Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0029463 (
osteosarcoma
)
16,637
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In addition to retinoblastoma and
osteosarcoma
, mutation of both alleles of the RB1 gene occurs frequently in several other types of tumors. In order to evaluate the role of RB1 in cancer, the wild type RB1 gene was introduced into the RB1-deleted breast cancer cell line MDA-468-S4 and retinoblastoma cell lines WERI-Rb1 and Y-79. The RB1 complementary DNA was under control of the inducible murine
metallothionein
promoter in MDA-468-S4 and the thymidine kinase promoter in the retinoblastoma lines. The protein, p110RB1, produced from the exogenously introduced gene appeared normal by immunoprecipitation, Western blot analysis, and nuclear localization and also showed normal cell cycle-dependent phosphorylation and an ability to bind to E1a protein. No changes in growth rate or morphology were observed in either of the reconstituted cell types. Expression of p110RB1 in MDA-468-S4 did not affect anchorage-independent growth when measured by colony formation in soft agar. Although the ability of WERI-Rb1 cells expressing p110RB1 to form colonies in methylcellulose was reduced, the reconstituted retinoblastoma cell lines formed intraocular tumors in immunodeficient mice with the same efficiency as the RB1-negative parent cell lines and the tumors produced by the RB1-reconstituted cells continued to express p110RB1. These experimental results suggest that the malignant phenotype is little affected by the replacement of p110RB1 and that RB1 is a relatively weak tumor suppressor gene.
...
PMID:Failure of RB1 to reverse the malignant phenotype of human tumor cell lines. 173 54
ROS 17/2.8 cells, a cloned rat
osteosarcoma
cell line, are exceptionally sensitive to the cytotoxic effects of cadmium. This sensitivity is associated with the inability of this metal to induce the synthesis of
metallothionein
, a transition metal-binding protein, which detoxifies this metal by its sequestration. Sodium butyrate induces the synthesis of
metallothionein
in these cells in a concentration-dependent manner. Treatment with this agent also significantly increases the resistance of these cells to the cytotoxic effects of cadmium and the protective effect of butyrate is reversed upon its removal from culture medium. Butyrate treatment did not significantly alter the accumulation of cadmium by these cells. Hence, the increased synthesis of
metallothionein
in butyrate-treated cells is not due to increased cellular uptake of cadmium. Inhibition of DNA synthesis due to butyrate was not a sufficient condition to alter
metallothionein
synthesis or to protect against Cd-induced cytotoxicity. Equivalent inhibition of DNA synthesis with hydroxyurea failed to increase
metallothionein
synthesis in cadmium-treated cells. These results indicate that modulation of
metallothionein
gene expression in this cell line is the critical factor in determining cellular sensitivity to the cytotoxic effects of cadmium.
...
PMID:Effect of sodium butyrate on metallothionein induction and cadmium cytotoxicity in ROS 17/2.8 cells. 199 66
PTH activates multiple acute intracellular signals within responsive target cells, but the importance of cAMP vs. other second messenger signals in mediating different biological responses to PTH is not known. To address these questions, we developed a genetic approach to block activation of the cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PK-A) in PTH-responsive cell lines. Clonal rat
osteosarcoma
cells (UMR 106-01) were stably transfected with REV-I, a plasmid that directs synthesis of a mutant cAMP-resistant form of the type I regulatory subunit of PK-A. In the transfected bone cells, most of the catalytic subunits of PK-A were associated with the mutant regulatory subunit, and activation of PK-A by cAMP was correspondingly inhibited. We have characterized one such mutant (UMR 4-7) that expressed large amounts of mutant mRNA and exhibited inducible blockade of PK-A via the REV-1
metallothionein
promoter. In the absence of
metallothionein
induction, these cells exhibited nearly normal PTH responsiveness, but after REV-1 induction by Zn2+, they were resistant to PTH-induced activation of PK-A and regulation of membrane phospholipid synthesis by both PTH and cAMP analogs. The mutant UMR 4-7 cell provides a model system in which the consequences of cAMP production by PTH or other agonists that activate adenylate cyclase in osteoblasts may be specifically inhibited by brief exposure to Zn2+. Such mutant cell lines will facilitate further investigation of the linkage between early signalling events and subsequent biological responses in the action of PTH and other agonists on target cells in bone.
...
PMID:Inhibition of parathyroid hormone responsiveness in clonal osteoblastic cells expressing a mutant form of 3',5'-cyclic adenosine monophosphate-dependent protein kinase. 253 93
We have shown previously that overexpression of c-Ha-ras, v-mos or c-fos increases the spontaneous level of chromosomal aberrations and gene mutations in NIH 3T3 cells, and that reduction of the Fos protein level inhibits aberration induction by c-Ha-ras and v-mos and also by irradiation with ultraviolet light (van den Berg et al., Mol. Carcinogenesis, 4, 460-466). In order to examine whether fos is also involved in DNA recombination, thymidine kinase (tk) deficient human
osteosarcoma
cells containing two versions of the herpes simplex virus tk gene inactivated by base insertion were either transiently or stably transfected with various fos expression plasmids. The frequency of tk+ revertants was significantly enhanced both upon transient transfection with RSV-promoter-fos gene constructs and by stimulation of Fos synthesis in stably transfected cells harbouring an inducible
metallothionein
promoter-fos construct. No such increases were observed in cells transfected with plasmids containing a truncated version of c-fos. The data indicate that c-fos is involved in generating various types of genetic changes including homologous recombination; a role of c-fos in genetic instability may contribute to its action in tumor promotion and progression.
...
PMID:Overexpression of c-fos increases recombination frequency in human osteosarcoma cells. 809 16
Although loss of cell surface fibronectin (FN) is a hallmark of many oncogenically transformed cells, the mechanisms responsible for this phenomenon remain poorly understood. The present study utilized the nontumorigenic human
osteosarcoma
cell line TE-85 to investigate the effects of induced Ha-ras oncogene expression on FN biosynthesis. TE-85 cells were stably transfected with
metallothionein
-Ha-ras fusion genes, and the effects of metal-induced ras expression on FN biosynthesis were determined. Induction of the ras oncogene, but not proto-oncogene, was accompanied by a decrease in total FN mRNA and protein levels. Transfection experiments indicated that these oncogene effects were not due to reduced FN promoter activity, suggesting that a posttranscriptional mechanism was involved. The most common mechanism of posttranscriptional regulation affects cytoplasmic mRNA stability. However, in this study the down-regulation of FN was identified as a nuclear event. A component of the ras effect was due to a mechanism affecting accumulation of processed nuclear FN RNA. Mechanisms that would generate such an effect include altered RNA processing and altered stability of the processed message in the nucleus. There was no effect of ras on FN mRNA poly(A) tail length or site of polyadenylation. There was also no evidence for altered splicing at the ED-B domain of FN mRNA. This demonstration of nuclear posttranscriptional down-regulation of FN by the Ha-ras oncogene identifies a new level at which ras oncoproteins can regulate gene expression and thus contribute to development of the malignant phenotype.
...
PMID:A novel mechanism of Ha-ras oncogene action: regulation of fibronectin mRNA levels by a nuclear posttranscriptional event. 816 64
Gene fusions have been widely used in heterologous expression systems as a technique to stabilize the recombinant product against proteolysis, increase the translational initiation efficiency or to serve as an affinity handle for the purification of the protein. A further advantage is the potential to generate an authentic amino terminus of the foreign protein when this is vital for its biological activity, such as for the ability of human parathyroid-hormone-related protein (hPTHrP) to mediate activation of adenylate cyclase. We report here the construction and utility of a ubiquitin fusion protein system for production of the otherwise short-lived hPTHrP(1-141) as a carboxyl extension to ubiquitin in yeast. A hybrid gene containing the hPTHrP(1-141) cDNA coding region fused in-frame to the 3' end of the yeast ubiquitin cDNA was constructed and expressed under the control of the regulatable yeast
metallothionein
promoter. The recombinant protein was purified to homogeneity and finally characterized by N-terminal amino acid sequencing and amino acid composition analysis, demonstrating that the fusion protein was cleaved correctly and quantitatively in vivo by an ubiquitin-specific yeast endoprotease to generate authentic hPTHrP(1-141). hPTHrP(1-141) stimulated adenylate cyclase in rat
osteosarcoma
cell membranes to the same extent as equimolar amounts of recombinant human parathyroid hormone(1-84) and [Tyr34]hPTHrP(1-34)amide. Thus, this expression cloning strategy permits the production of authentic, biologically active recombinant hPTHrP(1-141), and the procedure can easily be adapted to make PTHrP analogues for further studies of its domain-specific activities and biological roles.
...
PMID:Synthesis of human parathyroid-hormone-related protein(1-141) in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. A correct amino-terminal processing vital for the hormone's biological activity is obtained by an ubiquitin fusion protein approach. 838 31
Epidemiological, experimental and clinical data indicate that cadmium and lead are osteotoxins in man and other species. The relative sensitivities of a clonal human
osteosarcoma
cell line (HOS TE 85) and a clonal rat
osteosarcoma
cell line (ROS 17.28) to the cytotoxic effects of cadmium and lead were tested in serum-free media without added growth factors. The rat
osteosarcoma
cells were more sensitive to cadmium with cytotoxicity and inhibition of proliferation at 0.25 versus 0.75 and 1.0 mumol l-1 cadmium, respectively, for human
osteosarcoma
cell lines. The lower sensitivity to cadmium of human
osteosarcoma
cells is attributed, at least partly, to induction of
metallothionein
synthesis by cadmium and zinc in this cell line; in the rat
osteosarcoma
cell line, they do not induce
metallothionein
synthesis. Human
osteosarcoma
cells were more sensitive than rat
osteosarcoma
cells to lead with inhibition (IC50) of proliferation at 4 mumol l-1 lead and cytotoxicity at 20 versus 6 and over 20 mumol l-1 lead, respectively, for these variables in rat
osteosarcoma
cells. Both cell lines attained the highest lead concentration in the 15,000 x g (mitochondrial) fraction. The lead in the mitochondrial, microsomal, nuclear and cytosolic fractions of the human cell line did not decrease during 24 h post-washout. Binding of lead was much less stable in the less sensitive rat cells, with 50-100% loss of mitochondrial, microsomal and nuclear lead during 24 h post-washout.
...
PMID:Osteotoxicity of cadmium and lead in HOS TE 85 and ROS 17/2.8 cells: relation to metallothionein induction and mitochondrial binding. 840 Jul 64
Osteosarcoma
is the most frequent highly malignant bone-tumor with a peak manifestation during the second and third decade of life. Although survival rate increased up to 60-70% within the last 20 years, the problem of non-response to chemotherapy remains. Initial tumor size and response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy are the most accepted prognostic factors used for postoperative stratification of chemotherapy. The identification of patients with a bad response to therapy at the time of diagnosis would facilitate already a preoperative stratification of chemotherapy or a more aggressive regime to increase survival. This review reflects on recently described molecular markers but not on clinical parameters in human
osteosarcoma
with respect to their prognostic potential. This includes p53, the p-glycoprotein, the multidrug resistance gene, the humen epidermal growth factor receptor and
metallothionein
expression. Heat shock proteins have recently become important in
osteosarcoma
because of their prognostic value and their role in drug resistance. A short overview of serological markers is also given. Further results on drug resistance and survival may be provided by ongoing studies, which investigate the role of proteins of the apoptotic and antiapoptotic families in human
osteosarcoma
.
...
PMID:Proteins expressed in osteosarcoma and serum levels as prognostic factors. 1116 28
Osteosarcoma
is the most common primary tumor of bone occurring in children and adolescents. The histological response to chemotherapy represents a key clinical factor related to survival. We previously showed that statins exhibit antitumor effects in vitro, inducing apoptotic cell death, reducing cell migration and invasion capacities and strengthening cytotoxic effects in combination with standard drugs. Comparative transcriptomic analysis between control and statin-treated cells revealed strong expression of several genes, including
metallothionein
(MT) 2A. MT2A overexpression by lentiviral transduction reduced bioavailable zinc levels, an effect associated with reduced
osteosarcoma
cell viability and enhanced cell differentiation. In contrast, MT2A silencing did not modify cell viability but strongly inhibited expression of osteoblastic markers and differentiation process. MT2A overexpression induced chemoresistance to cytotoxic drugs through direct chelation of platinum-containing drugs and indirect action on p53 zinc-dependent activity. In contrast, abrogation of MT2A enhanced cytotoxic action of chemotherapeutic drugs on
osteosarcoma
cells. Finally, clinical samples derived from chemonaive biopsies revealed that tumor cells expressing low MT2A levels correspond to good prognostic (good responder patients with longer survival rate), whereas high MT2A levels were associated with adverse prognosis (poor responder patients). Taken together, these data show that MT2A contributes to chemotherapy resistance in
osteosarcoma
, an effect partially mediated by zinc chelation. The data also suggest that MT2A may be a potential new prognostic marker for
osteosarcoma
sensitivity to chemotherapy.
...
PMID:Zinc chelation: a metallothionein 2A's mechanism of action involved in osteosarcoma cell death and chemotherapy resistance. 2415 68
Osteosarcoma
is the most prevalent primary bone malignancy in children and young adults. Resistance to chemotherapy remains a key challenge for effective treatment of patients with
osteosarcoma
. The aim of the present study was to investigate the preventive role of
metallothionein
-2A (MT2A) in response to cytotoxic effects of chemotherapy. A panel of human and murine
osteosarcoma
cell lines, modified for MT2A were evaluated for cell viability, and motility (wound healing assay). Cell-derived xenograft models were established in mice. FFPE tumour samples were assessed by IHC. In vitro experiments indicated a positive correlation between half-maximal inhibitory concentration (IC50) for drugs in clinical practice, and MT2A mRNA level. This reinforced our previously reported correlation between MT2A mRNA level in tumour samples at diagnosis and overall survival in patients with
osteosarcoma
. In addition, MT2A/MT2 silencing using shRNA strategy led to a marked reduction of IC50 values and to enhanced cytotoxic effect of chemotherapy on primary tumour. Our results show that MT2A level could be used as a predictive biomarker of resistance to chemotherapy, and provide with preclinical rational for MT2A targeting as a therapeutic strategy for enhancing anti-tumour treatment of innate chemo-resistant
osteosarcoma
cells.
...
PMID:MT2A is an early predictive biomarker of response to chemotherapy and a potential therapeutic target in osteosarcoma. 3144 79
1