Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0027819 (neuroblastoma)
27,800 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The cellular mechanism of action of the cannabimimetic drugs is examined using cultured cells. In membranes from N18TG2 neuroblastoma cells and the neuroblastoma X glioma hybrid cells, NG108-15, the psychoactive cannabinoid drugs and their nantradol analogs could inhibit adenylate cyclase activity. This response was not observed in either the soluble adenylate cyclase from rat sperm or membrane-bound adenylate cyclases from C6 glioma or S49 lymphoma cells. This cellular selectivity provides further evidence for the existence of specific receptors for the cannabimimetic compounds. Receptor-mediated inhibition of adenylate cyclase requires the presence of a guanine nucleotide-binding protein complex, Gi. Gi can be functionally inactivated as a result of an ADP-ribosylation modification catalyzed by pertussis toxin. The present study demonstrates that pertussis toxin treatment of cells abolished the cannabimimetic response in intact cells and in membranes derived therefrom. The action of pertussis toxin required NAD+ as substrate for in vitro modification of neuroblastoma membranes. Furthermore, pertussis toxin was able to catalyze the labeling of a neuroblastoma membrane protein in vitro using [32P] NAD+ under conditions similar to those by which attenuation of the cannabimimetic inhibition of adenylate cyclase could be demonstrated. This evidence demonstrates the requirement for a functional Gi in the action of cannabimimetic drugs.
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PMID:Involvement of Gi in the inhibition of adenylate cyclase by cannabimimetic drugs. 286 5

Bone-marrow autotransplantation consists of the administration of extremely high doses of chemotherapy and/or radiation followed by "rescue" with autologous, cryopreserved, bone-marrow cells. This approach can produce responses unattainable with conventional doses of similar agents. Bone-marrow autotransplantation is increasingly being done. This report summarises data from 2570 patients receiving autotransplants at 43 centres worldwide for haematological malignancies and solid tumours; more than 50% of these transplants were done since 1984. Most transplants were performed for treatment of lymphoma, leukaemia, lung cancer, melanoma, neuroblastoma, and breast cancer. Preliminary analyses indicate favourable responses in some tumour types and provide a basis for future investigations.
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PMID:Bone-marrow autotransplantation in man. Report of an international cooperative study. 287 40

Prion protein (PrP) forms the fibrils or prion rods isolated from scrapie-infected brain and has been proposed as the major component of the infectious agent of this slowly progressive spongiform encephalopathy. In previous Northern blot analyses PrP-specific mRNAs have been found in both normal and scrapie-infected brains but not in spleen, an organ which harbours large titres of infectivity. In the present study, mouse PrP DNA was used to probe for PrP mRNA in assorted tissues and cells. A reexamination of mouse and hamster spleens revealed that they contained low levels of PrP mRNA (approx. 0.8% of that in brain mRNA). No consistent differences were observed between normal and scrapie-infected tissues. Also positive for PrP mRNA under stringent hybridization conditions were mouse epithelial, neuroblastoma, erythroid, B-lymphocytic and embryo fibroblast tissue culture cell lines, a hamster ovary cell line, a rat glioma cell line, and human T lymphocytic and neuroblastoma cell lines. In contrast, no PrP mRNA was detected in two mouse myeloid cell lines and one T cell lymphoma. These results provide evidence that PrP is a protein common to numerous, but not all, cell types besides those of the brain.
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PMID:Detection of prion protein mRNA in normal and scrapie-infected tissues and cell lines. 289 63

Skeletal involvement in childhood nonosseous tumors can be due to primary involvement, arrosion or metastasis, secondary due to therapy induced alterations or osteomyelitis following diminished immunity. The occurence of bone changes differs widely from those in adults. Neuroblastoma, rhabdomyosarcoma and malignant lymphoma are discussed in detail. Rare tumors are listed for synopsis. As diagnostic screening method skeletal scintigraphy is recommended, whereas in localized disease X-rays should be performed. Beside roentgenmorphology-particularly in primary disease-localisation, frequency and age dependency may give essential diagnostic hints. Prognosis depends on primary tumor.
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PMID:[Skeletal manifestations of malignant, nonosseous tumors in childhood]. 298 8

Modern multidisciplinary treatment of childhood cancer has made extent of disease evaluation important for proper treatment planning. Accurate staging is essential to cooperative group studies and for comparing treatment modalities at different centers. Operative staging plays an important role where clinical or imaging methods are limited, as in abdominal Hodgkin's disease or regional nodal metastasis. Operative staging is carried out either as a special diagnostic procedure, as in lymphoma, or as part of a planned surgical resection of a solid tumor. For lymphomas: Operative staging of abdominal Hodgkin's disease is required where protocols include involved field irradiation and sparing of normal growing tissue in the child. In non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, bulky abdominal tumor may be surgically evaluated after intensive chemotherapy either in delayed primary surgery or in second look procedures. Residual tumor may be excised or tagged with clips for localized irradiation to the tumor sparing normal abdominal organs. For solid tumors: During surgical resection of neuroblastoma, Wilms' tumor and rhabdomyosarcoma, the correct procedure involves regional staging either by formal node dissections or by multiple biopsies to determine extent of spread. Regional node dissections are often part of a correct cancer operation for cure, but also give staging information unobtainable by other methods. The surgeon must plan every procedure carefully with the aim of curing the patient and also deriving maximum information from the operation to enable correct planning of further treatment.
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PMID:The objectives and importance of operative staging of children with cancer. 301 92

Hypercalcemia, often associated with certain types of adult tumors, has also been described in pediatric neoplasms. In childhood, the more common associations include lymphoma, leukemia, rhabdomyosarcoma and rarely neuroblastoma. However, recently, several infants with hypercalcemia were described having renal tumors without bone metastases. The following is a case report of a 2-month-old infant who presented with severe hypercalcemia and a large right-sided abdominal mass, which at surgery was diagnosed as a cellular mesoblastic nephroma.
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PMID:Hypercalcemia in association with mesoblastic nephroma: report of a case and review of the literature. 302 25

A total of 452 cases of childhood malignant solid tumors were treated over the last twenty years at the National Children's Hospital. These included 175 cases of neuroblastoma, 64 cases of Wilms' tumor, 65 cases of malignant lymphoma, 45 cases of soft tissue sarcoma, 31 cases of hepatoma, 20 cases of malignant teratoma, 17 cases of testicular tumor, 7 cases of ovarian tumor and 28 cases of other forms of malignant solid tumor. Bone metastasis was observed in 62 of 175 cases of neuroblastoma, 3 of 64 cases of Wilms' tumor, one of 65 cases of malignant lymphoma, 4 of 45 cases of soft tissue sarcoma, one case of pulmonary blastoma and one case of osteogenic sarcoma, giving a total occurrence of bone metastasis in 72 of the 452 cases. The main sites of bone metastasis in neuroblastoma were the skull (61.4%), femur (56.8%), orbit (27.3%) and spine (22.7%). The average values of serum calcium and alkaline phosphatase activity showed no significant difference. The patients with bone metastasis were treated with a combination of radiation therapy and intensive chemotherapy, resulting in temporary improvement. The survival of patients with stage IV neuroblastoma with bone metastasis was worse than that of similar patients without bone metastasis.
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PMID:[Bone metastasis of malignant solid tumors in childhood]. 303 15

Fine-needle aspiration biopsy has been employed to establish morphologic diagnoses in abdominal and retroperitoneal tumors in 54 infants and children. A 0.4-0.7-mm gauge needle was used; the puncture was performed through the anterior abdominal wall in the abdominal tumors and by the lateral approach in the retroperitoneal tumors. Malignant tumors were discovered in 51 cases (94.4%). The nature of the lesion was recognized in 96.2%, and correct cell typing was achieved in 90.2%. The most frequent lesion was non-Hodgkin's malignant lymphoma, followed by neuroblastoma, nephroblastoma, and individual cases of other epithelial and mesenchymal tumors. Using parallel bone marrow examination, half of the neuroblastoma cases and five of 28 lymphoma cases showed bone marrow involvement. We observed no complications caused by the fine-needle aspiration technique. Due to the safety and efficacy of this technique, it can often be used instead of explorative laparatomy.
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PMID:Fine-needle aspiration biopsy of abdominal and retroperitoneal tumors in infants and children. 303 51

Association with family history of cancer of each site was examined for each type of childhood malignancies using data of National Childhood Malignancy Registry in Japan as materials (n = 16,555). 2,926 cases were with cancer family history. Family history of same type of malignancy was found significantly in excess for leukemia, a malignant lymphoma, brain tumor, neuroblastoma and retinoblastoma. When observed by cell type, association with family history of leukemia was most striking in acute myeloid leukemia. Median age at first diagnosis of retinoblastoma was 11 months earlier when family history of retinoblastoma existed. Family history of leukemia and history of exposure to prenatal radiation exposure was found to enhance relative risk for childhood leukemia when combined, suggesting existence of genetic environment interaction. Mode of interaction was interpreted as multiplicative.
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PMID:[Interaction of cancer family history and environmental factors in the risk of cancer--with special reference to childhood malignancies]. 303 33

The culture medium of certain strains of Clostridium botulinum type C contains two separable ADP-ribosyltransferases. Besides the ADP-ribosylation of actin due to botulinum C2 I toxin, a second microbial enzyme causes the mono-ADP-ribosylation of a eukaryotic protein with a molecular mass of about 20 kDa found in platelets, neuroblastoma X glioma hybrid cells, S49 lymphoma cells, chick embryo fibroblasts and sperm. The eukaryotic substrate is inactivated by heating and trypsin treatment. In contrast, the novel ADP-ribosyltransferase, which can be separated by DEAE-Sephadex chromatography, is largely resistant in the short term to trypsin digestion.
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PMID:Clostridium botulinum type C produces a novel ADP-ribosyltransferase distinct from botulinum C2 toxin. 310 Mar 33


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