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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0029463 (
osteosarcoma
)
16,637
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The production and detailed immunostaining properties of a new rat monoclonal antibody (ICR.2) to epithelial membrane antigen are reported. The antibody was selected for its ability to compete with the polyclonal antiserum (M7), used in the original immunohistological studies, in order that it might serve as a direct replacement in diagnosing epithelial tumours. Most of the staining reactions on normal tissues were identical to those previously reported with M7 but there were some important differences. They included: positivity of renal and adrenal capsular fibroblasts, perineurium, some myoepithelial and smooth muscle cells, occasional osteoblasts and squamous and thyroid follicular epithelium in the normal state. The intercellular canaliculi of sweat glands and secretory canaliculi of gastric oxyntic cells were clearly demonstrated. These staining reactions could be obtained with M7 when a sensitive detection system was used although the results were usually weak and inconsistent. Nearly all adenosquamous and transitional carcinomas were positive. The remaining tumours fell into three major groups: (1) those which were consistently or nearly consistently negative--melanoma, seminoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, alveolar soft part sarcoma, adrenal cortical carcinoma, granulocytic sarcoma, paraganglioma, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. Hodgkin's disease and
embryonal carcinoma
: (2) those which were either negative or positive with distinctive patterns of staining--basal cell carcinoma, embryonal tumours: and (3) non-epithelial tumours that were consistently positive--epithelioid sarcoma, synovial sarcoma,
osteosarcoma
, chordoma and myeloma--or positive in a significant minority of cases--leiomyosarcoma, malignant fibrous histiocytoma, clear cell sarcoma of tendon sheath, various neuroectodermal tumours.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Detailed investigation of the diagnostic value in tumour histopathology of ICR.2, a new monoclonal antibody to epithelial membrane antigen. 169 88
Cis-diamminedichloro platinum (II) (cis-DDP) and cis-diamminediaquo platinum (II) nitrate (cis-aq) were complexed to a macromolecular carrier carboxymethyl dextran (CM-dex). Two carriers were used in this study, one derived from dex-T-10 (Mr-10000) and the other from dex-T-40 (Mr-40000). The two platinum (II) drugs formed soluble complexes with both carriers. Uncomplexed and complexed drugs were tested and found to be cytotoxic in vitro against 5 murine and 2 human derived tumor cell lines. The two free platinum (II) drugs were cytotoxic against these cells to a similar extent. In comparison to the free drugs the complexes were somewhat less active, up to 3 fold, against murine 38C-13, L1210, EL-4 and RDM-4 leukemias, as well as against human HeLa and
osteogenic sarcoma
, and as active as the free drugs against murine F9
embryonal carcinoma
. There were no major differences in the in vitro cytotoxic activity between CM-dex T-10 and CM-dex T-40 complexes. Differences due to the molecular size of the carrier were observed in vivo: The CM-dex T-10 complexes were significantly less toxic than the free drugs, whereas the reduction of toxicity by complexing to CM-dex T-40 was less profound. As for the efficacy, when tested in vivo against a cis-DDP sensitive tumor (F9) the T-40 complexes were equally or even more effective than the respective free drugs. The T-10 complexes were less effective than the free drugs at equal drug doses but their effectivity increased at increasing drug levels. These complexes were, however, very effective in inhibiting tumor growth upon repeated injections, leading to 100% survival.
...
PMID:Cis-platinum (II) complexes of carboxymethyl-dextran as potential antitumor agents. II. In vitro and in vivo activity. 243 22
An ultrastructural survey of 11 human tumors passaged in N:NIH(S) (nu/nu) mice showed two instances of type C virus production. In one instance type C virus particles were observed in the endothelial murine stromal cell component of an
embryonal carcinoma
but not in the human tumor cells. In another instance type C virus particles were seen replicating in the chondroblastic human cells of a xenografted
osteosarcoma
. The type C virus produced in the human cells failed to transform NIH/3T3 cells, the C-127 rat cell line, or mink cells. Nucleic acid hybridization studies in which a human endogenous retroviral probe and a xenotropic murine leukemia virus envelope probe were used suggested that the retrovirus present in the human
osteosarcoma
cells is related to murine leukemia viruses. Intracisternal A-particles (IAP) were also detected in the human
osteosarcoma
cells. Their presence in the human cells was demonstrated by simultaneous visualization of IAP and human HLA determinants at the cell surface. The literature on type C virus infection of human cells and tumors grafted in nude mice is reviewed.
...
PMID:Murine type C retroviruses and intracisternal A-particles in human tumors serially passaged in nude mice. 631 Feb 1
A total of 114 children with solid tumors refractory to conventional therapy were evaluated for response and/or toxic effects after receiving cisplatin at doses of 3.0-4.5 mg/kg with aggressive hydration and mannitol diuresis every 3 weeks; a minimum of two courses was required for evaluation of response (110 patients). Objective responses were noted in 18 patients: rhabdomyosarcoma (three), Wilm's tumor (three),
osteogenic sarcoma
(three). Ewing's sarcoma (two), neuroblastoma (one), undifferentiated sarcoma (one), hepatoblastoma (one), ovarian teratoma (one), hepatocellular carcinoma (one),
embryonal carcinoma
of the mediastinum (one), and thymoma (one). Twenty-six patients had some evidence of renal toxicity. Asymptomatic hearing loss was commonly found when audiometry was performed (eight of 18 patients tested). Eight additional patients had symptomatic hearing problems--tinnitus or hearing loss. Myelosuppression was mild. Hypomagnesemia and/or hypocalcemia were common but only one patient had symptoms. Cisplatin, administered at a dose of 3.0 mg/kg with aggressive hydration and mannitol diuresis, is reasonably well-tolerated. Its role in the therapy for those tumors against which it shows activity remains to be determined.
...
PMID:Phase II trail cisplatin in refractory childhood cancer: Children's Cancer Study Group Report. 694 56
Mouse models show that congenital neural tube defects (NTDs) can occur as a result of mutations in the platelet-derived growth factor receptor-alpha gene (PDGFRalpha). Mice heterozygous for the PDGFRalpha-mutation Patch, and at the same time homozygous for the undulated mutation in the Pax1 gene, exhibit a high incidence of lumbar spina bifida occulta, suggesting a functional relation between PDGFRalpha and Pax1. Using the human PDGFRalpha promoter linked to a luciferase reporter, we show in the present paper that Pax1 acts as a transcriptional activator of the PDGFRalpha gene in differentiated Tera-2 human
embryonal carcinoma
cells. Two mutant Pax1 proteins carrying either the undulated-mutation or the Gln --> His mutation previously identified by us in the PAX1 gene of a patient with spina bifida, were not or less effective, respectively. Surprisingly, Pax1 mutant proteins appear to have opposing transcriptional activities in undifferentiated Tera-2 cells as well as in the U-2 OS
osteosarcoma
cell line. In these cells, the mutant Pax1 proteins enhance PDGFRalpha-promoter activity whereas the wild-type protein does not. The apparent up-regulation of PDGFRalpha expression in these cells clearly demonstrates a gain-of-function phenomenon associated with mutations in Pax genes. The altered transcriptional activation properties correlate with altered protein-DNA interaction in band-shift assays. Our data provide additional evidence that mutations in Pax1 can act as a risk factor for NTDs and suggest that the PDGFRalpha gene is a direct target of Pax1. In addition, the results support the hypothesis that deregulated PDGFRalpha expression may be causally related to NTDs.
...
PMID:Altered regulation of platelet-derived growth factor receptor-alpha gene-transcription in vitro by spina bifida-associated mutant Pax1 proteins. 982 22
Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) is a powerful technique for studying protein-DNA interactions. Drawbacks of current ChIP assays however are a requirement for large cell numbers, which limits applicability of ChIP to rare cell samples, and/or lengthy procedures with limited applications. There are to date no protocols for fast and parallel ChIPs of post-translationally modified histones from small cell numbers or biopsies, and importantly, no protocol allowing for investigations of transcription factor binding in small cell numbers. We report here the development of a micro (micro) ChIP assay suitable for up to nine parallel quantitative ChIPs of modified histones or RNA polymerase II from a single batch of 1000 cells. MicroChIP can also be downscaled to monitor the association of one protein with multiple genomic sites in as few as 100 cells. MicroChIP is applicable to small fresh tissue biopsies, and a cross-link-while-thawing procedure makes the assay suitable for frozen biopsies. Using MicroChIP, we characterize transcriptionally permissive and repressive histone H3 modifications on developmentally regulated promoters in human
embryonal carcinoma
cells and in
osteosarcoma
biopsies. muChIP creates possibilities for multiple parallel and rapid transcription factor binding and epigenetic analyses of rare cell and tissue samples.
...
PMID:MicroChIP--a rapid micro chromatin immunoprecipitation assay for small cell samples and biopsies. 1820 78