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)

A simple combine treatment with immunosuppressive agents permitting the growth of human tumor xenografts in conventional mice is presented. It consists of two simultaneous applications of 90 mg of procarbazine (PCH) per kg and 30 mg of cyclophosphamide (CY) per kg, alternating with two doses of 0.15 ml/10 g of antilymphocyte serum (ALS) for 4 days before grafting. No postgraft treatment is used. With a take rate of 100%, at 60 days after subcutaneous transplantation into male C3H mice, fragments of a human colon adenocarcinoma had grown (on the average) into cherry-sized tumors. Two osteosarcomas, an Ewing sarcoma, and a bronchogenic carcinoma were also studied and grew similarly. Tumors could be established in the three tested mouse strains but grew better in male animals. Synergy of PCH and CY and ALS depends upon the alternating sequence of both drugs and ALS. The histology of the colon carcinoma and the Ewing sarcoma was unchanged as compared to the tumors growing in nude mice. In contrast, the osteosarcoma developed in a more differentiated fashion in the immunosuppressed mice. The presented model may serve as a screening system for anticancer drugs.
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PMID:Growth of human tumors in mice after short-term immunosuppression with procarbazine, cyclophosphamide, and antilymphocyte serum. 693 35

A Ewing sarcoma grown in immunosuppressed mice was eradicated with a single lethal dose of dimethylmyleran (DMM) followed by autologous or syngeneic bone marrow. Sarcomas treated 2 weeks after grafting in a phase of rapid proliferation disappeared and large sarcomas treated after 6 or 10 weeks were reduced to necrotic tissue. A human osteosarcoma also regressed distinctly after this therapy while a human colon carcinoma responded poorly. Sub-lethal DMM treatment induced complete remissions in only 62% of the mice. Tumours which display sensitivity in this model may be treated clinically with lethal doses of DMM and autologous marrow transplantations.
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PMID:Control of a human tumour (Ewing sarcoma) in mice by a single lethal dose of dimethyl-myleran and bone marrow. 702 62

9,10-Anthracenedicarboxaldehyde bis[(4,5-dihydro-1H-imidazol-2-yl)hydrazone] dihydrochloride (CL 216942; bisantrene hydrochloride; NSC 337766), a member of a new chemical class of compounds with antineoplastic properties, has been evaluated for antitumor activity in experimental murine tumor systems. The compound produced significant increases in life span (LS) and long-term survivors among mice bearing transplantable leukemias and solid tumors. Optimal treatment regimens resulted in an ILS of greater than 173 and 151% in mice with P388 and L1210 leukemia, respectively, an ILS of greater than 85% in mice with Lieberman plasma cell tumor, and an ILS of greater than 200, 150, and 63%, respectively, in mice with B16 melanoma, colon tumor 26, and Ridgway osteogenic sarcoma. An adriamycin-resistant subline of P388 leukemia showed complete cross-resistance to CL of 216942. The compound was active when administered by the i.p., i.v., and s.c. routes, but p.o. activity was not observed. Significant schedule dependency was not observed when the drug was administered once daily for 9 days, once every 4 days, or as a single dose, but single doses typically produced the best effects. CL 216942 was a potent inhibitor of DNA and RNA synthesis in L5178Y lymphoma cells cultured in vitro, and preliminary studies indicated the drug was a DNA-intercalating agent. The drug was cytotoxic for rapidly proliferating and nonproliferating (G0) human colon carcinoma WiDR cells in vitro.U
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PMID:Activity of a novel anthracenyl bishydrazone, 9,10-anthracenedicarboxyaldehyde Bis[(4,5-dihydro-1H-imidazol-2-yl)hydrazone] dihydrochloride, against experimental tumors in mice. 705 99

We investigated the interaction of different human tumor types with resting and IL-1-activated human umbilical vein endothelial cells under laminar flow conditions using a parallel plate flow chamber. Three tumor cell lines (the HT-29M colon carcinoma, the OVCAR-3 ovarian carcinoma, and the T-47D breast carcinoma) showed limited adhesion to unstimulated endothelial cells at any of the shear stress levels tested, while rolling and massive adhesion of tumor cells were observed on IL-1-activated endothelial cells. Three other tumor cell lines (the A375M and A2058 melanomas and the MG-63 osteosarcoma) did not adhere on resting endothelial cells at high shear stress (> 1.5 dyn/cm2) and started to adhere with decreasing shear stress; the number of adherent cells increased steeply on IL-1-activated endothelial cells, but no cell rolling was observed even at the highest shear stress. These mechanisms of tumor cell interaction with endothelial cells were analyzed in detail using the HT-29M colon carcinoma and the A375M melanoma. Incubation of activated endothelial cells with a monoclonal antibody against E-selectin inhibited rolling and adhesion of HT-29M, but had no effect on the adhesion of A375M cells; monoclonal antibody against vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 reduced the adhesion of A375M cells and had no effect on HT-29M. The selective interaction of these two molecules with tumor cells was confirmed by measuring the adhesion of tumor cells on immobilized soluble proteins. On E-selectin-coated surfaces, HT-29M cells rolled during perfusion experiments without subsequent adhesion, while A375M cells did not adhere. On vascular cell adhesion molecule-1-coated surfaces, HT-29M cells neither adhered nor rolled, while A375M cells adhered massively without rolling. Under flow conditions, therefore, cells from different tumor types interact with the endothelial surface by different mechanisms, depending on adhesion molecules expressed on the tumor and endothelial cell surface.
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PMID:Rolling and adhesion of human tumor cells on vascular endothelium under physiological flow conditions. 750 97

We have found a monoclonal antibody, called BV7, that rapidly stimulated by 6-10-folds HT-29 colon carcinoma cell adhesion to resting human umbilical vein endothelial cells. This effect was directed to tumor cells and not to endothelial cells and was cell-specific. BV7 was also active on the HCCP-2998 but did not change adhesion to endothelial cells of other tumor cells (MG63 osteosarcoma, A375 melanoma, MHCC-1410 and Lovo colon carcinoma) even if, by flow cytometry, this monoclonal antibody could bind to them. Additionally, BV7 effect was substratum-specific, since it did not increase but rather blocked HT-29 adhesion to matrix proteins. Immunoprecipitation analysis and binding to specific transfectants revealed that BV7 recognizes beta 1-subunit of integrin receptors and antibody blocking experiments showed that alpha 2 beta 1 antibodies were able to counteract BV7 effect on HT-29 adhesion to endothelial cells. In contrast, antibodies directed to other integrins or endothelial adhesive receptors (E- and P-selectin, VCAM-1, ICAM-1, ICAM-2) were ineffective. Induction of HT-29 adhesion to endothelial cells by BV7 was Fc- and protein synthesis-independent but required metabolically active cells. The presence of physiological concentrations of divalent cations and of cytoskeletal integrity was not needed. Comparative studies with eight different prototypic beta 1 antibodies showed that five of them induced HT-29 adhesion to endothelial cells in a way unrelated to their ability to interfere with HT-29 adhesion to matrix proteins. Cross-blocking binding assays demonstrated that all the five antibodies recognized a topographically related epitope. Taken together these results provide evidence that beta 1 antibodies may trigger a novel pathway of HT-29 colon carcinoma adhesion to endothelial cells with different features in respect to other described mechanisms of tumor cell interaction with the endothelium.
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PMID:A novel mechanism of colon carcinoma cell adhesion to the endothelium triggered by beta 1 integrin chain. 750 99

1,25-(OH)2-Vitamin D3, the active metabolite of vitamin D, is a secosteroid hormone with known differentiating activity in leukemic cells. Studies have demonstrated the presence of vitamin D receptors (VDR) in a wide range of tissues and cell types. Antiproliferative activity of 1,25-(OH)2-vitamin D3 has been documented in osteosarcoma, melanoma, colon carcinoma, and breast carcinoma cells. This study was designed to analyze vitamin D receptor level in breast cancer cells as a marker of differentiation and as a predictor of growth inhibition by 1,25-(OH)2-vitamin D3. VDR messenger RNA was found to be present in relatively high levels in well-differentiated cells and in low levels in poorly differentiated cells. All cell lines had detectable VDR mRNA. Radiolabeled ligand binding assay showed a similar pattern. MCF-7 and T47D cells, which express VDR at moderate levels, showed significant growth inhibition by 10(-9) M1,25-(OH)2-vitamin D3 (p < 0.05). MDA-MB-231 cells, which have very low levels of VDR, demonstrated no growth inhibition by 1,25-(OH)2-vitamin D3 at concentrations up to 10(-6) M. Based on these results it can be stated that VDR expression is lost with de-differentiation and that receptor is essential for the antiproliferative response to 1,25-(OH)2-vitamin D3.
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PMID:Vitamin D receptors in breast cancer cells. 788 Oct 99

Primary chemotherapy is an established treatment in selected patients with osteosarcoma and locally advanced breast cancer. In several other tumor entities this therapeutic approach is under clinical investigation. In contrast, colon carcinoma has been believed to be chemoresistant for a long period of time. Thus, no therapeutic approaches dealing with preoperative therapy have been initiated yet. Recent studies showing remission rates as high as 40% in advanced colon cancer and the proof of efficacy for postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy must now lead to reevaluation of the therapeutic approach to this tumor entity. Data from animal models as well as several tumor biologic hypotheses also point to a possible advantage for preoperative therapy in order to ameliorate relapse-free survival and overall survival in these patients. In this work we discuss potential advantages and disadvantages of primary, neoadjuvant strategies of treatment for colon cancer. Based on these pros and cons, clinical studies for a preoperative therapeutic approach appear to be justified and necessary in patients with locally advanced disease and in patients with metastases at the time of diagnosis.
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PMID:[Primary (preoperative, neoadjuvant) chemotherapy of colon cancer--a therapeutic alternative?]. 808 4

Intoplicine (RP 60475, NSC 645008) is a new 7H-benzo[e]pyrido [4,3-b] indole derivative which interacts with DNA and inhibits both topoisomerases I and II. In vitro it was found cytotoxic against various cell types with greater cytotoxicity towards solid tumor cells. We report here the anticancer activity of RP 60475 against a variety of transplantable tumors of mice, and also its cross-resistance profile in leukemias. The end points used were % T/C (median tumor weight of the Treated over the Control x 100) and logCK (log10 cell kill total). RP 60475 administered i.v. was found schedule-independent with a peak plasma level problem. It had a good therapeutic index and host recovery usually occurred 7.5 days post last treatment. RP 60475 was found to be highly active against early stage colon 38 (T/C = 0%, 2.9 logCK) and could induce 5/5 complete regressions of advanced stage tumor. It was found active against colon adenocarcinoma 51 (T/C = 3.6%, 1.9 logCK) and colon carcinoma 26 (T/C = 11.7%, 1.2 logCK). Most of the mammary adenocarcinomas were found very responsive, MA16/C (T/C = 0%, 2.8 logCK), MA14/A (T/C = 0%, 1.4 logCK), MA13/C (T/C = 0%, 3.1 log CK) and MA44 (T/C = 34%). Excellent activity was also observed against early stage pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma 03 (T/C = 0%) and RP 60475 could achieve 5/5 complete regressions of upstaged tumor. Activity was also obtained on Glasgow osteogenic sarcoma (T/C = 0%, 3.3 logCK), on B16 melanoma (T/C = 14%, 1.3 logCK) and to a lesser extent on Lewis lung carcinoma (T/C = 33.2%). Evaluation of RP 60475 against leukemia sublines with acquired resistance, revealed that L1210/cisplatin and L1210/BCNU were not cross-resistant to RP 60475 whereas P388/vincristine was partially cross-resistant to RP 60475 and P388/doxorubicin was cross-resistant to RP 60475. Based on RP 60475 broad activity against transplantable tumors of mice, its effectiveness against some resistant sublines, its original mechanism of action and its acceptable toxicological profile, this compound was selected for clinical trials.
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PMID:Antitumor activity of intoplicine (RP 60475, NSC 645008), a new benzo-pyrido-indole: evaluation against solid tumors and leukemias in mice. 815 69

The antiproliferative action of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 in osteosarcoma, breast carcinoma, and colon carcinoma cell lines has been described. In this study, the level of vitamin D receptor was analyzed in a panel of colon adenoma and adenocarcinoma cell lines and the receptor level was correlated with the response to treatment with 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3. Ribonuclease protection and ligand-binding assays quantitated the level of vitamin D receptor mRNA expression and the level of functional receptors, respectively. The more well-differentiated cell lines, such as VACO 330, showed higher levels of vitamin D receptor than less-differentiated cell lines, such as SW620. Proliferation assay, clonogenic assay, and growth curve study in HT29 and SW620 cell lines assessed the antiproliferative effect of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 at concentrations ranging from 10(-11) to 10(-6) M. HT29 showed significant (P < 0.05) growth inhibition at 10(-9) to 10(-6) M concentrations, but growth of SW620 remained unchanged. The amount of vitamin D receptor in 12 malignant colonic tumors was compared with that of adjacent normal tissue, and in 9 cases, the tumor expressed a lower vitamin D receptor level. Our results suggest that the level of vitamin D receptor correlates with the degree of differentiation in human colon cancer cell lines and may serve as a useful biological marker in predicting clinical outcome in patients.
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PMID:1,25-Dihydroxyvitamin D3 receptor as a marker of human colon carcinoma cell line differentiation and growth inhibition. 839 79

The 'deleted in colon carcinoma' (DCC) gene has been considered a candidate tumour-suppressor gene that encodes for a transmembrane protein with strong structural similarity to members of the superfamily of neural cell adhesion molecules. It has been mapped to the chromosomal region 18q21.1 and it is implicated in cellular differentiation and developmental processes. In human osteosarcoma allelic loss frequently occurs on the long arm of chromosome 18, suggesting a possible involvement of the DCC gene in the pathogenesis of this tumour entity. In the present study the mRNA and protein expression and rearrangements at the DNA level of the DCC gene were addressed in 25 osteosarcomas and several tumour cell lines, including osteosarcoma- and colon carcinoma-derived cell lines. Using an reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reach in (RT-PCR)-based approach DCC expression was found to be lost or substantially reduced in 14 of 19 high-grade osteosarcomas, in three of six lower grade osteosarcomas and most of the tumour cell lines, in contrast to normally differentiated osteoblasts. Immunohistochemical studies on DCC protein expression of 14 selected tumours correlated well with the RT-PCR-based results. In view of the putative tumour-suppressor characteristics of the DCC gene its loss or reduction of expression could be a specific event in the development or progression of many high-grade osteosarcomas.
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PMID:Frequent reduction or loss of DCC gene expression in human osteosarcoma. 915 51


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