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)

Hormone-related cancers, namely breast, endometrium, ovary, prostate, testis, thyroid and osteosarcoma, share a unique mechanism of carcinogenesis. Endogenous and exogenous hormones drive cell proliferation, and thus the opportunity for the accumulation of random genetic errors. The emergence of a malignant phenotype depends on a series of somatic mutations that occur during cell division, but the specific genes involved in progression of hormone-related cancers are currently unknown. In this review, the epidemiology of endometrial cancer and breast cancer are used to illustrate the paradigms of hormonal carcinogenesis. Then, new strategies for early detection and prevention of hormonal carcinogenesis are discussed. This includes developing polygenic models of cancer predisposition and the further development of safe and effective chemopreventives that block target sequence activity. We developed polygenic models for breast and prostate cancer after hypothesizing that functionally relevant sequence variants in genes involved in steroid hormone metabolism and transport would act together, and also interact with well-known hormonally related risk factors, to define a high-risk profile for cancer. A combination of genes each with minor variation in expressed activity could provide a degree of separation of risk that would be clinically useful as they could yield a large cumulative difference after several decades. The genes included in the breast cancer model are the 17beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase 1 (HSD17B1) gene, the cytochrome P459c17alpha (CYP17) gene, the aromatase (CYP19) gene, and the estrogen receptor alpha (ER) gene. The prostate cancer model includes the androgen receptor gene (AR), steroid 5alpha-reductase type II (SRD5A2), CYP17 and the 3beta hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (HSD3B2) gene. We present data from our multi-ethnic cohort to support these models.
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PMID:Hormonal carcinogenesis. 1123 97

The differential diagnosis of an osteoblastic vertebral lesion (ivory vertebra) includes metastatic prostate cancer, lung cancer, lymphoma, osteosarcoma and Paget's disease. We report a case of a man who was initially diagnosed with Paget's disease on vertebral biopsy. He failed to respond to conventional bisphosphate therapy. The review of the original biopsy specimen showed metastatic carcinoid tumor involving the bone marrow. The various features of carcinoid tumors metastasizing to the skeleton are briefly reviewed.
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PMID:Case of an ivory vertebra. 1102 70

The effects of recombinant human bone morphogenetic protein-2 (rhBMP-2) on cell growth were studied in three human osteosarcoma cell lines, NOS-1, HuO9, and HuO-3N1; one human prostate cancer cell line, PC-3; and one human breast cancer cell line, OCUB-1M. The growth of these cell lines was not promoted by rhBMP-2 at concentrations of 50, 100, 250, and 500 ng/ml, as evaluated by colorimetric 3 (4,5-dimethyl-thiazol-2-yl)-2,5 diphenyl tetrazolium bromide (MTT) assay. Furthermore, the protein induced osteogenic differentiation, characterized by increased alkaline phosphatase activity, and increased production of type I collagen and gamma-carboxylated osteocalcin in NOS-1 cells. The results of this study may suggest the feasibility of using rhBMP-2 for the reconstruction of bone defects caused by malignant tumors, although the data are still preliminary and require further investigation.
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PMID:Effects of bone morphogenetic protein-2 on human tumor cell growth and differentiation: a preliminary report. 1118 Sep 25

A 76-year-old man was treated with bilateral orchiectomy, estramustine phosphate and pelvic irradiation for prostate cancer. Osteogenic sarcoma of the prostate developed 18 months after the treatment. Postmortem examination revealed that the tumor was 8 cm in diameter and had infiltrated into the bladder and rectal walls and had resulted in peritoneal dissemination. There was no distant metastasis. Macroscopically, the tumor was ashen, firm and relatively homogenous and diffusely spread. Histologically, it was composed of spindle and pleomorphic cells, which were making osteoid with calcification. There was no ordinary tubular formation as shown in adenocarcinoma of the prostate. No positive immunostaining for prostate-specific antigen, epithelial membrane antigen and cytokeratin (AE-1, AE-3) were confirmed. Positive immunostaining for nonepithelial marker vimentin was confirmed. The ultimate diagnosis was osteogenic sarcoma of the prostate.
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PMID:Osteogenic sarcoma of the prostate. 1126 Mar 56

Aneuploidy is a characteristic of the majority of human cancers, and recent studies suggest that defects of mitotic checkpoints play a role in carcinogenesis. MAD1L1 is a checkpoint gene, and its dysfunction is associated with chromosomal instability. Rare mutations of this gene have been reported in colon and lung cancers. We examined a total of 44 cell lines (hematopoietic, prostate, osteosarcoma, breast, glioblastoma and lung) and 133 fresh cancer cells (hematopoietic, prostate, breast and glioblastoma) for alterations of MAD1L1 by RT-PCR-SSCP and nucleotide sequencing. Eight mutations consisting of missense, nonsense and frameshift mutations were found, together with a number of nucleotide polymorphisms. All the alterations in cell lines were heterozygous. Frequency of mutations was relatively high in prostate cancer (2/7 cell lines and 2/33 tumor specimens). We placed a mutant truncated MAD1L1, found in a lymphoma sample, into HOS, Ht161 and SJSA cell lines and found that it was less inhibitory than wild type MAD1L1 at decreasing cell proliferation. Co-expression experiments showed that the mutant form had a dominant-negative effect. Furthermore, this mutant impaired the mitotic checkpoint as shown by decreased mitotic indices in HOS cells expressing mutant MAD1L1 after culture with the microtubule-disrupting agent, nocodazole. Our results suggest a pathogenic role of MAD1L1 mutations in various types of human cancer.
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PMID:Mutations in the mitotic check point gene, MAD1L1, in human cancers. 1142 79

Ligation of the Fas receptor (FasR) is a key step in apoptosis induction. Using a series of human tumor cells (SNB19, SNB79, 143N2, and SHEP), we observed a distinct efficacy of human anti-FasR antibody with an apparent correlation with Fas cell surface antigen expression. In contrast, all cells studied expressed detectable FasR mRNA transcripts. For all anti-FasR antibody-sensitive tumor cells, we showed a similar efficacy of Mab according to dose fractionation and injection site. We showed that, when injected into nude mice bearing human osteosarcoma 143N2, neuroblastoma SHEP, prostatic cancer PAC120, and the two glioblastomas SNB19 and SNB79, anti-FasR Mab induces significant inhibition of the growth rate of 143N2, SHEP, and PAC120 tumors, but has no efficacy on SNB19 and SNB79 tumors, with a relationship between in vitro and in vivo sensitivity to anti-FasR antibody. Altogether, these results suggest the antitumor potential of anti-FasR antibody in human neoplasms.
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PMID:Distinct experimental efficacy of anti-Fas/APO-1/CD95 receptor antibody in human tumors. 1147 42

The KAI1 gene has been identified as a metastasis suppressor gene in human prostate cancer. Decrease or loss of KAI1/CD82 expression has been shown to be associated with poorer prognosis and metastasis in carcinomas of various organs. The purpose of this study was to examine whether KAI1/CD82 is expressed in bone and soft tissue tumors, and whether it is associated with metastasis to the lungs. Immunohistochemically, KAI1/CD82 expression in benign and malignant soft tissue tumors was noted in 83% and 37% of cases, respectively. KAI1/CD82 was- also expressed in benign bone tumors and osteosarcomas in 67% and 36% of the cases, respectively. Four (40%) of 10 osteosarcoma cases with no lung metastasis and one (25%) of four osteosarcoma cases with lung metastasis were positive for KAI1/CD82, respectively. Metastasis of osteosarcoma cells to the lungs was not correlated with the loss of KAI1/CD82 in osteosarcoma cells.
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PMID:Loss of KAI1/CD82 expression in bone and soft tissue tumors is not associated with lung metastasis. 1156 27

Osteocalcin (OC) is a small (6 kDa) polypeptide whose expression was thought to be limited to mature osteoblasts. The discovery of OC expression in prostate cancer specimens led us to study the regulation of OC gene in androgen-independent metastatic human prostate PC3 cells. An 800-bp human OC (hOC) promoter-luciferase construct exhibited strong basal and vitamin D-induced activity in OC-positive human prostate and osteosarcoma cell lines. Through deletion analysis of the hOC promoter, the functional hierarchy of the cis-acting elements, OSE1, OSE2, and AP-1/VDRE, was established in PC3 cells (OSE1 > AP-1/VDRE > OSE2). By juxtaposing dimers of these 3 cis-elements, we produced a minimal hOC promoter capable of displaying high tissue specific activity in prostate cancer cells. Our study demonstrated three groups of transcription factors, Runx2, JunD/Fra-2, and Sp1, responsible for the high hOC promoter activity in PC3 cells by binding to the OSE2, AP-1/VDRE, and OSE1 elements, respectively. Among the three groups of transcription factors, the expression levels of Runx2 and Fra-2 are higher in the OC-positive PC3 cells and osteoblasts, compared with the OC-negative LNCaP cells. Interestingly, unlike the mouse OC promoter, the OSE1 site in hOC promoter is regulated by members of Sp1 family instead of the osteoblast-specific factor Osf1. The molecular basis for androgen-independent prostate cancer cells behaving like mature osteoblasts may be explained by the interplay and coordination of these transcription factors under the tight regulation of autocrine and paracrine mediators.
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PMID:Regulation of human osteocalcin promoter in hormone-independent human prostate cancer cells. 1168 80

We have identified a novel 14-exon human lysyl oxidase-like gene, LOXL4, on chromosome 10q24. The cDNA and derived amino acid sequence of LOXL4 demonstrates a conserved C-terminal region including the characteristic copper-binding site, lysyl and tyrosyl residues and a cytokine receptor-like domain. One of the four N-terminal SRCR domains contains a 13 amino acid insertion encoded by a short exon not present within the closely homologous LOXL2 and LOXL3 genes. The 3.5-kb LOXL4 mRNA is present in pancreas and testis and at lower levels in several other tissues. Fibroblasts, smooth muscle and osteosarcoma (HOS) cells express LOXL4. No expression was detected in HCT-116 and DLD-1 colon, MCF-7 breast and DU-145 prostate cancer cell lines.
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PMID:A novel human lysyl oxidase-like gene (LOXL4) on chromosome 10q24 has an altered scavenger receptor cysteine rich domain. 1169 88

The human INK4a gene locus encodes two structurally unrelated tumor suppressor proteins, p16(INK4a) and p14(ARF), which are frequently inactivated in human cancer. Whereas p16(INK4a) acts through engagement of the Rb-cdk4/6-cyclin D pathway, both the pro-apoptotic and cell cycle-regulatory functions of p14(ARF) were shown to be primarily dependent on the presence of functional p53. Recent reports have also implicated p14(ARF) in p53-independent mechanisms of cell cycle regulation and apoptosis induction, respectively. To further explore the pro-apoptotic function of p14(ARF) in relation to functional cellular p53, we constructed a replication-deficient adenoviral vector for overexpression of p14(ARF) (Ad-p14(ARF)). As expected, Ad-p14(ARF) efficiently induced apoptosis in p53/Rb wild-type U-2OS osteosarcoma cells at low multiplicities of infection. Interestingly, Ad-p14(ARF) also induced apoptosis in both p53-deleted SAOS-2 osteosarcoma cells and HCT116 colon cancer cells with a bi-allelic knock-out of p53 (HCT116-p53(-/-)). Similarly, adenovirus-mediated overexpression of p14(ARF) induced apoptosis in p53/Bax-mutated DU145 prostate cancer cells as well as in HCT116 cells devoid of functional Bax (HCT116-Bax(-/-)). Restoration of Bax expression by retroviral gene transfer in DU145 cells did not further enhance p14(ARF)-triggered cell death. Infection with Ad-p14(ARF) induced activation of mitochondrial permeability shift transition, caspase activation and apoptotic DNA fragmentation irrespective of the presence or absence of either Bax or functional cellular p53. Nevertheless, overexpression of the anti-apoptotic Bcl-2 homolog Bcl-x(L) markedly inhibited p14(ARF)-induced apoptosis. This may indicate that p14(ARF) triggers a so far unknown activator of mitochondrial apoptosis which can be inhibited by Bcl-2 but which acts either independently or downstream of Bax. Taken together, this report demonstrates the participation of signaling pathways apart from the p53/Mdm-2 rheostat and Bax in p14(ARF)-mediated apoptosis.
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PMID:Adenovirus-mediated overexpression of p14(ARF) induces p53 and Bax-independent apoptosis. 1208 30


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