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)

Histophysiology, ultrastructure, chemical analyses of transplants and implants of Dunn and Ridgway mouse osteosarcomas demonstrate that tumorigenesis is a manifestation of deranged morphogenesis in developing mesenchymal cell populations. The end product of development is defective, incompletely calcified, disorganized bone without any inclusions of bone marrow tissue. When Dunn osteosarcoma is freeze-dried and then implanted, the tumor is resorbed and replaced by deposits of normal cartilage, bone, and bone marrow. Freeze-dried Ridgway osteosarcoma is replaced only by a fibrous connective tissue scar. Disaggregated Dunn tumor osteoblasts synthesize a trypsin-labile collagenase-resistant cell surface localized bone morphogen. Tumor matrix stroma, prepared by sequential chemical extraction of soluble non-collagenous proteins also contains significant quantities of the same bone morphogen. Tumor tissue pulverized to particle size as small as 44 micrometer3 transmitted bone morphogen more rapidly than intact tumor tissue. The total tumor cell and stroma mediated bone morphogen produces three times more normal bone than normal cortical bone matrix. Our working hypothesis is that a normal bone morphogenetic polypeptide (BMP) is synthesized by Dunn osteosarcoma cells and retained by the tumor matrix stroma. Neither the mechanism of transmission nor the mesenchymal cell receptor sites of BMP are known.
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PMID:An osteosarcoma cell and matrix retained morphogen for normal bone formation. 27 29

Immunological studies are presented on a patient with a long clinical history suggesting the existence of a tumor-specific immune response. His tumor, first considered benign, progressed to a highly malignant osteosarcoma. Cell-mediated immune reactivity against biopsy cells and against tumor extract was detected in vitro by the autologous tumor stimulation test (ATS) and in vivo by the skin test. In one ATS-test with tumor extract, blastogenesis of T-cells was demonstrated. The amount of Ig(s) in consecutive biopsies increased. Biopsies taken in the later period of the disease stimulated only after trypsin treatment. This stimulation was inhibited by autologous serum or acid eluate of the biopsy. The inhibitory factor in the serum was not intact immunoglobin. Blood lymphocytes did not show a discriminatory or disease-related cytotoxicity, either directly or after co-cultivation with the tumor material. Lymphocytes isolated from one biopsy were non-reactive in both the ATS and the cytotoxicity test.
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PMID:Search for anti-tumor response in a bone tumor patient with a long clinical history. 106 20

The purpose of this investigation was to evaluate the chemotactic potential of a partially purified protein extract from bone matrix when tested against osteosarcoma cells with osteoblast characteristics. The chemotactic response of ROS 17/2 cells to a lyophilized bovine bone extract purified to "Urist step eight" was evaluated in Boyden blind well chambers. A checkerboard design was employed to test cell migration against positive, negative, and no concentration gradients, thereby controlling the effects of chemokinesis and/or random migration on results. The results demonstrate that the partially purified protein extract from bovine bone matrix is chemotactic since more cells migrated to positive gradients than to negative gradients (P less than .01). The chemotactic effect was confirmed by an increase in cell migration toward positive gradients of the bone extract compared to cell migration in the presence of no gradient (P less than .01). When no gradient was present, the cells exhibited an increased response in the presence of equal concentrations of the bone extract (P less than .01) indicating a chemokinetic effect. The proteinaceous nature of the chemoattractant was confirmed by its susceptibility to trypsin digestion and heat exposure.
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PMID:In vitro chemotactic response of osteoblast-like osteosarcoma cells to a partially purified protein extract of demineralized bone matrix. 200 26

These studies were undertaken to characterize the physiological fate of the insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I)-type I receptor complex in MG-63, an IGF-responsive human osteosarcoma cell line. To investigate this, a photoreactive iodinated derivative of IGF-I [5-azido-2-nitrobenzoyl-125I-IGF-I (ANBz-125I-IGF-I)] was synthesized. This derivative retained biological activity and photolabeled a cell surface component on MG-63 cells with the size and binding specificity characteristic of the type I IGF receptor. To assess the stability of the photoaffinity-labeled IGF-I receptor complex, quiescent monolayers of MG-63 cells were incubated with ANBz-125I-IGF-I at 2 C, photolyzed, and then warmed to 37 C. At various times the monolayers were solubilized and the receptor complex was identified by quantitative autoradiography after sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Under these conditions the photoaffinity-labeled IGF-I receptor complex was relatively stable, with a half-life of 11 +/- 2 h in five experiments. To determine if the complex undergoes internalization, its susceptibility to hydrolysis by trypsin at 2 C was measured. When cells that were labeled at 2 C were warmed to 37 C, a trypsin-insensitive band appeared within 20 min, reached a maximum by 1 h, and declined thereafter; however, an average of only 7% (5-8% in four experiments) of the total labeled receptor pool was present intracellularly at 1 h, and this declined to less than 1% by 4 h. A similar distribution of receptors was observed in cells photolabeled after incubation with ANBz-125I-IGF-I at 37 C, indicating that this distribution was not the result of altered metabolism of the photolabeled receptor complex. Lysosomotropic agents inhibited degradation of the complex, but did not alter its distribution between the cell surface and interior. These results indicated that the IGF-I-type I receptor complex is relatively stable and does not undergo rapid ligand-induced down-regulation and degradation. These observations suggest a model in which the IGF-receptor complex functions while present at or near the cell surface.
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PMID:Metabolism of photoaffinity-labeled insulin-like growth factor-I receptors by human cells in vitro. 215 97

Several human cell lines were studied for the production of gelatinases. Diploid fibroblasts, the melanoma cell line Bowes, the MG-63 osteosarcoma cell line and the human hepatoma cell line Malavu all constitutively produced a 67 kDa gelatinase. Gelatinolytic enzymes were quantified by a sensitive zymographic substrate conversion assay. Upon induction with phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA), the human hepatoma cell line secreted considerable amounts of an 85 kDa gelatinase activity. The induction process was time- and dose-dependent. It represented a true increase in production per individual cell and was associated by a marked change of the cell morphology. The effect of various proteinase inhibitors and the maximal activity of the enzyme near neutral pH demonstrate that it is a neutral metalloproteinase. Characterization studies showed the 85 kDa gelatinase to be transformed to lower molecular weight, active forms by treatment with p-aminophenylmercuric acetate (APMA) or trypsin.
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PMID:Human hepatoma cells produce an 85 kDa gelatinase regulated by phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate. 216 96

The secretion of elevated levels of proteinases is considered to be a distinct property of most transformed cells. The cellular and secreted levels of plasminogen activators and collagenases have been examined in the nonmalignant human osteosarcoma (HOS), the malignant Kirsten murine sarcoma virus transformed (KHOS/NP), the temperature sensitive revertant of virus transformed HOS (KHOS-240S) and N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine transformed HOS (MNNG/HOS) clones. Virus and MNNG transformed clones exhibit 100- and 7-fold higher cellular and and 270- and 30-fold higher extracellular plasminogen activator (PA) activity as compared with untransformed HOS controls. The cellular PA activity of the revertant clone is similar to but the secreted level is slightly higher than the HOS controls. SDS-PAGE in the presence of casein and plasminogen is consistent with the major PA species of urinary type (u-PA) and with the absence of PA inhibitor in the parent and revertant clones. The cellular levels of active collagenase are low in all the clones. However, on activation by trypsin, the two active collagenase bands of similar intensity are observed for all the lines in SDS-PAGE in the presence of gelatin. While there appears to be some elevation of secreted collagenase prior to trypsin activation, the activated collagenases appear to have the same size and activity in all of the clones.
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PMID:Synthesis and secretion of plasminogen activators and collagenases in human cells transformed by Kirsten murine sarcoma virus and N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine. 256 62

Endosomal preparations from human osteosarcoma cells and from fibroblasts contain 51,000- and 26,000-Mr proteins which bind a small dermatan sulphate proteoglycan after SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis and Western blotting. Binding can be inhibited by unlabelled proteoglycan core protein. The proteins co-precipitate with a proteoglycan core protein-antibody complex. Scatchard analysis of immobilized endosomal proteins yielded a KD of about 37 nM for the proteoglycan. In intact cells proteins of the same size can be found. They are sensitive to trypsinization. A 51,000-Mr protein is the predominant membrane protein with strong binding to immobilized dermatan sulphate proteoglycan. There are additional proteoglycan-binding proteins with Mr values of around 30,000 and 14,000 which are insensitive to trypsin treatment. In contrast with the 51,000- and 26,000-Mr proteins, they resist deoxycholate/Triton X-100 extraction several days after subcultivation.
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PMID:Endocytosis of a small dermatan sulphate proteoglycan. Identification of binding proteins. 260 92

Demineralized extracts of bone matrix and conditioned media from cultured fetal rat calvaria have been reported to contain growth stimulatory activity for bone cells. To investigate the potential role of these local bone growth factors in the development of bone metastases, we chose the Walker 256 carcinosarcoma, a rat mammary tumor which causes osteolytic bone metastases and hypercalcemia. 45Ca-labeled, 19-day fetal Sprague-Dawley rat calvaria were cultured for 96 hours in BGJb medium. Walker cells from ascites tumors or cultures were grown in unconditioned media or in conditioned media harvested from the bone cultures, in the presence of 10% fetal calf serum. Media were changed every 2 days, cells were counted daily for 5 days, and 3H-thymidine uptake into acid insoluble residues was measured. The growth of tumor cells was 5-6-fold greater in conditioned media than in unconditioned media and the effect was dose dependent. Cells cultured in conditioned media demonstrated a approximately 3-fold enhancement of 3H-thymidine incorporation. Generation of growth stimulatory activity correlated with the extent of bone resorption, measured by release of 45Ca from the fetal parietal bones (r = 0.85; P less than 0.001). Conditioned media from bones cultured with 10(-7) M prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) contained greater amounts of growth stimulatory activity than untreated conditioned media, but PGE2 itself did not stimulate tumor cell growth. Addition of 3.5 mM PO4 to bone cultures blocked bone resorption and the generation of growth factors. Growth stimulatory activity was stable to heat (56 C for 30 minutes) and trypsin digestion, with an apparent molecular weight of less than 17,000 daltons by high-performance liquid chromatography. Conditioned medium also stimulated the growth of 13762 rat mammary adenocarcinoma cells, MB-MDA-231 human breast carcinoma cells, TE-85 osteosarcoma cells, a murine fibrosarcoma and rat embryonic fibroblasts, with the most potent effects noted for Walker tumor cells, the TE-85 osteosarcoma, and human breast carcinoma lines. These results suggest a mechanism by which bone resorption could promote the development of skeletal metastasis.
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PMID:Resorbing bone stimulates tumor cell growth. A role for the host microenvironment in bone metastasis. 345 36

The tumor line CAC-8, is a serially transplantable adenocarcinoma maintained in nude mice which originated from a hypercalcemic dog. Nude mice with CAC-8 developed a syndrome of humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy. CAC-8 contained a protein factor which stimulated adenylate cyclase of bone and kidney cells in vitro. The adenylate cyclase (AC) of rat osteosarcoma cell lines, ROS 17/2.8 (ROS) and UMR-106, was stimulated by the tumor extract and potentiated by forskolin (0.1 microM). The ROS cells responded to the lowest concentration of CAC-8 extract, but UMR cells responded with a greater increase in AC activity compared to controls following exposure to CAC-8 extract. Pretreatment of ROS 17/2.8 cells with dexamethasone enhanced the response to CAC-8 extract. The opossum kidney cell line (OK) was less sensitive to the AC-stimulating activity of CAC-8 extract, but AC stimulation was increased in the presence of forskolin. Bovine (1-34) parathyroid hormone (BPTH) (10 nM) stimulated AC equally in ROS, UMR, and OK cells. Isoproterenol (1.0 microM) stimulated AC activity in ROS and UMR cells but not in OK cells. The AC-stimulating activity of CAC-8 appeared to bind to the parathyroid hormone receptor of ROS, UMR, and OK cells since addition of the parathyroid hormone receptor antagonist, [8,18norleucine, 34tyrosine]BPTH (3-34) amide, inhibited CAC-8-mediated cyclic adenosine 5'-monophosphate production and alone did not stimulate AC activity. The AC-stimulating activity of CAC-8 was acid and heat stable. Trypsin digestion reduced BPTH and CAC-8 stimulation of AC to near basal levels and treatment of CAC-8 extract with dithiothreitol reduced AC stimulation in UMR cells by approximately 50%. Extracts of the hypercalcemic tumor line (CAC-8) contained bone and kidney AC-stimulating activity which was enhanced by forskolin and dexamethasone, inhibited by [8,18Nle, 34Tyr]BPTH (3-34) amide, heat stable, trypsin sensitive, inactivated by reduction, and had a relative molecular weight of 34,000 by gel exclusion chromatography. Isolation and characterization of the factor(s) produced by CAC-8 that stimulate AC activity will be useful in further understanding the pathogenesis of humoral hypercalemia of malignancy in animal and human patients.
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PMID:Bone and kidney adenylate cyclase-stimulating activity produced by a hypercalcemic canine adenocarcinoma line (CAC-8) maintained in nude mice. 346 38

We have found that the gamma-carboxyglutamic acid (GLA)-containing protein from bone (BGP, osteocalcin) has chemotactic activity in vitro for a number of cells which are found adjacent to endosteal bone surfaces in vivo. Using the Boyden chamber technique for measuring cell chemotaxis in vitro, we have shown that BGP is chemotactic for cultured human breast cancer cells, human and mouse monocytes, and for cultured rat osteosarcoma cells which have the characteristics of osteoblasts. The migration of these cells in response to BGP is undirectional and not due to spontaneous or random migration. A synthetic peptide (Phe-Tyr-Gly-Pro-Val), which is identical to the carboxy-terminal peptide cleaved from BGP when digested by trypsin, is also chemotactic for the same cells. BGP retains its chemotactic activity after conversion of the gamma-carboxyglutamic acid residues to glutamic acid, indicating that this biological effect requires neither gamma-carboxyglutamate nor the ability of BGP to bind calcium. Since BGP is released from bone during states of increased bone turnover, it is possible that this chemotactic effect of the protein may be a mechanism for recruitment of these cells to sites of active bone remodeling.
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PMID:Chemotactic activity of the gamma-carboxyglutamic acid containing protein in bone. 660 77


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