Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0035412 (rhabdomyosarcoma)
6,156 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The functional operation of the cell surface pro-u-PA and plasminogen activating system has previously been shown to depend on the assembly of u-PA receptors, plasminogen binding sites, and their respective ligands at the focal adhesions of cell extensions. We now show that additional factors operate that affect the persistence of functional activity and that evidently involve charge interactions mediated by polyanions, such as those found in the cell surface proteoglycans. Heparin-like compounds and protamine were identified as fast-acting stimulators of cell surface plasminogen activation. Heparin stabilized surface u-PA activity during plasminogen activation, and we propose that a heparin binding site exists in the kringle structure of u-PA. Heparin at 40 micrograms/ml could reduce u-PA loss to only 20% compared with 60% on control cells activating plasminogen. Protamine (25 micrograms/ml) exerted a strong stimulatory effect on the level of generated bound plasmin and notably prolonged the persistence of this activity, so that 100 minutes after addition of plasminogen the level of plasmin on protamine-treated cells was five times higher than on control-treated cells. The effect of protamine on plasmin clearance suggests that an unknown plasmin inhibitor may be produced by rhabdomyosarcoma cells, whose action is accelerated by endogenous polyanions, in an analogous manner to thrombin inactivation by antithrombin III and protease nexin on endothelial cells and fibroblasts, respectively. The stimulatory effects of heparin and protamine do not affect the inactivation of cell surface u-PA by recombinant PAI-2.
...
PMID:Stimulation of cell surface plasminogen activation by heparin and related polyionic substances. 183 80

The effect of an intratumor injection of thrombin as a potential cancer therapeutic agent was examined in two transplantable solid tumor models: a renal adenocarcinoma implanted beneath the kidney capsule in Wistar-Lewis rats and a rhabdomyosarcoma implanted similarly in Wag-Rij rats. For each tumor type, a group of test animals received a single dose of thrombin injected directly into the central tumor mass 6 weeks following tumor implantation. Corresponding groups of tumor-implanted controls consisted of animals that received an equal volume injection of saline instead of thrombin and animals that were not injected. The tumor-implanted animals receiving thrombin, saline, or no injection were handled identically. The saline-injected and noninjected control animals died of metastasis to the lung within the same well-defined period of time. All animals receiving thrombin showed significantly increased longevity, and the degree of increase was related to variations in tumor size at the time of injection. In every case, animal death was due to pulmonary metastasis verified at autopsy, but animals receiving thrombin therapy lived about 85% longer following tumor implantation than animals not receiving therapy.
...
PMID:Thrombin: implications for intratumor therapy against metastasis. 335 Aug 46

We observed that human rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) cells highly express a tissue factor that promotes thrombin formation, which indirectly and directly affects RMS progression. First, we found that thrombin activates platelets to generate microvesicles (PMV), which transfer to RMS cells' alpha2beta3 integrin and increase their adhesiveness to endothelial cells. Accordingly, RMS cells covered with PMVs showed higher metastatic potential after i.v. injection into immunodeficient mice. Furthermore, PMVs activate mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK)p42/44 and AKT to chemoattract RMS cells. We also found that RMS cells express functional protease-activated receptor-1 (PAR1) and PAR3 and respond to thrombin stimulation by MAPKp42/44 and MAPKp38 phosphorylation. To our surprise, thrombin did not affect RMS proliferation or survival; it inhibited the chemotactic and adhesive properties of RMS cells. However, when PAR1-specific agonist thrombin receptor-activating peptide 6 was used, which does not activate PAR3, selective PAR1 stimulation enhanced RMS proliferation. To learn more on the role of PAR1 and PAR3 antagonism in RMS proliferation and metastasis, we knocked down both receptors by using a short hairpin RNA strategy. We found that although thrombin does not affect growth of PAR1(-/-) cells, it stimulated the proliferation of PAR3(-/-) cells. More importantly, PAR3(-/-) cells, in contrast to PAR1(-/-) ones, formed larger tumors in immunodeficient mice. We conclude that thrombin is a novel underappreciated modulator of RMS metastasis and that we have identified a novel role for PAR3 in thrombin signaling.
...
PMID:Thrombin regulates the metastatic potential of human rhabdomyosarcoma cells: distinct role of PAR1 and PAR3 signaling. 2044 98