Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0029463 (osteosarcoma)
16,637 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Urinary neutral oligosaccharides of various connective tissue diseases were studied by gel-filtration through Sephadex G--10 after treatments with cetylpyridinium chloride (CPC), Dowex 50 (H+ form) and Dowex 1 (Cl- form), in succession. Increased excretion of urinary glucose-containing oligosaccharides, specifically glucosylgalactose was observed in most of the patients with chondrosarcoma, rheumatoid arthritis, Werner's syndrome, Rothmund Thomson syndrome and Morquio's disease. However, urinary excretion of neutral oligosaccharides in the patients with osteosarcoma and other tumorous conditions, and some systemic disorders in the connective tissues, examined in the present study, showed almost normal values. It is indicated, therefore, that the activity of glucosidase in insufficient for the glucose-containing oligosaccharides produced from the ground substance(s) in the former type connective tissue diseases.
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PMID:Excretion of glucose-containing oligosaccharides in urines of orthopedic patients. 28 16

Werner's syndrome (WS) is often mistaken for scleroderma. We describe a patient with WS who presented with an enlarging, painful mass of the right knee that proved to be a juxtaarticular osteosarcoma of the distal femur. Recognition of WS and prompt investigation of any painful, enlarging masses to exclude sarcomatous degeneration will benefit these patients.
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PMID:A patient with Werner's syndrome and osteosarcoma presenting as scleroderma. 161 16

The authors report a case of Werner's syndrome complicated by quintuplicate malignancy, and review the literature data. Four malignancies occurred synchronously in the case: osteosarcoma of the left distal tibia, malignant melanoma of the left plantar region, gastric cancer, pulmonary coin lesion. The osteosarcoma and malignant melanoma were treated by below-knee amputation and the gastric cancer by palliative surgery; the pulmonary coin lesion did not respond to cisplatin chemotherapy. It was difficult to treat the multiple primary cancer curatively, and patient died of respiratory failure due to a brain tumor seven months after surgery. The postmortem examination revealed a papillary carcinoma of the thyroid gland and a leiomyosarcoma of the lung. In some cases of Werner's syndrome, attention should be paid to the concurrent occurrence of multiple primary malignant neoplasms.
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PMID:Werner's syndrome combined with quintuplicate malignant tumors: a case report and review of literature data. 206 29

The association between genetic disorders and diverse cancers has provided clues for laboratory research into carcinogenesis. Such an opportunity now arises from studies of cancer in Werner syndrome (WRN). Soft-tissue sarcoma (STS) and benign meningioma have been associated with WRN, an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by premature aging, more commonly reported in Japan than elsewhere, in part because of inbreeding. In the literature we found 124 case-reports of neoplasia and WRN from Japan and 34 from outside Japan, 1939-August, 1995. They reveal a greater diversity of neoplasia in WRN than was previously known. In Japanese, there were 127 cancers, 14 benign meningioma, and 5 myeloid disorders, as compared with 30, 7 and 2 respectively in non-Japanese. The ratio of epithelial to non-epithelial cancers was about 1:1 for Japanese and for non-Japanese instead of the usual 10:1. Both series had excess of STS, osteosarcoma, myeloid disorders, and benign meningioma. In addition, the Japanese had an excess of thyroid cancer (20 versus 2 cases in non-Japanese) and melanoma (21 versus 3 cases), including 5 intranasal and 13 of the feet. STS, osteosarcoma, melanoma, and thyroid carcinoma accounted for 57% of all cancer in WRN as compared with 2% expected based on the Osaka population at 25-64 years of age. Multiple tumors were reported in 19 Japanese and 5 non-Japanese. In Japan, nine first-degree relatives had WRN and cancer, six of whom were concordant as to site and/or cell type. The WRN gene has been mapped to chromosome 8p. The high frequency of thyroid cancer and melanoma in Japanese, not found in Caucasians, may be related to a report of linkage disequilibrium with the WRN gene in Japanese but not in Caucasians and to haplotype differences within and between the two races, suggesting multiple independent mutations.
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PMID:Excess of rare cancers in Werner syndrome (adult progeria). 872 14

We described a case of Werner's syndrome associated with osteosarcoma. A 37-year-old Japanese man was diagnosed as having Werner's syndrome by the presence of juvenile cataracts, skin sclerosis and hyperpigmentation of the feet, high-pitched voice, characteristic bird-like appearance of the face with beak-shaped nose, thinning of the entire skin and hyperkeratoses on soles, hyperlipemia, hyperuricemia, diabetes melitus, and the mutated responsible gene (WRN). He had a 3-month history of a tumor on his left forearm. Histologically, the tumor included four histological patterns; a malignant fibrous histiocytoma-like, a desmoid-like, a dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans-like, and a chondrosarcoma-like pattern. Tumoral osteoid formation was also found in the tumor. Therefore, the tumor was diagnosed as osteosarcoma.
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PMID:A case of Werner's syndrome associated with osteosarcoma. 1055 36

Werner syndrome (WS), adult progeria, is more common in Japan than elsewhere. It predisposes to osteosarcoma (OS) and five other rare tumors. To determine if and how OS is atypical in this genetic disorder, we studied the characteristics of ten Japanese cases with respect to clinical features, pathology, and radiographs, and compared them with a hospital series of 36 skeletal OS with the same atypical age-range, 35 - 57 years. The anatomic sites were also atypical: seven ankle / foot, two radius and one patella compared with only one at the ankle in the hospital series. The osteoblastic cell-type was about equally frequent in both series, but, among others than the three major subtypes, there was only one in WS as compared with 14 (39%) in the hospital series. The types of mutations were sought in five WS cases with OS. One showed no mutation at any of the ten known loci for Japanese, two were of type 4 / 4 and two of type 6 / 6. The mutations 4 and 6 have been found in 66% of alleles of WS cases in Japan. The increased frequency and unusual age and site distributions of OS in WS may be due to increased susceptibility, related to later-life leg ulcers, and weight-bearing on spindly ankles weakened by severe loss of lower limb subcutaneous tissue.
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PMID:Atypical osteosarcomas in Werner Syndrome (adult progeria). 1112 36

We report three cases of papillary thyroid carcinoma occurring after successful treatment of osteosarcoma. Only one of the three patients received radiation therapy (to the chest) as part of the primary treatment of osteosarcoma. The onset of thyroid carcinoma occurred between 8 and 16 years from the cessation of osteosarcoma therapy. All patients are alive and disease-free from both malignancies. Whereas the association between osteosarcoma and thyroid carcinoma has not previously been recognized, there have been five case reports of these two entities occurring in the same patient. Three of these cases occurred in patients with Werner syndrome. None of the patients reported here had physical stigmata of Werner syndrome or a family history consistent with a hereditary cancer syndrome. Thyroid carcinoma occurs infrequently in patients with osteosarcoma, but in view of the rarity of these two disorders, this association may represent an inherited predisposition to these malignancies.
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PMID:Thyroid carcinoma after successful treatment of osteosarcoma: a report of three patients. 1146 90

The overall incidence of osteosarcoma is low. However, the occurrence of osteosarcoma in a setting of multiple primary tumours is not infrequent, although population-based incidence numbers are unknown. The occurrence of osteosarcoma and other malignancies is frequently related to treatment, and can also be the result of genetic predisposition as in patients with retinoblastoma, Li-Fraumeni syndrome, Werner syndrome and Rothmund-Thomson syndrome. The aim of our study is to establish the incidence of osteosarcoma associated with other malignancies in a populationwide study and to find out if these osteosarcomas have a specific subtype, that could draw attention to a genetic predisposition to malignancy. A list of all patients registered in the Dutch National Pathology Register, named PALGA, with a diagnosis of osteosarcoma between 1975 and May 2000 was retrieved. All patients with another malignancy besides osteosarcoma were selected. All patients registered in the same period with a tonsillectomy served as a control for the occurrence of malignancy in a normal population. In a second step, only osteosarcoma patients with a history of retinoblastoma or a malignancy before the age of 46 years, since these are most probable to have a hereditary cancer syndrome, were retained for further analysis. The osteosarcomas were subtyped as common, chondroblastic, fibroblastic, teleangiectatic, anaplastic, osteoclast-rich or small cell. As a control for osteosarcoma subtypes the data of 570 patients entered in two studies from the European Osteosarcoma Intergroup (EORTC/MRC) were used. Of all 938 patients registered with the diagnosis of osteosarcoma, 66 had a history of multiple primary tumours. Four patients had a surface osteosarcoma, three an extraskeletal osteosarcoma and 59 had intramedullar high-grade osteosarcoma. Of this last group, one patient was known with Rothmund-Thomson syndrome, one had retinoblastoma and 30 had their malignancies before the age of 46. Of these 32 patients, 17 had osteosarcoma of the long bones. Especially women seem to be more susceptible for the development of multiple primaries. In nine patients, the histological subtype could be assessed by revision of available histological slides. All of these patients had an osteosarcoma subtype other than common as opposed to 29% in the control group of the European Osteosarcoma Intergroup. It is concluded that although the incidence of osteosarcoma is low, the occurrence of another malignancy in osteosarcoma patients is higher than in the normal population. Specifically, osteosarcoma patients have a relative risk of 2.4 (95% confidence interval 1.88-3.07) to develop another malignancy. A noncommon subtype of osteosarcoma should draw attention to a possible genetic predisposition of the patient involved.
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PMID:Multiple primary malignancies in osteosarcoma patients. Incidence and predictive value of osteosarcoma subtype for cancer syndromes related with osteosarcoma. 1289 82

The RECQL4 helicase gene is a member of the RECQL gene family, mutated in some Rothmund-Thomson syndrome (RTS) patients. Other members of this gene family are BLM mutated in Bloom syndrome, WRN mutated in Werner syndrome and RECQL and RECQL5. All polypeptides encoded by RECQL genes share a central region of seven helicase domains. The function of RECQL4 remains unknown, but based on the domain homology it possesses ATP-dependent DNA helicase activity such as BLM and WRN. Rothmund-Thomson, Bloom and Werner syndromes have overlapping clinical features, of which high predisposition to malignancies is the most remarkable feature. Here we report a fourth syndrome resulting in mutations in the RECQL genes. RAPADILINO syndrome is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by short stature, radial ray defects and other malformations, as well as infantile diarrhoea, but not by a significant cancer risk. Four mutations in the RECQL4 gene were found in the Finnish patients, the most common mutation representing exon 7 in-frame deletion saving the helicase domain and showing dominant effect over other three nonsense mutations. The tissue expression of Recql4 in mouse well agrees with the tissue symptoms of RAPADILINO. The skeletal malformations in RAPADILINO and RTS patients as well as the high osteosarcoma risk in RTS propose a special role for RECQL4 in bone development.
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PMID:Molecular defect of RAPADILINO syndrome expands the phenotype spectrum of RECQL diseases. 1295 69

In yeast, mitochondrial dysfunction activates a specific pathway, termed retrograde regulation, which alters the expression of specific nuclear genes and results in increased replicative life span. In mammalian cells, the specific nuclear genes induced in response to loss of mitochondrial function are less well defined. This study characterizes responses in nuclear gene expression to loss of mitochondrial DNA sequences in three different human cell types: T143B, an osteosarcoma-derived cell line; ARPE19, a retinal pigment epithelium cell line; and GMO6225, a fibroblast cell population from an individual with Kearns-Sayre syndrome (KSS). Quantitative real-time reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) was used to measure gene expression of a selection of glycolysis, TCA cycle, mitochondrial, peroxisomal, extracellular matrix, stress response, and regulatory genes. Gene expression changes that were common to all three cell types included up-regulation of GCK (glucokinase), CS (citrate synthase), HOX1 (heme oxygenase 1), CKMT2 (mitochondrial creatine kinase 2), MYC (v-myc myelocytomatosis viral oncogene homolog), and WRN (Werner syndrome helicase), and down-regulation of FBP1 (fructose-1, 6-bisphosphatase 1) and COL4A1 (collagen, type IV, alpha 1). RNA interference experiments show that induction of MYC is important in rho0 cells for the up-regulation of glycolysis. In addition, a variety of cell type-specific gene changes was detected and most likely depended upon the differentiated functions of the individual cell types. These expression changes may help explain the response of different tissues to the loss of mitochondrial function due to aging or disease.
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PMID:Common and cell type-specific responses of human cells to mitochondrial dysfunction. 1556 Nov 7


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