes. To learn whether the decline in melanization is associated with a shift from constitutive to alternative splicing of some pigment gene pre-mRNAs, melanomas were collected from Tyr-SV40E transgenic mice of the standard C57BL/6 strain. The mRNAs of the tyrosinase gene, which has a key role in melanogenesis, were analyzed by quantitative reverse transcriptase-PCR in 34 samples from 16 cutaneous tumors and 9 metastases. The cutaneous tumors included some cases with distinct melanotic and amelanotic zones, which were separately analyzed. All tyrosinase transcripts found in the melanomas were also found in normal skin melanocytes. However, the Delta1b and Delta1d alternatively spliced transcripts, due to deletions within the first exon, were specifically augmented in most of the tumors over their very low levels in skin; the exceptions were some all-amelanotic tumors in which no tyrosinase transcripts were detected. The level of Delta1b rose as high as 11.3% of total tyrosinase mRNAs as compared with 0.6% in skin; Delta1d reached 4.0% as compared with 0. 8% in skin. Expression of these splice variants was highest in the melanotic components of zonal primary tumors, relatively lower in their amelanotic components, and still lower in all-amelanotic primary tumors and amelanotic metastases. The increase in Delta1b and Delta1d transcripts may be predicted to increase the levels of unusual peptides, which could have antigenic potential in the tumors, especially in the relatively early phases of malignancy. Analyses of the alternative transcripts of other pigment genes may identify additional candidate antigens, ultimately enabling melanoma cells in all phases of the disease to be represented as a basis for immune intervention.
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PMID:Selective increase in specific alternative splice variants of tyrosinase in murine melanomas: a projected basis for immunotherapy. 914 37

Cutaneous malignant melanomas in cats, both melanotic and amelanotic, were diagnosed in 57 of 1.530 skin tumors during the period 1991-1995. All melanomas occurred in domestic shorthaircats of ages 3-19 years (mean = 11.5 years). Postmortem examination was performed on 16 cats. All had metastases in the regional lymph node and several organ systems. The average time of survival after surgical removal of the tumor was 4.5 months. Histologically, five types of melanomas could be distinguished: epithelioid, spindle, mixed, signet-ring, and balloon cell. Whereas all epithelioid, spindle, and mixed epithelioid/spindle cell types showed pigmentation, signet-ring and balloon cell types were often amelanotic. Immunohistochemical examination of the melanomas revealed a positive staining for S-100, vimentin, and neuron-specific enolase. The melanomas were negative for muscle cell markers, except in some of the signet-ring cell melanomas; 13 of 21 tumors showed a weak positive staining for polyclonal desmin. Electron microscopic examination of signet-ring cell melanomas revealed an abundance of intermediate filaments, whereas in some of these tumors a few cells with melanosomes were found. Nonisotopic in situ hybridization for mRNA encoding for tyrosinase verified the melanocytic origin of the amelanotic signet-ring and balloon cell melanomas.
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PMID:Cutaneous malignant melanomas in 57 cats: identification of (amelanotic) signet-ring and balloon cell types and verification of their origin by immunohistochemistry, electron microscopy, and in situ hybridization. 915 May 43

In recent years, it has become evident that T cells can recognize peptides of melanocytic lineage antigens such as gp100, MART-1, and tyrosinase at the tumor cell surface and can subsequently destroy these cells. It is thus feasible to develop immunotherapeutic approaches based on the melanocytic marker profiles of melanoma cells. One of the predictors of the success rate of such a treatment is the extent of positive (target) tumor cells within the lesions of the patient. First, we investigated the presence of these three proteins in 18 human melanoma cell lines using RT-PCR and immunohistochemistry. In 11 cell lines, mRNA and protein of all three markers could be detected; in one cell line, only two markers were present, and six melanoma cell lines showed no evidence for these markers. Secondly, we stained frozen sections of 105 human melanocytic lesions, 13 common nevocellular nevi, 13 atypical nevi, 13 early primary melanomas (Breslow < 1.5 mm), 25 advanced primary melanomas (aPM; Breslow > or =1.5 mm), and 41 melanoma metastases (MM) with antibodies against glycoprotein 100, melanoma antigen recognized by T cells, and tyrosinase. In addition, we used the 3,4-dihydroxy-L-phenylalanine reaction to detect tyrosinase enzyme activity as a confirmation of the tyrosinase immunohistochemical results in a subset of the lesions. In the benign lesions, glycoprotein 100 was more prominently expressed in epidermal melanocytes, whereas melanoma antigen recognized by T cells was encountered in all or nearly all dermal melanocytes in all nevocellular nevi and atypical nevus lesions. Tyrosinase was found in a lower percentage of melanocytes, both in the epidermis and in the dermis within these lesions. With regard to heterogeneity of staining within the malignant lesions, we found that 54% (early primary melanomas), 48% (aPMs), and 56% (MM) of the lesions stained within the same staining category for all three proteins studied. Approximately 17% of the aPM and MM lesions did not show positive tumor cells for any of the three proteins. We conclude that a subgroup of patients with high expression should be selected for immunotherapeutic treatment approaches based on the presence of these proteins.
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PMID:Heterogeneous expression of immunotherapy candidate proteins gp100, MART-1, and tyrosinase in human melanoma cell lines and in human melanocytic lesions. 924 53

The incidence of malignant melanoma continues to rise steadily in the United States, with approximately 40,300 new cases expected in 1997. A significant number of patients with deep primary lesions or regional lymph node metastases are at high risk for developing recurrent, metastatic disease despite adequate surgical intervention. Therefore, approaches to adjuvant therapy including immunotherapy, such as interferon, levamisole, and vaccines and chemotherapy and chemoimmunotherapy have been investigated in high-risk patients. The key adjuvant trials are reviewed, with emphasis placed on randomized trials. High-dose interferon-alpha has recently been shown to modestly improve disease-free and overall survival in a prospective randomized trial of high-risk patients and has been approved by the FDA for this indication. Vaccines, which currently remain experimental, may prove to be equally effective but less toxic options for adjuvant therapy. Also, the identification of more high-risk patients who might benefit from adjuvant therapy may be facilitated by sentinel lymph node biopsy and the reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction for tyrosinase.
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PMID:Adjuvant therapy of malignant melanoma. 930 94

Malignant cutaneous melanomas and metastases were taken directly from in situ lesions of genetically identical (C57BL/6 strain) Tyr-SV40E transgenic mice, and samples were analyzed by Western immunoblotting with antisera specific for the COOH terminus of each of four melanocytic proteins. These were tyrosinase, TRP-1, TRP-2, and Pmel 17/silver. Of the 13 melanomas examined, there were 5 melanotic primary tumors, 5 amelanotic primary tumors, and 3 amelanotic metastases. The melanotic tumors expressed all of the markers to some extent. In contrast, the amelanotic tumors lacked detectable levels of one, two, or three of the proteins, except for an apparently amelanotic tumor sample in which all were expressed, but in which some melanotic cells were likely to have been present. Thus, despite some variability, there is clearly a downward trend in the presence of these proteins as the tumors become amelanotic, a pigmentary change associated with ongoing malignant progression. In the amelanotic tumors, tyrosinase was most often deficient, whereas TRP-2 was most often persistently expressed. These results, obtained from melanomas of syngeneic origin, indicate that tumors in the relatively early stages of malignancy might be more responsive than later-stage tumors to immunotherapy involving an ensemble of antigenic peptides of the tested gene products. Moreover, TRP-2 peptides may be especially useful for therapeutic intervention at the later stages.
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PMID:Comparative decreases in tyrosinase, TRP-1, TRP-2, and Pmel 17/silver antigenic proteins from melanotic to amelanotic stages of syngeneic mouse cutaneous melanomas and metastases. 953 58

The presence of regional lymph node metastases is one of the most significant prognostic factors for predicting survival in patients with clinical stage I or II cutaneous melanoma. For accurate staging of the primary tumor a sensitive technique is required to detect occult nodal micrometastases. This prospective diagnostic study was designed to evaluate the incidence of nodal micrometastases using nested reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) for tyrosinase in comparison to immunohistochemical examination. Furthermore, the incidence of melanoma micrometastases detected by RT-PCR was analysed in correlation to major prognostic factors. A total of 466 regional lymph nodes from 79 patients with primary cutaneous melanoma (tumor thickness > 0.75 mm) were investigated. In 49 lymph nodes from 31 patients immunohistochemistry demonstrated melanoma metastases. Using tyrosinase RT-PCR, nodal micrometastases were detected in 136 lymph nodes from 52 patients including all lymph nodes positive by immunohistochemical examination. Out of the 417 lymph nodes negative by immunohistochemistry, 87 nodes (21%) were identified to express tyrosinase by the RT-PCR technique. Among the 48 patients negative by immunohistochemical assessment, 21 (44%) had nodal micrometastases (n = 40) using RT-PCR. All 68 lymph nodes from 46 non-melanoma patients serving as negative controls for tyrosinase RT-PCR were negative. The detection of melanocytic nodal micrometastases by tyrosinase RT-PCR is a highly specific method with a sensitivity significantly higher than that achieved by immunohistochemistry (p < 0.0001). Patients with nodal micrometastases identified exclusively by RT-PCR had significantly higher tumor thickness as compared to patients with negative results by RT-PCR (p < 0.01).
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PMID:Lymph node micrometastases of cutaneous melanoma: increased sensitivity of molecular diagnosis in comparison to immunohistochemistry. 969 21

The authors retrospectively tested the potential value of paraffin-reactive monoclonal antibodies (A103 against melan-A, T311 against tyrosinase) and antibody KBA62 as immunohistochemical markers for amelanotic metastatic melanomas. The study cases included 72 amelanotic metastases of known cutaneous melanomas, 59 poorly differentiated carcinomas, 73 sarcomas of varying histogenesis, 4 Leydig cell tumors, 10 high-grade lymphomas, and 6 plasmoblastic/anaplastic myelomas. The results were compared with immunostainings for S-100 protein and HMB-45. HMB-45, antimelan-A, and antityrosinase showed almost identical staining results, with a sensitivity of 0.85 for HMB-45 and of 0.86 for both antimelan-A and for antityrosinase. HMB-45 and antityrosinase both had a specificity of 1.00; the specificity of antimelan-A was 0.95 as a result of a positive reaction in three of three adrenocortical carcinomas and four of four Leydig cell tumors. KBA62 stainings resulted in a sensitivity of 0.86 for melanomas. A positive immunoreactivity of KBA62 alone had a specificity of only 0.83, but in conjunction with anti-S-100 protein (sensitivity, 1.00; specificity, 0.87) and anticytokeratin 8/18/19 (CK), a KBA62+/S-100+/CK- immunophenotype identified all except one of the melanoma cases that were negative for the three melanocyte-specific markers with a specificity of 0.99. In conclusion, we found comparable immunohistochemical sensitivities of HMB-45, antityrosinase, and antimelan-A for a highly specific identification of approximately 85% of amelanotic metastatic melanomas on paraffin sections. Melanomas that were negative for all of these specific markers might be sensitively and specifically detected with anti-S-100 protein and KBA62.
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PMID:Tyrosinase, melan-A, and KBA62 as markers for the immunohistochemical identification of metastatic amelanotic melanomas on paraffin sections. 972 May 2

Expression of HLA class I molecules is essential for the recognition of tumor cells by CD8+ T cells. In this study, 48 bioptic samples of 42 patients in all stages of melanoma were investigated after short-time cultivation of tumor cells. To confirm melanocytic origin of cultured cells, samples were screened for mRNA expression of melanoma markers gp100, tyrosinase, MAGE-3, MelanA, and MUC18 by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction. Surface expression of specific HLA-A and -B allospecificities on melanoma cells were analyzed with a standard microcytotoxicity assay after stimulation with interferon (IFN)-alpha and compared with the background found in peripheral blood mononuclear cells from the corresponding patients. Immunohistochemistry and flow cytometry confirmed specific losses in cases where the appropriate monoclonal antibodies were available. The level of expression of HLA-I, HLA-II, and intercellular adhesion molecule 1 antigens on melanoma cells cultured in the presence or absence of IFN-alpha and IFN-gamma was determined cytofluorometrically. All cell cultures tested were found to be positive for one or more melanocytic markers by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction. The specific HLA-I alleles on the cultured cells were detectable in 45 of 48 samples. In 11 cases a specific loss of one HLA-I allele was observed (2 x A2, B7, B8, B18, 4XB44, B47, B49). Ten of these samples were derived from locoregional lymphnode metastases or from distant metastatic tumors. Only one sample from a primary melanoma showed a specific loss of HLA-I (B47). IFN-alpha upregulated expression of HLA-I up to 4-fold. IFN-gamma enhanced the appearance of HLA-II up to 35-fold and the expression of intercellular adhesion molecule 1 up to 40-fold. Selective loss of HLA-I allospecificities might be a major step in tumor progression.
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PMID:Higher frequency of selective losses of HLA-A and -B allospecificities in metastasis than in primary melanoma lesions. 974 Feb 47

It has recently been shown that tumor-associated antigens (TAAs) can evoke tumor-specific T-cell-defined immune responses in cancer patients, thereby offering the possibility of treating patients with such antigens. To develop T-cell-based immunotherapeutic approaches for renal cell carcinoma (RCC), we studied the mRNA expression profile of the TAAs RAGE-1, tyrosinase, MAGE-1, MAGE-2, NY-ESO-1, Melan-A/MART-1, glycoprotein (gp) 75, gp100, beta-catenin, PRAME, and MUM-1 in 14 human RCC cell lines and in tissue specimens of 37 primary RCCs, 2 related metastases, and 33 specimens of normal renal epithelium. Reverse transcription-PCR was performed with TAA-reactive primers, and the specificity of the PCR products was confirmed by Southern blot and/or direct sequencing. PRAME (10 of 14 cell lines), RAGE-1 (7 of 14 cell lines), and gp75 (4 of 14 cell lines) antigens were expressed in a high percentage of RCC cell lines, although the level of TAA expression varied among the different RCC cell lines. However, low levels of TAA expression in RCC cells are sufficient for recognition by TAA-specific CTLs. Transcription of tyrosinase, Melan-A/MART-1, MAGE-1, MAGE-2, NY-ESO-1, gp100, beta-catenin, and MUM-1 was not detected in any RCC cell line. Approximately 50% of surgically removed neoplasias expressed at least one TAA. RAGE-1 mRNA expression was found in 8 of 39 (21%) RCC samples, PRAME mRNA expression was found in 15 of 39 (40%) RCC samples, and gp75 mRNA expression was found in 4 of 39 (11%) RCC samples, but the expression levels of these TAAs were heterogeneous in the different RCC lesions. One RCC specimen expressed MAGE-2, whereas transcription was not detected in any RCC specimen for MAGE-1, NY-ESO-1, tyrosinase, Melan-A/MART-1, gp100, beta-catenin, and MUM-1. The normal kidney epithelium samples were negative for any TAA tested. Thus, RAGE-1, PRAME, and gp75 expression is found with a different frequency in surgically removed lesions and in RCC cell lines, suggesting that a subgroup of RCC patients could be selected for immunotherapeutic strategies that may benefit from immunization against the RAGE-1, gp75, and/or PRAME antigens. However, additional targets for T-cell-based immunotherapy of RCC have yet to be identified.
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PMID:Heterogeneous expression of the tumor-associated antigens RAGE-1, PRAME, and glycoprotein 75 in human renal cell carcinoma: candidates for T-cell-based immunotherapies? 975 17

In the treatment of cutaneous melanoma, provisional therapeutic strategies have been designed to combat tumour load using T cells that are sensitized with peptides derived from melanoma autoantigens, such as glycoprotein 100 (gp100), melanoma antigen recognized by T cells 1 (MART-1 or MelanA), tyrosinase and tyrosinase-related protein 1 (TRP-1). We recently found that gp100, MART-1 and tyrosinase are heterogeneously expressed in human cutaneous melanoma (De Vries et al (1997) Cancer Res 57: 3223-3229). Here, we extended our investigations on expression of these immunotherapy candidate proteins to uveal melanoma lesions. Cryostat sections from 11 spindle-type, 21 mixed and epithelioid tumours and four metastasis lesions were stained with antibodies specifically recognizing gp100, MART-1, tyrosinase and TRP-1. In addition, we used the DOPA reaction to detect tyrosinase enzyme activity as a confirmation of the tyrosinase immunohistochemical results. High expression of gp100, MART-1 and tyrosinase was found in the uveal melanoma lesions: 80% of the lesions displayed 75-100% positive tumour cells. TRP-1 positivity was slightly less: approximately 65% of the lesions stained in the 75-100% positive tumour cell category. All uveal melanoma lesions were positive for the four markers studied, this being in contrast to cutaneous melanoma where 17% of the advanced primary lesions and metastases were negative. The presence of these antigens was a little lower in metastases. We conclude that uveal melanomas and their metastases express melanocyte-lineage immunotherapy candidate proteins very abundantly. Uveal melanomas differ in this respect from cutaneous melanoma, in which the expression of these immunotherapy antigens was much more heterogeneous. This makes uveal melanoma a suitable candidate tumour for immunotherapeutic approaches.
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PMID:High expression of immunotherapy candidate proteins gp100, MART-1, tyrosinase and TRP-1 in uveal melanoma. 982 Jan 72


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