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)

The expression of the cell-cell adhesion molecule E-cadherin has previously been shown to be reduced in poorly differentiated squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck and absent in nodal metastases. Twenty-eight patients with previously untreated squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck, 22 of whom had nodal metastases at presentation, were investigated for E-cadherin expression using the monoclonal antibody 6F9, specific for human E-cadherin. Reduced expression was seen in the poorly differentiated primary tumours, compared with well differentiated tumours, but this trend was not statistically significant. E-cadherin expression was present at a reduced level in nodal metastases. It was also noted that, where both the primary tumour and corresponding nodal metastasis were investigated, E-cadherin expression was identical for both samples. The degree of E-cadherin expression did not correlate with survival. These data confirm a reduction in E-cadherin expression in poorly differentiated tumours. There was no correlation between E-cadherin expression and any of the host, tumour and treatment factors associated with malignancies of the head and neck region.
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PMID:Expression of the cell-cell adhesion molecule E-cadherin in squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck. 836 8

The cell adhesion molecule (CAM) L1 is involved in homotypic and heterotypic adhesion between neural cells. It has recently also been identified on leucocytes. We have investigated the expression of L1 on hematopoietic tumor cell lines and found that several tumors including the ESb-MP lymphoma are positive for L1. A potential role for L1 in spontaneous metastasis formation was examined using these cells. From wild-type (wt) L1high lymphoma cells we selected by a fluorescence-activated cell sorter (FACS) stable L1low expression variants. Syngeneic DBA/2 mice injected subcutaneously with L1low clones showed faster primary tumor growth, developed visceral metastases significantly faster and died earlier than animals carrying L1high wt cells. L1 high revertants from the L1low variants showed again a reduced metastatic capacity and a malignancy similar to the wt cells. Expression of L1 on the tumor variants and revertants correlated directly with their homotypic aggregation behaviour in vitro. L1 expression correlated negatively with metastatic capacity. These results suggest that L1 molecules may contribute to the overall malignant potential of the lymphoma cells, presumably by interfering with cell-cell interactions critical for tumor growth and dissemination.
Clin Exp Metastasis 1993 Sep
PMID:Expression of L1 cell adhesion molecule is associated with lymphoma growth and metastasis. 837 17

The cell-cell adhesion molecule E-cadherin has been shown to suppress invasive growth of epithelial cells in vitro, and loss of its expression is thought to be important in invasion and metastatic potential of epithelial tumors in vivo. We retrospectively studied the level of E-cadherin expression in 50 primary head and neck squamous-cell carcinomas (HNSCC) by immunohistochemical methods, on frozen sections, using anti-E-cadherin monoclonal antibody (MAb) 6F9. It concerned patients with different stages of carcinoma of larynx or oral cavity who had been treated with curative intention 30 months or more before. Percentages of membranous stained tumor cells were scored in 1 of 5 categories. Scores were generally low, as in 11/50 lesions < or = 5% cells were stained, and in 19/50 lesions only 6-25% cells showed membranous staining. In 9 lymph-node metastases evaluated, E-cadherin expression was in the same range as in the primary tumors. There was a significant correlation between the level of membranous E-cadherin expression in the primary tumor and the degree of differentiation. No relation was found with tumor size (pT) or regional lymph-node classification (pN). Nevertheless, 29 patients surviving > or = 30 months without evidence of disease had significantly higher levels of membranous E-cadherin expression in their primary tumors than 10 patients with unfavorable clinical course clearly related to recurrent and/or metastatic HNSCC. Moreover, this could only partially be explained by distinctions in differentiation grade between both groups. Our results suggest that membranous E-cadherin expression has prognostic importance in patients with HNSCC.
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PMID:E-cadherin expression in head and neck squamous-cell carcinoma is associated with clinical outcome. 840 85

A recently described splice variant of CD44 expressed in metastasizing cell lines of rat tumors has been shown to confer metastatic potential to a non-metastasizing rat pancreatic carcinoma cell line and to non-metastasizing sarcoma cells. Homologues of this variant as well as several other CD44 splice variants are also expressed at the RNA level in human carcinoma cell lines from lung, breast, and colon, and in immortalized keratinocytes. Using antibodies raised against a bacterial fusion protein encoded by variant CD44 sequences, we studied the expression of variant CD44 glycoproteins in normal human tissues and in colorectal neoplasia. Expression of CD44 variant proteins in normal human tissues was readily found on several epithelial tissues including the squamous epithelia of the epidermis, tonsils, and pharynx, and the glandular epithelium of the pancreatic ducts, but was largely absent from other epithelia and from most non-epithelial cells and tissues. In human colorectal neoplasia CD44 variant proteins, including homologues of those which confer metastatic ability to rat tumors, were found on all invasive carcinomas and carcinoma metastases. Interestingly, focal expression was also observed in adenomatous polyps, expression being related to areas of dysplasia. The distribution of the CD44 variants in human tissues suggests that they play a role in a few restricted differentiation pathways and that in colorectal tumors one of these pathways has been reactivated. The finding that metastasis-related variants are already expressed at a relatively early stage in colorectal carcinogenesis and tumor progression, i.e., in adenomatous polyps, suggests the existence of a yet unknown selective advantage linked to CD44 variant expression. The continued expression in metastases would be compatible with a role in the metastatic process.
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PMID:A human homologue of the rat metastasis-associated variant of CD44 is expressed in colorectal carcinomas and adenomatous polyps. 841 89

Lu-ECAM-1 is a 90-kDa lectin-like, melanoma-cell-binding endothelial-cell adhesion molecule that mediates colonization of the lungs by B16-F10 melanoma cells. The well-known formation of pleural and sub-pleural B16-F10 melanoma colonies is correlated quantitatively with prominent histochemical staining of endothelia of pleural capillaries and sub-pleural venules with anti-Lu-ECAM-1 MAb 6D3. The less frequent endothelial staining of perivenous and peribronchial venules is associated with fewer B16-F10 colonies in these locations, and the occasional segmental staining of pulmonary veins coincides with rare tumor nodules which usually expand in an asymmetric fashion around these veins. Lu-ECAM-1 is also expressed on endothelia of some tumor vessels, indicating that these vessels are recruited from the same host blood vessels that originally caused the arrest of blood-borne B16-F10 melanoma cells. The close association between the lung distribution patterns of Lu-ECAM-1-positive blood vessels and experimental melanoma metastases is further evidence of the importance of endothelial-cell adhesion molecules in the formation of metastases.
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PMID:Correlation between the lung distribution patterns of Lu-ECAM-1 and melanoma experimental metastases. 843 36

Expression of the epithelial cell adhesion molecule E-cadherin in primary and metastatic gastric carcinoma was examined using immunohistochemical analyses. Compared to normal mucosa, 92% of the primary tumors (n = 60) showed reduced E-cadherin expression, suggesting that down-regulation of this cell adhesion molecule is a common early event in gastric tumorigenesis. No significant correlation was found between E-cadherin expression and tumor diameter, lymphatic vessel invasion, Borrmann classification, lymph node status, or manifest metastases. Although advanced tumors (tumor stage 3/4) showed a loss of E-cadherin-positive cells (< or = 50% cells/lesion, P = 0.0168), the most significant correlation was observed between low E-cadherin expression and cellular dedifferentiation (grading 3/4, P = 0.0001) and disintegration of tissue architecture (Lauren and WHO classifications, P = 0.0001). Low E-cadherin expression (< or = 50% cells/lesion) was associated with tumor recurrence (P = 0.0013) and mortality (P = 0.0246). E-cadherin expression in metastatic lesions (n = 58) also correlated with the degree of glandular differentiation (P = 0.0001). Significant correlation (rs = 0.686) was observed between E-cadherin expression in primary and metastatic lesions from individual patients (n = 39). However, while metastases derived from E-cadherin-negative tumors remained negative, those originating from E-cadherin-positive tumors frequently demonstrated increased levels of expression. Evaluation of multiple metastases in 11 patients revealed uniformly strong E-cadherin expression in liver metastases, suggesting a possible regulatory role of the microenvironment.
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PMID:E-cadherin expression in primary and metastatic gastric cancer: down-regulation correlates with cellular dedifferentiation and glandular disintegration. 845 43

Renal cell carcinoma is known to metastasize early independent of tumour grade. Invasion of the renal vein plays an important role in the prognosis. Cell adhesion molecules have been investigated, including the expression of alpha-2, alpha-5, and alpha-6 integrin, E-cadherin, neural-cell adhesion molecule and CD-44 in 34 renal cell carcinomas, using the alkaline phosphatase-anti-alkaline phosphatase technique. Our results indicate a differential expression of these cell adhesion molecules (alpha-2, alpha-5 and E-cadherin) depending on histological type and tumour grade.
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PMID:Expression of cell adhesion molecules alpha-2, alpha-5 and alpha-6 integrin, E-cadherin, N-CAM and CD-44 in renal cell carcinomas. An immunohistochemical study. 849 78

Cell adhesion receptors (eg, integrins and CD44) play an important role in invasion and metastasis during tumor progression. The increase in integrin alpha 4 beta 1 expression on primary melanomas has been reported to significantly correlate with the development of metastases. alpha 4 beta 1 is a cell surface heterodimer that mediates cell-cell and cell-extracellular matrix interactions through adhesion to vascular cell adhesion molecule (VCAM)-1 and to the IIICS region of fibronectin. To test the effects of alpha 4 beta 1 expression on tumor cell metastasis, Chinese hamster ovary cells were transfected with human alpha 4 cDNA. Whereas alpha 4-negative Chinese hamster ovary cells developed only pulmonary metastasis, alpha 4-positive Chinese hamster ovary cells developed bone and pulmonary metastasis in 3 to 4 weeks when injected intravenously into nude mice. Bone metastasis was inhibited by antibody against alpha 4 or VCAM-1. Expression of alpha 3 beta 1, alpha 6 beta 1, or alpha V beta 1 did not induce bone metastasis. Expression of alpha 4 beta 1 also induced bone metastasis in K562 human erythroleukemia cells injected into SCID mice. These results demonstrate that alpha 4 beta 1 can induce tumor cell trafficking to bone, probably via interaction with VCAM-1 that is constitutively expressed on bone marrow stromal cells.
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PMID:Induction of experimental bone metastasis in mice by transfection of integrin alpha 4 beta 1 into tumor cells. 854 26

To determine the potential prognostic value of epithelial cadherin (E-cadherin), a Ca(2+)-dependent cell-cell adhesion molecule, we have analysed its immunoreactivity and cellular localisation in 67 transitional cell carcinomas (TCC) using an avidin-biotin immunoperoxidase technique on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissues. These results were correlated with histopathological grade, tumour stage, presence of metastases and survival. In addition, 10 cystitis and 11 normal bladder biopsies were evaluated as controls. E-cadherin was expressed in a normal membranous pattern in all normal and 7 of 10 cystitis biopsies. Loss of normal surface E-cadherin expression was found in 3 of 15 superficial tumours and in 48 of 52 invasive cancers. Abnormal immunoreactivity was strictly related to tumour differentiation and stage. Fifteen of 20 well-differentiated (grade I) tumours showed preserved membranous E-cadherin immunoreactivity, while 46 of 47 moderate and poorly differentiated tumours (grades II and III) demonstrated abnormal staining patterns. Loss of membranous E-cadherin immunoreactivity was also associated with advanced tumour stage. There was a significantly higher 5-year survival rate for patients with preserved membranous staining compared with patients with abnormal staining.
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PMID:E-cadherin expression in bladder cancer using formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissues: correlation with histopathological grade, tumour stage and survival. 855 Feb 36

The CD44 antigen (ECMRIII, Hermes antigen) is a highly glycosylated cell-surface polypeptide involved in diverse cellular functions, including cell adhesion and lymphocyte-homing receptor activity. CD44 is also expressed in vivo by several tumors, including astrocytomas, meningiomas, and colonic adenocarcinomas. In addition, it has been shown that expression of CD44 appears to confer metastatic potential to cell lines derived from certain adenocarcinomas. In the skin, CD44 is normally expressed in epidermal keratinocytes and hair follicular, sebaceous, and eccrine epithelial cells. However, there have been few data with regard to the expression in vivo of CD44 in primary cutaneous neoplasms. Furthermore, there have not been studies in vivo of the possible differential expression of CD44 in primary versus metastatic tumors in the skin. We have examined by immunohistochemistry the expression of CD44 in cutaneous invasive and metastatic squamous cell carcinomas, metastatic adenocarcinomas, and basal cell carcinomas. All invasive and metastatic squamous cell carcinomas, as well as metastatic adenocarcinomas, strongly expressed CD44; however, basal cell carcinomas were nonreactive or showed only focal, minimal reactivity. Adjacent normal skin demonstrated CD44 immunoreactivity throughout the epidermis, including the basal layer. In addition, hair follicles and sebaceous and eccrine glands expressed CD44. The results suggest that expression of CD44 in these cutaneous epithelial tumors is not related to malignant transformation, but instead may be related to tumor progression and the ability to metastasize.
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PMID:Differential expression of CD44 in malignant cutaneous epithelial neoplasms. 859 48


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