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Query: UMLS:C0029463 (
osteosarcoma
)
16,637
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 70% methanol extract of Terminalia chebula fruit, was studied for its effects on growth in several malignant cell lines including a human (MCF-7) and mouse (S115) breast cancer cell line, a human
osteosarcoma
cell line (HOS-1), a human
prostate cancer
cell line (PC-3) and a non-tumorigenic, immortalized human prostate cell line (PNT1A) using assays for proliferation ([(3)H]-thymidine incorporation and coulter counting), cell viability (ATP determination) and cell death (flow cytometry and Hoechst DNA staining). In all cell lines studied, the extract decreased cell viability, inhibited cell proliferation, and induced cell death in a dose dependent manner. Flow cytometry and other analyses showed that some apoptosis was induced by the extract at lower concentrations, but at higher concentrations, necrosis was the major mechanism of cell death. ATP assay guided chromatographic fractionation of the extract yielded ellagic acid, 2,4-chebulyl-beta-D-glucopyranose (a new natural product), and chebulinic acid which were tested by ATP assay on HOS-1 cell line in comparison to three known antigrowth phenolics of Terminalia, gallic acid, ethyl gallate, luteolin, and tannic acid. Chebulinic acid (IC(50) = 53.2 microM +/- 0.16) > tannic acid (IC(50) = 59.0 microg/ml +/- 0.19) > and ellagic acid (IC(50) = 78.5 microM +/- 0.24), were the most growth inhibitory phenolics of T. chebula fruit in our study.
...
PMID:Inhibition of cancer cell growth by crude extract and the phenolics of Terminalia chebula retz. fruit. 1212 33
Prostate cancer
coexisting with asymptomatic Paget's disease (osteitis deformans) may be difficult to stage. The skeletal lesions of both
prostate cancer
and Paget's disease may closely resemble each other, as appearing on imaging. A case of clinically localized
prostate cancer
coexisting with incidental Paget's disease is herein reported.
Prostate cancer
and coexisting incidental Paget's disease both need careful evaluation and close follow-up of the skeleton by imaging, because there is a risk of the former involving the skeleton at low clinical stages and low PSA serum levels, as well as the latter developing
osteosarcoma
.
...
PMID:Prostate cancer and coexisting incidental Paget's disease--report on a case. 1223 Feb 80
The steroid compound cyproterone acetate was identified in a high-throughput screen for glucocorticoid receptor (GR) binding compounds. Cyproterone (Schering AG) is clinically used as an antiandrogen for inoperable
prostate cancer
, virilizing syndromes in women, and the inhibition of sex drive in men. Despite its progestin properties, cyproterone shares a similar pharmacological profile with the antiprogestin mifepristone (RU486; Roussel Uclaf SA). The binding affinities of cyproterone and RU486 for the GR and progesterone receptor were similar (K(d), 15-70 nM). Both compounds were characterized as competitive antagonists of dexamethasone without intrinsic transactivating properties in rat hepatocytes (K(i), 10-30 nM). In
osteosarcoma
cells, RU486 revealed a higher potency than cyproterone acetate to prevent responses to dexamethasone-induced GR transactivation and NF kappa B transrepression. Upon administration to Sprague-Dawley rats, both compounds were found to be orally bioavailable and to inhibit transactivation of liver GR. Molecular docking of cyproterone acetate and RU486 into the homology model for the GR ligand binding domain illustrated overlapping steroid scaffolds in the binding pocket. However, in contrast to RU486, cyproterone lacks a bulky side chain at position C11 beta that has been proposed to trigger active antagonism of nuclear receptors by displacing the C-terminal helix of the ligand-binding domain, thereby affecting activation function 2. Cyproterone may therefore inhibit transactivation of the GR by a molecular mechanism recently described as passive antagonism. New therapeutic profiles may result from compounds designed to selectively stabilize the inactive and active conformations of certain nuclear receptors.
...
PMID:Glucocorticoid receptor antagonism by cyproterone acetate and RU486. 1269 29
Elf-1 is a member of the Ets transcription factor family that regulates the genes involved in cellular growth and differentiation. Enhanced expression of Elf-1 has been reported in
prostate cancer
, breast cancer, and
osteosarcoma
. The aim of this study was to elucidate the involvement of Elf-1 in ovarian carcinogenesis. We analyzed serial frozen tissue sections from 26 patients with epithelial ovarian carcinoma and 10 patients with benign cystadenoma of ovary for Elf-1 protein expression, using fluorescent immunohistochemistry. We analyzed the relationship between the percentages of Elf-1-stained cells and patient characteristics, including histological classification, clinical stage, histological grade, clinical outcome, and survival rate. Elf-1 was weakly detected in some benign cystadenomas (0-5.5%). There was, however, abundant Elf-1 immunoreactivity in the nucleus of the ovarian carcinoma cells along with a little cytoplasmic staining. Scoring on the basis of the percentage of nuclear-positive cells indicated that nuclear Elf-1 expression was significantly associated with PCNA-labeling index (p=0.04), clinical stage (p<0.01), histological grade (p<0.01), and clinical outcome (p=0.02). However, there was no relationship between Elf-1 expression and histological classification. Survival data were available for all patients and demonstrated that Elf-1 expression was significantly associated with poor prognosis (p<0.01). Our results demonstrate that Elf-1 expression in ovarian carcinoma correlates with the malignant potential of this tumor.
...
PMID:The significance of Elf-1 expression in epithelial ovarian carcinoma. 1288 51
Prostate carcinoma-derived factors induce a proliferative response in osteoblasts. The present study investigated the involvement of MAP kinase in the osteoblastic reaction of osteocytes and the response of 1alpha,25-hydroxy-vitamin D3 (1,25-vitD3)-pretreated osteoblasts. Conditioned media (CM) from prostate, colon, pancreatic, renal cell and breast cancer cell lines were tested on their proliferative activity using murine osteoblast-like MC3T3-E1 cells, MG63 human
osteosarcoma
cells and immortalized human osteoblasts (AHTO-7). Changes in osteoblastic activities of the supernantants were measured in the presence of MAP kinase inhibitors and following 1,25-vitD3-induced differentiation of the target osteoblasts. Supernatants of
prostate cancer
cells stimulated proliferation of osteoblasts in all three indicator cell lines, with AHTO-7 exhibiting the most significant correlation to human primary osteoblast cultures. 1,25-vitD3 induced the differentiation marker alkaline phosphatase (ALP) in MC3T3-E1 and AHTO-7, but only to a minor degree in MG63 cells. 1,25-vitD3-induced differentiation reduced the proliferative response to CM from several cell lines in MC3T3-E1 and MG63 to a minor degree, whereas in AHTO-7 cells the osteoblastic reaction was reduced for 2/4 pancreatic, 3/3 colon and 1/1 renal cancer CMs, however not for 3/3
prostate cancer
CMs. Stimulation of AHTO-7 cells by CM from
prostate cancer
lines is inhibited significantly by MEK1 kinase inhibitor PD 98059 in contrast to CMs derived from other carcinomas, except ACHN renal cancer cells. The findings in the present study demonstrate that human AHTO-7 cells seem to represent a valid human system to monitor osteoblastic activity, especially in respect to 1,25-vitD3-induced differentiation. Vitamin D3-induced differentiation has no direct effect on
prostate cancer
-derived osteoblastic activity in the same cell line in vitro, which however, could be reversed by disruption of the signal transduction at the MAP kinase level, revealing a new target for the inhibition of
prostate cancer
-associated bone formation.
...
PMID:Effects of 1alpha,25-dihydroxy-vitamin D3 pretreatment and MAP kinase inhibitor PD 98059 on response of osteoblasts to prostate-derived osteoblastic factors. 1288 36
Tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases (TIMPs) have been shown to perform several biological functions in tumor promotion, principally by their action of inhibiting matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) at different steps of the metastatic process. In particular, TIMP-2 is involved in a functional complex with the membrane-type 1 (MT1) MMP to convert the secreted MMP-2 progelatinase into the fully active proteolytic enzyme. We used the human, androgen-sensitive prostate carcinoma cell line LNCaP in coculture with the human
osteosarcoma
cell line OHS to experimentally address the possibility of androgen-dependent regulatory effects on the functional MT1-MMP/TIMP-2/MMP-2 complex upon interaction between prostate carcinoma and osteoblastic cells in metastasis of
prostate cancer
to bone. In the LNCaP cells a gradual, time-dependent decline in TIMP-2 mRNA expression was observed in the presence of the synthetic androgen analogue R1881 (100 nM), reaching approximately 25% of the control level after 48 h of incubation. Consistent with this, the accumulation of secreted TIMP-2 in media from R1881-treated cells was significantly inhibited already after 3 h. Neither MMP-2 gelatinolytic activity nor expression of MT1-MMP was detected in LNCaP cells. In contrast, the OHS cells showed membrane-associated MT1-MMP expression as well as MMP-2 secretion. However, R1881 treatment of the LNCaP/OHS coculture model did not seem to change the overall proteolytic activity of the MT1 -MMP/TIMP-2/MMP-2 complex. Hormonal control of TIMP-2 expression in prostate carcinoma cells has not been previously reported, but whether such regulation has any functional role in the development of osteoblastic metastases in
prostate cancer
is still unclear.
...
PMID:The metalloproteinase inhibitor TIMP-2 is down-regulated by androgens in LNCaP prostate carcinoma cells. 1459 88
Stromal-epithelial interaction contributes to local prostate tumor growth, androgen-independent progression and distant metastasis. We have established in vitro coculture and in vivo chimeric tumor models to evaluate the roles of stromal cells isolated from either
osteosarcoma
or normal bone, a site where
prostate cancer
cells frequently metastasize, in contributing to the growth and survival of human
prostate cancer
cells. We have evaluated extensively the effects of toxic gene therapy using luciferase-tagged chimeric human
prostate cancer
models both in vitro and in vivo. In the in vitro cocultured cell model, we assessed cancer cell growth and residual cellular proteins after targeting either
prostate cancer
epithelial cells alone or both
prostate cancer
and bone stromal cells. In the in vivo animal model, we measured tumor volume and serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA) in mice bearing chimeric prostate tumors comprised of human prostate tumor cells and normal bone stromal cells. Our results demonstrated that: (1) The rate of human
prostate cancer
cell growth in vitro is accelerated by coculturing with human and rat
osteosarcoma
or normal mouse bone marrow stromal cell lines. No growth stimulation was noted when cocultured with a human prostate epithelial cell line. (2) Disabling the growth of normal bone stromal cells using transgenic targeting with a bystander gene, herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase (hsv-TK), plus the pro-drug ganciclovir (GCV) or acyclovir markedly depressed the growth of cocultured human
prostate cancer
cells in vitro and human
prostate cancer
-mouse normal bone stroma chimeric tumors in vivo. (3) By cotargeting both human
prostate cancer
and normal mouse bone stromal cells in vitro with an adenoviral construct, Ad-hOC-TK (a replication-defective Ad5 vector with the bystander transgene hsv-TK under the control of a human osteocalcin (hOC) promoter) plus GCV4, we observed greater inhibition of tumor cell growth than by targeting a single cell compartment with Ad-PSA-TK (a vector construct similar to Ad-hOC-TK except that the transgene expression is under regulation by a full-length human PSA promoter). These results, taken together, established a basic principle that cotargeting both tumor and its supporting stroma is more efficacious than targeting a single cell compartment in the treatment of human
prostate cancer
bone metastasis. This principle can be applied to other clinical conditions of cancer growth where stroma contribute to the overall growth and survival potential of the cancer.
...
PMID:Cotargeting tumor and stroma in a novel chimeric tumor model involving the growth of both human prostate cancer and bone stromal cells. 1469 56
A case of
osteosarcoma
in pelvic bone following radiation therapy for
prostate cancer
is reported. A 74-year-old patient was diagnosed with
prostate cancer
10 years ago and started on the endocrine therapy with LH-RH agonist. He had no apparent distant metastasis, and received radiation therapy 8 years ago. He has complained of low back pain since several months ago. A high uptake on bone scintigram and osteolytic and osteoblastic damages on CT were noted in pubic bone and sacrum. The PSA level was less than 0.2 ng/ml. Pathohistological diagnosis by biopsy of the pubic bone was chondroblastic type
osteosarcoma
, showing an atypical cell proliferation with osteoid. Immunostaining for nonepithelial marker vimentin was positive. He underwent heavy ion radiation therapy for
osteosarcoma
at the National Institute of Radiological Sciences.
Osteosarcoma
is one of the rare delayed complications after radiation therapy and requires biopsy for correct diagnosis.
...
PMID:[A case of osteosarcoma in pelvic bone following radiation therapy for prostate cancer]. 1497 43
Clusterin/Apolipoprotein J (CLU) is a heterodimeric ubiquitously expressed secreted glycoprotein that is implicated in several physiological processes and is differentially expressed in many severe physiological disturbances, including tumor formation and in vivo cancer progression. Despite extensive efforts, clarification of CLU's biological role has been exceptionally difficult and its precise function remains elusive. Short RNA duplexes, referred to as small interfering RNAs (siRNAs), provide a new approach for the elucidation of gene function in human cells. Here, we describe siRNA-mediated CLU gene silencing in
osteosarcoma
and prostate human cancer cells and illustrate that CLU mRNA is amenable to siRNA-mediated degradation. Our data demonstrate that CLU knockdown in human cancer cells induces significant reduction of cellular growth and higher rates of spontaneous endogenous apoptosis. Moreover, CLU knockdown cancer cells were significantly sensitized to both genotoxic and oxidative stress induced by chemotherapeutic drugs and H(2)O(2), respectively. These effects were more pronounced in cell lines that express high endogenous steady-state levels of the CLU protein and occur through hyperactivation of the cellular apoptotic machinery. Overall, our results reveal that, in the distinct cellular contexts of the
osteosarcoma
and
prostate cancer
cells assayed, CLU is a central molecule in cell homeostasis that exerts a cytoprotective function. The described CLU-specific siRNA oligonucleotides that can potently silence CLU gene expression may thus prove valuable agents during antitumor therapy or at other pathological conditions where CLU has been implicated.
...
PMID:Silencing expression of the clusterin/apolipoprotein j gene in human cancer cells using small interfering RNA induces spontaneous apoptosis, reduced growth ability, and cell sensitization to genotoxic and oxidative stress. 1499 47
Osteosarcoma
(OS), a malignant bone neoplasia in childhood, has poor prognosis if metastases appear in the lung. A novel therapeutic approach could consist in a gene therapeutic treatment of OS metastases. However, if promiscuous viral vectors are applied for the delivery of potentially toxic transgenes, their misdelivery into normal tissues could cause severe complications. This problem could be circumvented by application of OS-specific promoters for transgene expression control. We analysed the function of promoters described to be tumour-,
osteosarcoma
- or osteoblast-specific. Expression rates driven by osteoblast- specific fragments from the collagen1A1-promoter, the human Osteocalcin-promoter, the bone-sialoprotein promoter and the beta-catenin promoter depending on vitamin supplementation were analysed in five OS cell lines, in normal lung fibroblasts and in a non-osteoblastic
prostate cancer
cell line (LNCaP) by dual luciferase assays. In addition, an unspecific but doxycyclin-repressible promoter construct (pAd.3r-luc) was examined. We found that all constructs were active in OS cell lines to varying extents. The complete human Osteocalcin promoter and the bone-sialoprotein promoter were partially induced by vitamin D3 or C respectively while the pAd.3r-luc activity could be shut down by doxycyclin. In contrast, the human Osteocalcin-promoter was not activated by vitamin D3 in LNCaP cells; its action remained relatively low. Interestingly, excepting the beta-catenin promoter, we measured strong activities of all promoters in lung fibroblast cells. Our study demonstrates that promoter activity should be evaluated not only for the target cells of the gene therapeutic approaches, but also for neighbouring normal tissues. Unspecific but repressible promoters could represent an alternative.
...
PMID:Limited specificity of promoter constructs for gene therapy in osteosarcoma. 1537 10
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