Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027651 (tumor)
685,946 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The promoter/regulatory region of the bovine CYP11A (P-450scc) gene was cloned from a bovine genomic library. One major start site of transcription was identified by primer extension analysis with a minor start site four nucleotides further upstream. A putative TATA box is located at position -31, and at position -68 resides a putative binding site for the transcription factor Sp1. Transient transfection of chimeric reporter gene constructs into mouse adrenal tumor Y1 cells was used to locate regions within the P-450scc 5'-flanking sequences that are important for basal and cAMP-dependent transcription of the reporter genes. While cAMP-dependent accumulation of mRNA derived from expression of the endogenous bovine P-450scc gene can be inhibited by protein synthesis inhibitors, transcription of reporter gene constructs containing the promoter/regulatory region of the P-450scc gene is not affected by cycloheximide following transient transfection of Y1 cells or primary bovine adrenocortical cells. Basal expression of these constructs as well as cAMP responsiveness is reduced upon deletion of sequences between -186 and -101, further deletion to -50 leading to loss of virtually all the remaining cAMP responsiveness. The sequence between -183 and -83 alone will direct both basal and cAMP-enhanced transcription when fused to a heterologous promoter and is equally active in either the correct or reverse orientation. No homology to the consensus cAMP-responsive element (CRE) or AP-2 binding site is found in this region whereas an activator protein 1-like sequence is found at position -116. It is concluded that the cAMP responsiveness of P-450scc gene expression is mediated by sequences different from canonical consensus regulatory elements. Whether or not there are sequences conferring cAMP responsiveness which are common both to P-450scc and the other steroidogenic P-450 genes remains to be established.
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PMID:Characterization of the promoter/regulatory region of the bovine CYP11A (P-450scc) gene. Basal and cAMP-dependent expression. 215 74

A pancreatic alpha-like cell line has been established from a glucagonoma arising in transgenic mice expressing a hybrid gene consisting of the rat glucagon-promoter sequence fused to the sequence encoding the SV40 T-antigen oncoprotein. The alpha-tumor cell 1 (alpha TC1) line maintained many characteristics of differentiated alpha-cells for greater than 40 passages in culture and expressed levels of glucagon mRNA 5- to 10-fold higher than those reported previously in rat and hamster islet cell lines. By radioimmunoassay, the cells synthesized considerable amounts of glucagon, glucagonlike peptide I (GLP-I), the major proglucagon fragment, and small amounts of unprocessed proglucagon but no free GLP-II. This distribution of peptides is similar to that found in extracts of rodent pancreases and is distinct from that seen with other islet cell lines, which process proglucagon in patterns more characteristic of intestinal cells. The GLP-I peptide in the alpha TC1 cell line was in the form of GLP-I-(1-37), which is inactive as a stimulator of insulin secretion, and not GLP-I-7-37) or -(7-36)-amide peptides, both of which are potent insulin secretagogues. The alpha TC1 cell line produced glucagon-related peptides in a relatively uniform pattern by immunocytochemistry, and electron microscopy revealed typical alpha-type (glucagon) secretory granules. Although the cell line was derived from an islet tumor producing only glucagon, the alpha TC1 cell line also produced insulin in addition to the glucagon peptides.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Proglucagon processing similar to normal islets in pancreatic alpha-like cell line derived from transgenic mouse tumor. 215 40

Tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) gene expression is regulated by the tumor-promoting phorbol ester, phorbol-12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA), by cyclic AMP analogues, and the cAMP agonist, forskolin. Based on nuclear "run-on" transcription assays, t-PA expression is modulated by PMA on the level of transcription. 8-Bromo-cyclic AMP and forskolin do not induce t-PA gene transcription alone but act synergistically with PMA. These effects are confirmed by transient expression assays in HeLa cells employing deletion mutants of the t-PA gene promoter fused to the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) reporter gene. Constitutive expression and most of the PMA-mediated induction requires sequences downstream of position -145. DNase I protection ("footprint") analysis of this region reveals two protein-binding sites: one between position -102 and -115, differing from the consensus sequence of the cAMP-responsive element (CRE) by the substitution of an adenine for a guanine in the middle of the core motif (TGACATCA), and another, located in the first exon (between position +60 and +74), displaying homology to the consensus sequence of the activator protein 2- (AP-2) binding site (CCCCACCCCC). Base substitutions in the core of either the CRE-like element or the AP-2 site suppress constitutive CAT expression by over 80%, whereas the relative PMA- and PMA plus cAMP-mediated responses are retained. CAT expression is below the detection limit when both elements are mutagenized together. Hence, the CRE-like element and the exon-located AP-2-binding site have a cooperative impact on basal transcription, but each element can independently convey the effect of activators of the protein kinase C- and A-dependent pathways of signal transduction. The results of band-shift analysis and competition titration experiments demonstrate that the CRE-like element acts as a low affinity binding site for the same proteins which recognize the authentic CRE.
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PMID:A DNA motif related to the cAMP-responsive element and an exon-located activator protein-2 binding site in the human tissue-type plasminogen activator gene promoter cooperate in basal expression and convey activation by phorbol ester and cAMP. 216 21

We raised monoclonal antibody (MAb) against a synthetic oligopeptide corresponding to a portion of the predicted v-abl protein sequence (379-390). This MAb reacted with all of the abl-gene products (p145c-abl, p150c-abl and p210bcr-abl fused protein) and was not specific for any one of them. Immunocytochemically, we investigated the expression and localization of the abl-gene products in various leukemic cell lines. Positive immunoreactions were observed in Ph1 positive leukemic cell lines (K562 and KU-812) and erythro-leukemic cell lines (HEL and K3D) and were located on the cell membrane. Electron microscopically, a different distribution pattern was observed among the cell lines: linear and almost even in Ph1 positive leukemic cell lines, whereas spotted or budding-like in erythroleukemic cell lines. Ph1 translocation produces p210bcr-abl fused protein with not only altered autophosphorylation activities but also altered subcellular distribution patterns.
Med Oncol Tumor Pharmacother 1990
PMID:Immunocytochemical evaluation of abl-gene products in leukemic cell lines. 218 21

Murine monoclonal antibody FEN-1 was derived by immunizing Balb/c mice with an affinity-purified endometrioid ovarian cancer-associated antigen recovered from ascites-derived immune complexes. Splenic lymphocytes from the immunized mouse were fused with the myeloma cells SP2/0-AG14 in the presence of PEG 1500. The hybrid cultures were screened for production of immunoglobulins reactive with an extract preparation of an endometrioid ovarian tumor by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and flow cytometry. One of the hybrids secretes a monoclonal antibody of the IgG3 subtype designated FEN-1, which reacts with 100% of endometrioid ovarian cancer containing adenoacanthoma by indirect immunoperoxidase on paraffin-embedded tissue. No detectable levels of antigen were found in squamous metaplasia associated with nonendometrioid tumors, and no reactivity occurred against endometrial adenocarcinomas, endometriosis, or normal ovary and endometrium. The antibody does not cross-react with mucinous tumors, nonepithelial tumors of the ovary, or gastrointestinal tissue. This antibody may be used as an aid in the diagnosis of nonmucinous ovarian carcinomas by immunohistology.
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PMID:Immunohistochemical characterization of a monoclonal antibody detecting an endometrioid ovarian cancer-associated antigen. 219 40

Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) is a novel tool for the in vitro amplification of DNA segments up to several kb. Repeated cycles of DNA synthesis by heat-stable Taq DNA polymerase enables to obtain more than 10(5) copies of the target sequence. Recently its enormous attitude of amplification has been applied for the detection of tumor-specific gene alterations. Examples include the detection of point mutation of RAS oncogenes at codons 12, 13, and 61 and the detection of minimal residual neoplastic cells in patients in complete clinical remission. Among many kinds of tumor specific gene translocations, BCR-ABL gene in t(9;22)(q34;q11) and BCL-2-IgH gene in t(14:18)(q32;q21) have been successfully PCR-amplified around their fused regions. In lymphoid malignancies gene rearrangements of T cell receptor chain or immunoglobulin heavy chain can be used as clonal markers for leukemic cells. PCR technique permits the detection of leukemia DNA at dilution of 10(-4) to 10(-6). Although further investigation of patients' follow-up in large scale is needed, this technique seems to hold promise for the monitoring of residual neoplastic cells.
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PMID:[Polymerase chain reaction (PCR)--a novel tool for the molecular diagnosis of neoplasms]. 220 61

Neuroblastomas often show amplification and high expression of the N-myc oncogene. N-myc expression could be explained as a consequence of gene amplification, but an alternative possibility is that expression primarily results from the inactivation or loss of some factor that normally represses the N-myc gene. To test this idea, we fused N-myc-overexpressing neuroblastoma cell lines with lines that do not express N-myc. In the resulting hybrids, N-myc expression turned out to be switched off, although amplified N-myc copies were still present. This suggests that N-myc overexpression in neuroblastomas results, at least in part, from the inactivation of a suppressor gene that is present in normal cells. In rat neuroblastomas, it has been found that N-myc can switch off class I major histocompatibility complex (MHC) expression. Therefore, we analyzed in our hybrid cells whether suppression of N-myc results in reexpression of human class I MHC genes. Because this was found to be the case, the picture emerges of a hierarchic pathway that connects a putative tumor-suppressor gene with the expression of N-myc and consequently of class I MHC, thus affecting the potential immunogenic properties of neuroblastomas.
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PMID:N-myc expression switched off and class I human leukocyte antigen expression switched on after somatic cell fusion of neuroblastoma cells. 220 14

Lymphocytes from lymph nodes draining the tumor region in patients with colorectal cancer were fused with two different human B-lymphoblastoid cell lines, LICR-LON-HMy-2 (HMy-2) and WI-L2-729-HF2 (729-HF2), to generate hybridomas synthesizing antibodies reacting with tumor-associated antigens. In this way 220 hybridomas were obtained which produce antibody reacting with colon cancer cells. All established clones produced IgM. Four human monoclonal antibodies have been further analyzed. The cell lines producing these antibodies are all hybrids based on DNA analysis. Three of the antibodies (G4146, B9165 and D4213) showed binding to differentiation antigens by immunocytochemical analysis on different cancer cell lines and normal human leucocytes and by immunohistochemical analysis on sections of frozen malignant and normal tissues, while the fourth (F11348) showed a reaction with all cells and tissues tested. Western blots of tumor extracts showed binding of G4146 to two components from colon cancer cells with Mr of 59 K and 61 K, while B9165 bound to a 43 K component and F11348 to several components with Mr from 30 to 200K. D4213 showed no binding in this analysis. The results obtained demonstrate the successful application of hybridoma technology to produce human monoclonals with reactivity to differentiation antigens.
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PMID:Human-human hybridoma producing monoclonal antibodies against colorectal cancer-associated antigens. 220 14

Spleen cells from inbred Biozzi mice, immunized against the human breast cancer cell line T47D, were fused with murine myeloma SP2O cells to generate monoclonal antibodies. One of these, 1BE12, of IgM isotype, reacted with five of six human breast tumor cell lines, while no binding was detectable with normal lymphocytes, RBC, or fibroblasts. The antigen recognized by monoclonal antibody 1BE12 was localized on the surface of T47D and MCF7 cells and was detected in cell-free supernatants of cultures. The antigen was found also on the surface of milk secretory cells. Immunohistochemical staining of frozen and paraffin-embedded sections of human tissues showed apical polarized reactivity in normal breast glands, while in all breast cancers staining was either cytoplasmic or membranous and heterogeneously distributed. Immunostaining was also observed in some other normal epithelia, including salivary gland, gastroduodenal mucosa, exocrine pancreas, and cervix. The antigen was not detectable in secretory endometrium, whereas proliferative endometrium was strongly stained. Colon carcinoma, and cancers of the bladder and endometrium were strongly reactive. No staining was detected in melanoma, lymphoma, mesothelioma, non-small cell lung carcinoma, and thyroid, renal, and ovarian carcinomas. Lectin absorption of MCF7 membrane extracts reduced 1BE12 binding. A large reduction in 1BE12 reactivity was observed after digestion of T47D and MCF7 membrane extracts with proteases. Treatment with sodium periodate resulted in complete loss of antigenicity, while neuraminidase treatment did not affect 1BE12 binding. These findings suggest that the 1BE12 epitope is expressed on the carbohydrate moiety of a glycoprotein and does not contain sialic acid. Immunoblotting of the perchloric acid-soluble fraction of MCF7 membrane extracts after electrophoresis in 1% agarose detected the antigen as a high molecular weight species (Mr greater than 900,000). The antigen was purified by perchloric acid extraction of MCF7 membrane preparations followed by affinity chromatography on 1BE12 antibody coupled to Sepharose-4B and gel exclusion fast protein liquid chromatography. No reactivity of the purified material was found with monoclonal antibodies directed against human milk fat globule membrane-associated mucins HMFG1 and DF3.
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PMID:Characterization and distribution in human tissues of a glycoproteic antigen defined by monoclonal antibody 1BE12 raised against the human breast cancer cell line T47D. 222 61

We sequenced a 4.2-kb DNA region encompassing the vir A locus of the hairy-root-inducing plasmid pRiA4, and compared its sequence with the published vir A region sequences of four tumor-inducing plasmids. An open reading frame capable of coding for 829 amino acids was identified for vir A. Deletion mutants of vir A constructed by fusing to lacZ, but not the wild-type game itself, were efficiently expressed in Escherichia coli when they were put downstream front the lac promoter. These fused gene products became soluble or insoluble depending on the length of their lacZ moieties.
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PMID:Characterization of the virA gene of the agropine-type plasmid pRiA4 of Agrobacterium rhizogenes. 222 11


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