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Query: UMLS:C0027651 (
tumor
)
685,946
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Chemotactic cytokines (chemokines) play an important role in the recruitment of lymphocytes to tissue by regulating cellular adhesion and transendothelial migration. This study examined the expression and function of CXC (human monokine induced by gamma-interferon [HuMig], interleukin-8 [IL-8], and interferon-inducible protein-10 [IP-10]) and CC (macrophage inflammatory protein-1alpha [MIP-1alpha], MIP-1beta, regulated upon activation normal T lymphocyte expressed and secreted (RANTES), and macrophage chemoattractant protein-1 [MCP-1]) chemokines and their respective receptors on lymphocytes infiltrating human liver tumors. Chemokine and chemokine receptor expression was assessed by immunohistochemistry, flow cytometry, in situ hybridization and ribonuclease (RNAse) protection assays and function by in vitro chemotaxis of
tumor
-derived lymphocytes to purified chemokines and to HepG2
tumor
cell culture supernatants.
Tumor
-derived lymphocytes showed strong chemotactic responses to both CC and CXC chemokines in vitro and expressed high levels of CXCR3 (HuMig and IP-10 receptor) and CCR5 (RANTES, MIP-1alpha, and MIP-1beta receptor). Expansion of
tumor
-derived lymphocytes in recombinant IL-2 increased expression of CXCR3. The corresponding chemokines were detected on vascular endothelium (HuMig, IL-8, MIP-1alpha, and MIP-1beta) and sinusoidal endothelium (HuMig, MIP-1alpha, MIP-1beta) in hepatocellular carcinoma. In vitro, HepG2 cells secreted functional chemotactic factors for
tumor
-derived lymphocytes that could be inhibited using anti-CCR5 or anti-CXCR3 monoclonal antibodies (MoAbs). Thus, lymphocytes infiltrating human liver tumors express receptors for and respond to both CXC and CC chemokines. The relevant
chemokine
ligands are expressed in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), particularly HuMig, which was strongly expressed by
tumor
endothelium, suggesting that they play a role in lymphocyte recruitment to these tumors in vivo. The ability of HepG2 cells to secrete lymphocyte chemotactic factors in vitro suggests that the
tumor
contributes to lymphocyte recruitment in vivo.
...
PMID:Expression and function of CXC and CC chemokines in human malignant liver tumors: a role for human monokine induced by gamma-interferon in lymphocyte recruitment to hepatocellular carcinoma. 1038 45
Given the associations between chronic inflammation and epithelial cancer, we studied susceptibility to skin carcinogenesis in mice deficient for the pro-inflammatory cytokine TNF-alpha (refs. 5,6). TNF-alpha(-/-) mice were resistant to development of benign and malignant skin tumors, whether induced by initiation with DMBA and promotion with TPA or by repeated dosing with DMBA. TNF-alpha(-/-) mice developed 5-10% the number of tumors developed by wild-type mice during initiation/promotion and 25% of those in wild-type mice after repeated carcinogen treatment. TNF-alpha could influence
tumor
and stromal cells during
tumor
development. The early stages of TPA promotion are characterized by keratinocyte hyperproliferation and inflammation. These were diminished in TNF-alpha(-/-) mice. TNF-alpha was extensively induced in the epidermis, but not the dermis, in TPA-treated wild-type skin, indicating that dermal inflammation is controlled by keratinocyte TNF-alpha production. Deletion of a TNF-alpha inducible
chemokine
also conferred some resistance to skin tumor development. TNF-alpha has little influence on later stages of carcinogenesis, as tumors in wild-type and TNF-alpha(-/-) mice had similar rates of malignant progression. These data provide evidence that a pro-inflammatory cytokine is required for de novo carcinogenesis and that TNF-alpha is important to the early stages of
tumor
promotion. Strategies that neutralize TNF-alpha production may be useful in cancer treatment and prevention.
...
PMID:Mice deficient in tumor necrosis factor-alpha are resistant to skin carcinogenesis. 1039 30
We reported previously that
tumor
cells isolated from metastases of the in vitro transformed squamous cell carcinoma line Pam 212 exhibit an elevation in constitutive production of proinflmmatory cytokines interleukin (IL)-1alpha, IL-6, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor, and KC (the murine homologue of
chemokine
Gro-alpha). The basis for constitutive expression of these cytokines after tumor progression in vivo is unknown. Regulation of the expression of these proinflammatory cytokines involves transcription factor nuclear factor kappaB (NF-kappaB), which can be activated by cytokines such as tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha. In this study, we compared the constitutive and TNF-alpha-induced expression of proinflammatory cytokines in parental Pam 212 and metastatic LY-2 and LY-8 cell lines and determined the relationship of cytokine expression to activation of NF-kappaB. We found that the metastatic cell lines exhibited an increase in constitutive and TNF-alpha-inducible expression of proinflammatory cytokines when compared with parental Pam 212 cells. The increased cytokine expression was associated with an increase in constitutive and TNF-alpha-inducible activation of NF-kappaB as demonstrated by electrophoretic mobility shift assay and luciferase-reporter gene assay. Constitutive nuclear localization of NF-kappaB p65 was observed in LY-2 and LY-8 cells in culture and in
tumor
specimens but rarely in Pam 212 cells, consistent with the constitutive activation of NF-kappaB in
tumor
cels after selection in vivo. Induction of NF-kappaB by TNF-alpha was inhibited by the addition of protease inhibitors calpain inhibitor I and N-tosyl-phechloromethyl ketone and antioxidant 1-pyrrolidinecarbodithioic acid, whereas constitutive activation of NF-kappaB and cytokine KC mRNA expression was inhibited by N-tosyl-phechloromethyl ketone alone. Overexpression of a human Ikappa(B)alpha dominant suppresser in Pam 212 cells inhibited TNF-alpha-induced NF-kappaB binding activity and KC expression. These data indicate that activation of NF-kappaB contributes to increased expression of proinflammatory cytokines during metastatic tumor progression of squamous cell carcinoma, and that distinct mechanisms may be involved in the regulation of constitutive and TNF-alpha-induced activation of NF-kappaB in squamous cell carcinoma.
...
PMID:The host environment promotes the constitutive activation of nuclear factor-kappaB and proinflammatory cytokine expression during metastatic tumor progression of murine squamous cell carcinoma. 1041 16
Hodgkin's disease is histopathologically characterized by the relative scarcity of neoplastic Hodgkin and Reed-Sternberg cells and for yet unknown reasons by an abundant reactive background of T lymphocytes and often eosinophils. Eotaxin is a CC-chemokine attracting eosinophils and T helper 2 (Th2) cells in allergic inflammation. We now report that eotaxin is strongly expressed in fibroblasts of Hodgkin's disease tissues, whereas Hodgkin/Reed-Sternberg cells do not express this
chemokine
. In tissue culture, Hodgkin's disease
tumor
cells induce eotaxin expression in cocultured dermal fibroblasts in a concentration leading to a specific chemotactic response of a Th2 cell clone. Production of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) by Hodgkin/Reed-Sternberg cells appears to be responsible for this induction, because blocking of TNF-alpha by neutralizing antibodies prevented fibroblast eotaxin expression. Our data suggest that eotaxin is involved in the pathobiology of Hodgkin's disease by contributing to eosinophil and T-lymphocyte recruitment.
...
PMID:Hodgkin/Reed-Sternberg cells induce fibroblasts to secrete eotaxin, a potent chemoattractant for T cells and eosinophils. 1047 36
Breast carcinoma is the most common malignant disease among women and the second most lethal one. In search for a better understanding of the role of cellular mediators in the progression of this disease, we investigated the potential involvement of the CC chemokine Regulated on Activation, Normal T Cell Expressed and Secreted (RANTES) in breast carcinoma progression. To this end, RANTES expression was determined in breast
tumor
cell lines and in sections of breast carcinomas, followed by analysis of the incidence and intensity of its expression in different stages of the disease. Our study reveals that high and physiologically relevant levels of RANTES are constitutively produced by T47D and MCF-7 breast
tumor
cell lines. Analysis of RANTES expression in sections of breast carcinomas demonstrates a high incidence of RANTES expression in epithelial tumor cells; the
chemokine
was expressed in 74% of the sections. RANTES expression was rarely detected in normal duct epithelial cells or in epithelial cells that constitute benign breast lumps, which were located in proximity to
tumor
cells. High incidence and intensity of RANTES expression were detected in sections of most of the patients with stage II and stage III of the disease (expression was detected in 83 and 83.3%, respectively), whereas RANTES was expressed at a lower incidence and intensity in sections of patients with stage I of breast carcinoma (55% of the cases). Most importantly, the expression of RANTES was minimally detected in sections of patients diagnosed with benign breast disorders and of women that underwent reduction mammoplasty (15.4% of the cases). These results indicate that the expression of RANTES is directly correlated with a more advanced stage of disease, suggesting that RANTES may be involved in breast cancer progression. Moreover, it is possible that in patients diagnosed with benign breast disorders, RANTES expression may be indicative of an ongoing, but as yet undetectable, malignant process.
...
PMID:Elevated expression of the CC chemokine regulated on activation, normal T cell expressed and secreted (RANTES) in advanced breast carcinoma. 1049 25
The systemic transfer of ex vivo-activated
tumor
-sensitized T lymphocytes can mediate immunologically specific regression of established tumors. However, it has not been conclusively established whether the infiltration of systemically transferred T cells into metastases is required for their effector function. In this study, T cells from lymph nodes draining the murine fibrosarcoma MCA 205 cells were activated ex vivo with anti-CD3 monoclonal antibody and interleukin-2. During the final 24 h of culture, the T cells were treated with pertussis toxin (PTX) to inhibit signaling through G protein-coupled
chemokine
receptors required for diapedesis. Systemically transferred PTX-treated cells did not have any therapeutic efficacy against 3-day established pulmonary metastases. This lack of efficacy correlated with their failure to infiltrate the
tumor
parenchyma. However, PTX-treated cells responded to
tumor
antigen stimulation with IFN-gamma secretion in vitro. More importantly, PTX-treated effector T cells prevented tumor growth when they were admixed with
tumor
cells and inoculated s.c. These results demonstrate that systemically transferred
tumor
-reactive T lymphocytes need to infiltrate the
tumor
parenchyma through the endothelium to initiate
tumor
regression, but PTX-sensitive proteins are not required for either antigen recognition or effector functions.
...
PMID:Infiltration of tumors by systemically transferred tumor-reactive T lymphocytes is required for antitumor efficacy. 1053 4
B-cell malignancy-derived Ig may be considered a model
tumor
antigen for vaccine development. However, as a non-immunogenic self antigen, it must also be first rendered immunogenic by chemical or genetic fusion to carriers which enable the induction of protective antitumor immunity in murine
tumor
models. Our group has demonstrated that active immunizations of human patients with idiotypic vaccines elicited antigen-specific CD8+ T-cell responses and antitumor effects. Several alternative preclinical strategies to develop vaccines have been previously reported, including fusion of
tumor
idiotype-derived single chain Fv with cytokines and immunogenic peptides. On the other hand, we have recently explored a different approach in which the model antigen is rendered immunogenic in mice by genetically fusing it to a
chemokine
moiety. Administration of these vaccines as fusion proteins or naked DNA vaccines may allow efficient targeting of antigen-presenting cells in vivo. Potent antitumor immunity was dependent on the generation of specific anti-idiotypic antibodies and both CD4+ and CD8+ effector T cells. We propose that
chemokine
fusion may represent a novel, general strategy for formulating existing or newly identified
tumor
and HIV antigens into vaccines for cancer and AIDS, respectively, which elicit potent CD8+ T-cell immunity.
...
PMID:B-cell malignancies as a model for cancer vaccines: from prototype protein to next generation genetic chemokine fusions. 1056 46
High endothelial venules (HEV) allow rapid and selective lymphocyte trafficking from the blood into secondary lymphoid tissues. Here we report the expression profile of active genes in mouse high endothelial cells (HEC). HEC were first purified from mouse lymph nodes (LN) by magnetic cell sorting with MECA-79 mAb and a 3'-directed cDNA library that faithfully represents the composition of mRNA was constructed. A total of 1495 cDNA sequences were obtained from randomly selected clones. Based on their sequence identity, they were grouped into 754 different species [gene signatures (GS)] of which 335 GS were identified in GenBank. Among the previously identified genes, expression of several endothelial cell surface molecules including endoglin and ICAM-1 was detected in HEC. Comparison of the gene expression profile with that of purified CD31(+) flat endothelial cells identified several molecules, such as KC
chemokine
and Duffy antigen/receptor for chemokines, that are known to be selectively expressed in activated endothelial cells or post-capillary venules. Interestingly, mac25/TAF, which is known to be expressed specifically in
tumor
vessels and implicated in the regulation of cell adhesion, was highly and selectively expressed in HEC in mouse LN, suggesting that it may participate in regulating HEC-specific functions. Comparison with the expression profiles obtained from 35 different cell types showed at least 22 GS that were apparently specific to HEC. Our results illustrate the expression differences between HEC and CD31(+) flat endothelial cells, and will be useful for the identification and characterization of genes specific for HEC.
...
PMID:Expression profile of active genes in mouse lymph node high endothelial cells. 1059 Feb 65
Monocyte chemotactic protein-1 (MCP-1, CCL2) is an important determinant of macrophage infiltration in tumors, ovarian carcinoma in particular. MCP-1 binds the chemokine receptor CCR2. Recent results indicate that proinflammatory and anti-inflammatory signals regulate chemokine receptor expression in monocytes. The present study was designed to investigate the expression of CCR2 in
tumor
-associated macrophages (TAM) from ovarian cancer patients. TAM isolated from ascitic or solid ovarian carcinoma displayed defective CCR2 mRNA (Northern blot and PCR) and surface expression and did not migrate in response to MCP-1. The defect was selective for CCR2 in that CCR1 and CCR5 were expressed normally in TAM. CCR2 gene expression and chemotactic response to MCP-1 were decreased to a lesser extent in blood monocytes from cancer patients. CCR2 mRNA levels and the chemotactic response to MCP-1 were drastically reduced in fresh monocytes cultured in the presence of
tumor
ascites from cancer patients. Ab against TNF-alpha restored the CCR2 mRNA level in monocytes cultured in the presence of ascitic fluid. The finding of defective CCR2 expression in TAM, largely dependent on local TNF production, is consistent with previous in vitro data on down-regulation of
chemokine
receptors by proinflammatory molecules. Receptor inhibition may serve as a mechanism to arrest and retain recruited macrophages and to prevent
chemokine
scavenging by mononuclear phagocytes at sites of inflammation and tumor growth. In the presence of advanced tumors or chronic inflammation, systemic down-regulation of receptor expression by proinflammatory molecules leaking in the systemic circulation may account for defective chemotaxis and a defective capacity to mount inflammatory responses associated with advanced
neoplasia
.
...
PMID:Defective expression of the monocyte chemotactic protein-1 receptor CCR2 in macrophages associated with human ovarian carcinoma. 1062 17
Continuous expression of the MGSA/GROalpha, beta, or gamma
chemokine
bestows
tumor
-forming capacity to the immortalized murine melanocyte cell line, melan-a. The mechanism for this transformation is unclear, although both autocrine and paracrine processes are possible because melan-a cells as well as endothelial cells express a low level of the receptor for this ligand. To further define the role of MGSA/GRO proteins in melanocyte transformation, two types of experiments were designed to neutralize the biological effects of MGSA/GRO in the transfected melan-a clones: (1) the effect of neutralizing antiserum to MGSA/GRO proteins on melan-a tumor growth was assessed; (2) the
tumor
-forming capacity of melan-a clones expressing ELR motif-mutated forms of MGSA/GRO with compromised receptor affinity was compared to the
tumor
-forming capacity of clones expressing wild-type MGSA/GRO. These experiments revealed that SCID mice inoculated with MGSA/GROalpha- or gamma-expressing melan-a cells and subsequently treated with antiserum to the respective
chemokine
exhibited decreased tumor growth. This reduction in tumor growth was accompanied by declining angiogenic activity in MGSA/GROgamma-expressing tumors. Moreover, athymic nude mice injected with melan-a cells expressing ELR-mutant forms of MGSA/GROalpha exhibited markedly impaired
tumor
-forming capacity compared with those mice injected with melan-a clones expressing wild-type MGSA/GRO. These data suggest that continuous expression of MGSA/GRO proteins may facilitate tumor growth by stimulating the growth of microvessels into the
tumor
(paracrine) and by affecting melanocyte growth (autocrine).
...
PMID:The tumorigenic and angiogenic effects of MGSA/GRO proteins in melanoma. 1064 98
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