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 photosensitizing activity of hematoporphyrin derivative (HPD) was investigated by studying selected enzymes localized to mitochondria and cytosol of R3230AC mammary adenocarcinomas. Experiments in vitro demonstrated that mitochondrial succinate dehydrogenase was inhibited in a drug dose- and light exposure time-related manner; at 7.0 micrograms of HPD per ml or higher, enzyme activity was inhibited greater than 50% after 15 min of photoradiation. The three cytosol enzymes studied under the same conditions in vitro demonstrated different photosensitivities. Pyruvate kinase activity was significantly inhibited in a dose- and time-related fashion, whereas lactate dehydrogenase was inhibited to a lesser extent, and glucose phosphate isomerase activity was inhibited only at the highest dose (70 micrograms of HPD per ml) used. The time-course of these responses was examined with an in vivo-in vitro protocol, consisting of photoradiation of mitochondria and cytosol prepared from tumors obtained at various times (up to 1 week) after a single injection of HPD (80 mg/kg). Pyruvate kinase activity was markedly inhibited at early times returning to initial levels by 48 hr; neither lactate dehydrogenase nor glucose phosphate isomerase was inhibited by this treatment. Mitochondrial succinate dehydrogenase and cytochrome c oxidase activities displayed significant photoradiation-induced inhibitions, with greatest inhibition occurring between 24 and 96 hr after injection of HPD; at 1 week, succinate dehydrogenase activity had returned to its initial level, but cytochrome c oxidase activity remained significantly inhibited. These data suggest that HPD-induced photosensitization of mitochondria may be an important site of action contributing to tumor cell cytotoxicity and regression as a result of photoradiation therapy.
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PMID:Hematoporphyrin derivative-induced photosensitivity of mitochondrial succinate dehydrogenase and selected cytosolic enzymes of R3230AC mammary adenocarcinomas of rats. 623 Oct 99

The histochemical enzyme activity of alkaline phosphatase, nonspecific esterase, 5-nucleotidase, beta-glucuronidase, glucose-6-phosphatase, succinate dehydrogenase, and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase in human bladder cancer was investigated. Tumors of 84 patients, classified into grades I-III according to the WHO classification, were compared with 12 normal and 16 inflamed bladder epithelia. As a rule, loss of alkaline phosphatase activity and a decrease of nonspecific esterase activity was found in most of these tumors. The activity of beta-glucuronidase was decreased and compared with normal tissue, also the activity of 5-nucleotidase. The succinate dehydrogenase activity in tumor tissue was frequently increased, whereas glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase did not show any significant reaction.
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PMID:[Histochemical investigations on human bladder cancer (author's transl)]. 626 65

Hepatocellular neoplasms are known to differ in enzyme activity from the surrounding non-neoplastic liver. We have compared histochemically the enzyme activity of spontaneous hepatocellular tumors in mice with tumors induced by diethylnitrosamine and dieldrin. Some neoplasms had increased activity, others had decreased enzyme activity, yet other had the same activity as the surrounding liver. Alkaline phosphatase, glucose-6-phosphatase, succinic dehydrogenase and adenosine triphosphatase, as well as glycogen levels were studied. Carcinomas differed from adenomas in having elevated enzyme activity significantly more often than adenomas. However, the carcinomas showed elevated glycogen levels less frequently than adenomas. Histochemically, pulmonary metastases resembled the primary hepatocellular carcinomas from which they were derived. Tumors of dieldrin animals were notable in having increased activity of all the enzymes which we studied more frequently than tumors of diethylnitrosamine animals or of controls. Differences in enzyme activity between the three mouse strains were slight.
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PMID:Enzyme histochemical characteristics of spontaneous and induced hepatocellular neoplasms in mice. 629 95

A case of a pure heterologous sarcoma of the uterine corpus composed exclusively of rhabdomyosarcomatous elements has been studied by multiple morphologic and biochemical techniques. The neoplasm filled the endometrial cavity and protruded out the cervical os, but the myometrium was only superficially invaded. The tumor did not extend outside the corpus. The pathologic features are discussed in detail. Evidence of striated muscle differentiation could be identified on light microscopic and ultrastructural examination. Immunoperoxidase staining of tumor cells with antibodies to myoglobin were positive. Histochemical preparations for lactate dehydrogenase, succinic dehydrogenase, and acid phosphatase were also positive in neoplastic cells. Other stains gave equivocal or negative results. These findings are discussed in comparison with previous reports.
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PMID:Characterization of a pure heterologous sarcoma of the uterus: rhabdomyosarcoma of the corpus. 635 68

Transplantable pancreatic adenocarcinomas were established in subcutaneous tissue of Syrian golden hamsters and examined by enzyme histochemistry. The original tumors were found at week 40 after subcutaneous injection of N-nitrosobis(2-hydroxypropyl)amine (DHPN) at a dose of 250 mg/kg body weight once a week for the first 20 weeks of the experiment. They were well differentiated adenocarcinomas and their histology was not changed by serial transfer for 18 generations. Their transplantability was 67 to 100% and their average doubling time was 4.1 +/- 0.82 d. The enzymes gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (GGT), lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), succinate dehydrogenase (SDH), alkaline phosphatase (ALPase), and acid phosphatase (ACPase) were examined in tumor cells at the 14th and 15th generations and in ductal cells and acinar cells of normal pancreas of hamsters. Increased GGT activity was found in the tumor cells, and a strongly positive reaction was observed in acinar cells but not ductal cells of normal pancreas. LDH and SDH were found in the tumor cells, acinar cells and ductal cells. No ALPase was detected in the tumor cells, acinar cells, or ductal cells. ACPase was found in acinar cells and ductal cells, but not in the tumor cells.
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PMID:Enzyme histochemical studies on transplantable pancreatic adenocarcinomas in Syrian golden hamsters. 654 39

Experiments were carried out to determine if the difference in rates of cell proliferation between normal and neoplastic cells may be related to altered levels of oxidative enzymes. Assays were performed using homogenates from hepatocellular carcinoma HC-252, a rapidly growing and moderately well-differentiated tumor; from normal liver; and from the liver of the tumor-bearing ACI rat. Results of the mitochondrial enzymes indicated that the activities of cytochrome oxidase and succinate dehydrogenase were 3-fold lower in tumor homogenates than in liver homogenates. Monoamine oxidase activity could not be detected in HC-252; mixing experiments indicated no inhibitor was present in HC-252. Activities of th peroxisomal enzymes, urate oxidase, D-amino acid oxidase, and L-alpha-hydroxy acid oxidase were either undetected in the tumor or were 12-fold lower than in liver homogenates. The activity of xanthine oxidase, a cytoplasmic enzyme, was 5- to 6-fold lower in the tumor. Catalase activity in the tumor was also lower than in liver; this may be indicative of a lower oxidative environment at the cellular level. These enzyme activities of the liver of tumor-bearing rats were in the same range as those of normal rat liver, except that D-amino acid oxidase activity was slightly lower, and catalase activity was markedly lower and varied in a wide range. These results show an inverse correlation between the activities of oxygen-utilizing enzymes and rates of proliferation of one tumor line and its control. The possible implications of these results in neoplasia, cell proliferation, and cellular aging are discussed.
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PMID:Oxidoreductase activities in normal rat liver, tumor-bearing rat liver, and hepatoma HC-252. 689 80

A single poroid neoplasm composed of three histologically distinct lesions (hidroacanthomas simplex, eccrine poroma, and dermal duct tumor) is reported. Comparative histologic, histochemical, and electron-microscopic studies revealed that each tumor subtype contained varying proportions of poroid cells, clear cells, and cuticular cells. The major component of all three neoplasms was poroid cells, which, under the electron microscope, were characterized by a few, small, poorly developed desmosomes, and were histochemically characterized by a positive succinic dehydrogenase reaction. The dermal duct tumor was cultured, and showed similar histochemical findings to the in vivo poroid cells. These results suggest that poroid cells play the most important role in the histogenesis of these three neoplasms.
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PMID:Three subtypes of poroid neoplasia in a single lesion: eccrine poroma, hidroacanthoma simplex, and dermal duct tumor. Histologic, histochemical, and ultrastructural findings. 751 1

An auxiliary method for determination of chemosensitivity with the subrenal capsule assay (SRCA) was developed in which the specific activity of succinate dehydrogenase (SD) of tumor implanted beneath the renal capsule is measured. The appropriate conditions for measuring the specific activity of SD were determined. The chemosensitivity of tumors, derived from six xenograft lines originating from oral squamous cell carcinomas, to peplomycin (PEP), cisplatin (CDDP), and 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) were evaluated by the SRCA and the nude mouse assay (NMA). The chemosensitivity evaluated by NMA displayed a higher degree of correlation with that determined by the improved SRCA than with that determined by the conventional SRCA. The correlations between overall accuracy of prediction with the NMA and those with the conventional SRCA and the improved SRCA were 72.2% and 88.9%, respectively. These findings suggest that our new assay may be useful for evaluation of chemosensitivity in the SRCA.
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PMID:A biochemical evaluation of oral squamous cell carcinoma growth by measurement of specific activity of succinate dehydrogenase in the subrenal capsule assay. 759 55

Defects of the mitochondrial respiratory chain in cardiac muscle are an important, yet still overlooked cause of heart failure. In 16 of 32 endocardial biopsies from infants affected by "idiopathic" hypertrophic cardiomyopathy we demonstrated a remarkable decrease of activity of either complex I, or complex IV, or both, relative to complex II + III activity which was taken as an index of mitochondrial proliferation. At the molecular level, several mtDNA mutations have been associated with cardiomyopathy. For instance, MIMyCa is a maternally inherited syndrome presenting with a variable combination of skeletal and heart muscle failure associated with a heteroplasmic A3260G transition in the tRNALeu(UUR) gene. To study the effects of the mutation in a controlled system, we prepared clones of transmitochondrial cybrids by fusing mutant cytoplasts with mtDNA-less tumor cells. Two groups of clones were identified: nearly 100% mutant (M group) and nearly 100% wild-type (WT group). The means of complex I and IV in the M group were 63% and 67% relative to the WT group. The O2 consumption in the M group was 36%, and the lactate production was 218% of that in the WT group. MtDNA-specific translation was defective in M clones. The study of transmitochondrial cybrids is an important clue to test the pathogenicity of mtDNA mutations.
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PMID:OXPHOS defects and mitochondrial DNA mutations in cardiomyopathy. 760 20

We studied the tumor host response to excessive doses of an anabolic steroid (nandrolone propionate, 2.5 mg 20 g intraperitoneally every second day for 11 days) with respect to body composition and tumor cell kinetics in MCG 101 sarcoma-bearing mice (C57BL/6J) with progressive cachexia. Although survival and food intake were not affected, a significant weight gain was observed that was essentially attributed to water retention. Net protein content was increased only to a minor extent (15%), of which only the liver accounted for a significant part of the body compartments. Hepatic protein accumulation was obviously caused by decreased protein degradation, since hepatic RNA content was unchanged. After anabolic steroid administration, reduced histochemical staining of succinate dehydrogenase was observed in skeletal muscles rich in oxidative type 1 fibers, but it was not different from that of tumor-bearing control animals, which was also confirmed by measurements of citrate synthase and cytochrome c oxidase activities in skeletal muscle and liver tissue. The anabolic steroid had no significant effect on tumor growth in terms of weight progression, energy state, polyamine synthesis rate, cell division rate, and cell cycle cytocompartments. We conclude that anabolic steroid supplementation is not therapeutically beneficial in counteracting progressive weight loss in experimental cancer.
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PMID:Effects of nandrolone propionate on experimental tumor growth and cancer cachexia. 772 66


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