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Query: UMLS:C0027651 (
tumor
)
685,946
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Distinguishing aggressive prostate cancer from indolent disease represents an important clinical challenge, because current therapy may lead to overtreatment of men with limited disease. The
prostate-specific membrane antigen
(
PSMA
) is a membrane-bound glycoprotein that is highly restricted to the prostate. Previously, studies analyzing the expression of
PSMA
have found an up-regulation in correlation with prostate cancer, particularly in advanced cancer. This association is ideal for an application as a prognostic marker. In the current study, we characterized
PSMA
expression in a high-risk cohort and evaluated its potential use as predictive marker of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) recurrence.
PSMA
expression was analyzed by immunohistochemistry using tissue microarrays composed of
tumor
samples from 450 patients. Protein intensity was recorded using a semiautomated quantitative microscope system (ACIS II; Clarient Chromavision Medical Systems, San Juan Capistrano, CA).
PSMA
expression levels differed significantly (P < .001) between benign prostatic tissue, localized prostate cancer, and lymph node metastases. Dividing the cohort into high- and low-
PSMA
expressing cancers based on the median area of positive staining, we found that high
PSMA
levels were associated with significant increase of PSA recurrence (P = .004). This was independent of clinical parameters such as lymph node
tumor
burden (lymph node density, >20%; P < .001), extraprostatic extension (P = .017), seminal vesicle invasion (P < .001), and high Gleason score (8-10, P = .006). In a multivariate model,
PSMA
expression and metastases to pelvic lymph nodes were significantly associated with time to PSA recurrence (HR, 1.4; 95% confidence interval, 1.1-2.8, P = .017; and hazard ratio, 5; 95% confidence interval, 2.6-9.7, P < .001, respectively). In summary,
PSMA
is independently associated with PSA recurrence in a high-risk cohort and thus might provide insight into the additional use of adjuvant therapy. Validation on other cohorts is required.
...
PMID:Prostate-specific membrane antigen expression as a predictor of prostate cancer progression. 1732 Jan 51
There has been a resurgence of interest in developing noncytotoxic immune therapies for patients with either hormone-naive biochemically relapsed post-primary therapy or castrate metastatic prostate cancer. The rationale for developing an immunotherapeutic approach has been based on the overexpression and underglycosylation of a wide variety of altered "self" molecules including prostate-specific antigen (PSA), acid phosphatase (ACP), prostate stem cell antigen (PSCA), and
prostate-specific membrane antigen
(
PSMA
), which can serve as targets for immune recognition and attack. In addition, such a strategy could theoretically make use of the patient's immune system to fight the
tumor
particularly if their disease is of reasonably low volume. A variety of immunotherapeutic approaches have been explored through phase I, II, and now phase III trials demonstrating that immunologic tolerance could be broken, as evidenced by the development of hightiter antibodies and T-cell responses specific for the
tumor
. What appears to be revolutionizing the immunotherapy field is the combination of vaccines with cytokines or immune modulators, which not only potentiate immune reactivity in vivo but foster dramatic antitumor responses. This review explores the challenges now faced in establishing a role for immune therapies for prostate cancer treatment.
...
PMID:Emerging role of immunotherapy in the management of prostate cancer. 1744 37
A novel pretargeting method has been developed to quantitate antibody cellular internalization. In this study, the antibody was conjugated with a phosphorodiamidate morpholino oligomer (MORF) specific for the complementary MORF (cMORF) as an effector. Half the
tumor
cells were incubated with the MORF-antibody (pretargeting group) and the other half with the same MORF-antibody at the same concentration but radiolabeled (direct targeting group). After incubation, the same dosage of radiolabeled cMORF was added to the wells of the pretargeting group. The radioactivity of the direct targeting cells represented the sum of both internalized and cell-surface-bound antibodies, whereas the radioactivity of the pretargeting cells resulted only from the surface-bound antibodies, as the radiolabeled cMORF does not penetrate the cell surface. Therefore, the difference in radioactivity accumulation between pretargeting and direct targeting provides the internalized fraction. In this example, the internalization of a MORF conjugated anti-
prostate-specific membrane antigen
antibody, 3C6, in LNCaP cells was examined, and the average cell-surface residence time was determined as 2 hours. This method of measuring antibody internalization is directly applicable to pretargeting applications but can be a universal alternative to the conventional acid-wash method, with the advantage of leaving the cell membrane undamaged.
...
PMID:A novel pretargeting method for measuring antibody internalization in tumor cells. 1746 27
Gene directed enzyme pro-drug therapy (GDEPT) is one of the adjuvant therapeutic regimens for advanced prostate adenocarcinoma, and this research intended to explore how to apply targeting therapy of prostate adenocarcinoma under the mediation of a promoter/enhancer of
prostate-specific membrane antigen
(
PSMA
(EP)) as a specific regulatory element. Recombinant adenoviruses (Ad-
PSMA
(E-P)-enhanced green fluorescent protein [EGFP], Ad-CMV-EGFP, Ad-
PSMA
(E-P)-CD, and Ad-CMV-CD) were constructed and could express cytosine deaminase (CD) or the EGFP reporter gene driven by a
PSMA
(EP) or cytomegalovirus (CMV) promoter. LNCaP, CL-1, MCF-7, and A549 were infected with CD-produced recombinant adenoviruses and treated with pro-drug 5-fluorocytosine (5-FC) in vivo and vitro; then, the growth inhibition of the cells and the cell cycle variation were assessed by an [3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide] (MTT) assay and flow cytometry. Growth suppression of the xenograft
tumor
was also adopted to evaluate the efficiency of the suicide system. Morphologic changes after treatment in vivo were assessed with hematoxylin and eosin staining. In the 4 examined cancer cell lines,
PSMA
-positive prostate cancer cells LNCap and CL-1 were exclusively sensitive to the Ad-
PSMA
(E-P)-CD/5-FC system. The S phase of cell cycle arrest was thought to be involved in the cytotoxicity of 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) converted from 5-FC by CD. CL-1 implanted Athymic BALB/c mice showed growth inhibition of tumors when they were treated with the Ad-
PSMA
(E-P)-CD/5-FC system without systemic conversion toxicity. The
PSMA
-based, CD-produced adenovirus, deserving further investigation in the future, might be a good candidate for targeting gene therapy of prostate adenocarcinoma.
...
PMID:Recombinant adenovirus mediated prostate-specific enzyme pro-drug gene therapy regulated by prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) enhancer/promoter. 1752 18
For anti-
tumor
therapy different strategies have been employed, e.g., radiotherapy, chemotherapy, or immunotherapy. Notably, these approaches do not only address the
tumor
cells themselves, but also the
tumor
stroma cells, e.g., endothelial cells, fibroblasts, and macrophages. This is of advantage, since these cells actively contribute to the proliferative and invasive behavior of the
tumor
cells via secretion of growth factors, angiogenic factors, cytokines, and proteolytic enzymes. In addition,
tumor
stroma cells take part in immune evasion mechanisms of cancer. Thus, approaches targeting the
tumor
stroma attract increasing attention as anti-cancer therapy. Several molecules including growth factors (e.g., VEGF, CTGF), growth factor receptors (CD105, VEGFRs), adhesion molecules (alphavbeta3 integrin), and enzymes (CAIX, FAPalpha, MMPs,
PSMA
, uPA) are induced or upregulated in the
tumor
microenvironment which are otherwise characterized by a restricted expression pattern in differentiated tissues. Consequently, these molecules can be targeted by inhibitors as well as by active and passive immunotherapy to treat cancer. Here we discuss the results of these approaches tested in preclinical models and clinical trials.
...
PMID:Anti-cancer therapies targeting the tumor stroma. 1766 Oct 33
The histologic distinction between high-grade prostate cancer and infiltrating high-grade urothelial cancer may be difficult, and has significant implications because each disease may be treated very differently (ie, hormone therapy for prostate cancer and chemotherapy for urothelial cancer). Immunohistochemistry of novel and established prostatic and urothelial markers using tissue microarrays (TMAs) were studied. Prostatic markers studied included: prostate-specific antigen (PSA), prostein (P501s),
prostate-specific membrane antigen
(
PSMA
), NKX3.1 (an androgen-related
tumor
suppressor gene), and proPSA (pPSA) (precursor form of PSA). "Urothelial markers" included high molecular weight cytokeratin (HMWCK), p63, thrombomodulin, and S100P (placental S100). TMAs contained 38 poorly differentiated prostate cancers [Gleason score 8 (n=2), Gleason score 9 (n=18), Gleason score 10 (n=18)] and 35 high-grade invasive urothelial carcinomas from radical prostatectomy and cystectomy specimens, respectively. Each case had 2 to 8 tissue spots (0.6-mm diameter). If all spots for a case showed negative staining, the case was called negative. The sensitivities for labeling prostate cancers were PSA (97.4%), P501S (100%),
PSMA
(92.1%), NKX3.1 (94.7%), and pPSA (94.7%). Because of PSA's high sensitivity on the TMA, we chose 41 additional poorly differentiated primary (N=36) and metastatic (N=5) prostate carcinomas which showed variable PSA staining at the time of diagnosis and performed immunohistochemistry on routine tissue sections. Compared to PSA, which on average showed 18.8% of cells with moderate to strong positivity, cases stained for P501S,
PSMA
, and NKX3.1 had on average 42.5%, 53.7%, 52.9% immunoreactivity, respectively. All prostatic markers showed excellent specificity. HMWCK, p63, thrombomodulin, and S100P showed lower sensitivities in labeling high-grade invasive urothelial cancer in the TMAs with 91.4%, 82.9%, 68.6%, and 71.4% staining, respectively. These urothelial markers were relatively specific with only a few prostate cancers showing scattered (<or=2%) weak-moderate positive cells. In summary, PSA can be used as the first screening marker for differentiating high-grade prostate adenocarcinoma from high-grade urothelial carcinoma. Immunohistochemistry for P501S,
PSMA
, NKX3.1, and pPSA are useful when high-grade prostate cancer is suspected based on the morphology or clinical findings, yet shows negative or equivocal PSA staining. HMWCK and p63 are superior to the novel markers thrombomodulin and S100P.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical differentiation of high-grade prostate carcinoma from urothelial carcinoma. 1766 50
The expression of
glutamate carboxypeptidase II
(GCP II) is reduced in selective brain regions in schizophrenic patients. To investigate transcriptional mechanisms regulating the human GCP II gene, a 3460 bp DNA fragment comprised of the proximal 3228 bp of 5' untranscribed sequence and first 232 bp of 5' UTR portion of this gene was cloned into the mammalian luciferase reporter gene vector pGL3-Basic. Transfection assays in human astrocyte-derived SVG and human prostate
tumor
-derived LNCaP cells demonstrated that constructs with 3460, 1590 and 761 bp portions of 5' region of human GCP II gene were able to drive the luciferase reporter gene. Additional deletion constructs showed that in the SVG cell line, constructs with 511 and 411 bp of GCP II gene fragments yielded highest transcriptional activity, with declining activity upon further removal of 5' sequences. 15 bp of the promoter 5' to a 225 bp GCP II fragment were essential for luciferase expression. Thus, in the SVG cells, the proximal 240 bp of the human GCP II promoter (232 bp of the 5' UTR and 8 bp of 5' untranscribed sequences) may represent the core promoter. Further, while a LyF-1 site lies within and overlaps a transcription start site in the 15 bp sequence, site-directed mutagenesis shows that LyF-1 is not the transcription initiator for the "TATA and CAAT" box lacking GCP II gene in the SVG cells. Finally, pattern differences in GCP II gene promoter expression in SVG and LNCaP cells suggest that sequences beyond 240 bp may be important for tissue-specific GCP II expression.
...
PMID:Promoter analysis of human glutamate carboxypeptidase II. 1768 3
Despite the potency of dendritic cells (DC) as antigen-presenting cells for priming adaptive immunity, DC-based cancer vaccines have been largely insufficient to effectively reduce
tumor
burden or prevent tumor progression in most patients. To enhance DC-based vaccines, we used the combination of a synthetic ligand-inducible CD40 receptor (iCD40) along with Toll-like receptor-4 (TLR-4) ligation in human monocyte-derived DCs. The iCD40 receptor permits targeted, reversible activation of CD40 in vivo, potentially bypassing the essential role of CD4(+) T cells for activation of DCs. As a rigorous preclinical study of this approach, we evaluated key parameters of DC activation and function. Whereas neither iCD40 nor TLR-4 signaling alone led to high levels of interleukin (IL)-12p70 and IL-6, using iCD40 in combination with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) or monophosphoryl lipid A led to strongly synergistic production of both. Furthermore, this approach led to high expression of DC maturation markers, epitope-specific CTL and T helper 1 responses, as well as DC migration in vitro and in vivo. Moreover, use of iCD40-modified and LPS-stimulated DCs led to targeted expansion of autologous T cells against
tumor
-associated antigens, including
prostate-specific membrane antigen
, and elimination of preestablished tumors, supporting this technology as a potent strategy for DC-based cancer immunotherapy.
...
PMID:Enhanced activation of human dendritic cells by inducible CD40 and Toll-like receptor-4 ligation. 1797 97
This review covers progress to date in the identification of molecular targets on blood vessels in cancers, as well as agents that act on those targets, with emphasis on those currently in clinical trials. Current vascular-targeting therapies comprise two general types--antiangiogenic therapy and antivascular therapy. Advances in antiangiogenic therapies, particularly inhibitors of vascular endothelial growth factors and their receptors, have clarified the capacity of these inhibitors to change
tumor
-associated vessel structure to a more normal state, thereby improving the ability of chemotherapeutics to access the tumors. The responses of other antiangiogenesis target molecules in humans are more complicated; for example, alphanubeta3 integrins are known to stimulate as well as inhibit angiogenesis, and cleavage of various extracellular proteins/proteoglycans by matrix metalloproteinases produces potent regulators of the angiogenic process. Antivascular therapies disrupt established blood vessels in solid tumors and often involve the use of ligand-based or small-molecule agents. Ligand-based agents, irrespective of the antiangiogenic capacity of the ligand, target antivascular effectors to molecules expressed specifically on blood vessels, such as aminopeptidase N, fibronectin extra-domain B, and
prostate-specific membrane antigen
. Small-molecule antivascular agents, which are not targeted to molecules on blood vessels, rely on physical differences between the vasculatures in tumors and those in normal tissues.
...
PMID:Molecular targets on blood vessels for cancer therapies in clinical trials. 1808 Jun 18
Monoclonal antibodies with high specificity for prostate cancer tissue are of interest for diagnostic and therapeutic applications employing targeted therapy. The
prostate-specific membrane antigen
(
PSMA
) is a protein predominantly found in epithelial cells of prostate tissue origin and its expression correlates with
tumor
aggressiveness. Here, we report the development and characterization of new antibodies against
PSMA
. Murine monoclonal antibodies (MAb) were obtained by immunizing mice with a peptide corresponding to
PSMA
extracellular residues 490-500 -- GKSLYESWTKK (
PSMA
(490-500)). The MAbs react specifically to
PSMA
and to the prostate cancer cell line LNCaP with an affinity for
PSMA
in the low nanomolar range. This study also demonstrates the potential use of these antibodies for targeted drug delivery to prostate cancer cells. Nanomolar concentrations of
PSMA
-specific MAb in association with a molecule with cytotoxic potential were sufficient to allow for binding and uptake by LNCaP cells within minutes, leading to complete cell death within 3 days. These MAbs have potential clinical value in the development of diagnostic and therapeutic applications for prostate cancer.
...
PMID:Preparation and characterization of new anti-PSMA monoclonal antibodies with potential clinical use. 1815 80
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