Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0149925 (small cell lung cancer)
6,491 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The effects of bombesin/gastrin-releasing peptide (BN/GRP) on c-fos and c-jun gene expression were investigated using small cell lung cancer (SCLC) cells. BN (10 nM) increased c-fos mRNA fivefold using NCI-H345 or NCI-H510 cells. The increase was concentration dependent with 1 nM BN half-maximally increasing c-fos mRNA. Also, the increase in c-fos mRNA caused by BN was time dependent, being maximal after 1 h and returning to basal values after 4 h. GRP and GRP(14-27) but not GRP(1-16) increased c-fos mRNA. BW2258U89 (1 microM), a GRP receptor antagonist, had no effect on basal c-fos but inhibited the increase in c-fos mRNA caused by 10 nM BN. Also, BN transiently increased c-jun mRNA twofold and the increase caused by BN was blocked by BW2258U89. These data suggest that GRP receptors may regulate nuclear oncogene gene expression in SCLC cells.
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PMID:Bombesin stimulates c-fos and c-jun mRNAs in small cell lung cancer cells. 778 58

Bombesin (BBS) and its mammalian equivalent, gastrin-releasing peptide (GRP), exhibit diverse biological functions, including that of a neurotransmitter, a regulator of gastrointestinal hormone release, and a trophic factor for various normal and neoplastic tissues. Bombesin stimulates the growth of normal cells of the stomach, pancreas, and bronchial epithelium as well as cells in breast cancer, gastrinoma, and small cell lung cancer. The purpose of this study was to determine whether BBS regulates the growth of a human gastric cancer cell line (SIIA) in vitro, and if so, to examine the mechanisms of signal-transduction that are involved. We found that BBS stimulated the growth of SIIA cells in vitro. The GRP receptor antagonists, BIM 26189 and BIM 26226, had no effect on growth of SIIA cells. Although these antagonists blocked the BBS-induced increase of [Ca2+]i, they failed to block the growth-stimulatory effect of BBS. BBS stimulated intracellular tyrosine phosphorylation of multiple proteins, with a predominant protein of apparent molecular weight of 125 kDa. Inhibition of intracellular tyrosine kinases by tyrphostin blocked the growth-stimulatory effect of BBS on SIIA cells. These results indicate that BBS exerts its trophic effect on SIIA cells through a receptor(s) linked to tyrosine kinase pathway, but not to the phospholipase C (PLC) pathway.
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PMID:Bombesin stimulates the in vitro growth of a human gastric cancer cell line. 796 32

Non-small cell lung cancers with neuroendocrine differentiation (NSCLC-NE) may demonstrate biologic behavior intermediate between non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and small cell lung cancer (SCLC) with impact on prognosis. We studied the expression of four well-defined neuroendocrine (NE) markers: neuron-specific enolase (NSE), chromogranin A, Leu-7, gastrin-releasing peptide, and a panel of three non-NE markers, including vimentin, and the epithelial markers carcino-embryonic antigen (CEA) by immunohistochemistry, and mucin by histochemistry in 237 resected NSCLCs from patients on six LCSG protocols. Twenty-nine (12%) tumors were positive for 2 or more NE markers. An NE differentiation score was calculated but failed to correlate with recurrence as did other combinations of markers. However, the presence of tissue staining for CEA was strongly associated with improved survival (p = 0.011), whereas the presence of mucin was associated with a worse outcome (p < 0.001). Individually, CEA and mucin remained prognostic even when corrected for stage, histologic features, and performance status. We conclude that NE differentiation is not predictive of recurrence in patients with resected NSCLC but data on patterns of CEA and mucin expression may improve prognostication and permit rational design of new therapeutic approaches.
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PMID:Impact of neuroendocrine differentiation in non-small cell lung cancer. The LCSG experience. 798 66

Gastrin-releasing peptide (GRP) has previously been shown to be an autocrine growth factor for small cell lung cancer, and our objective in the study presented here was to determine whether GRP has a similar role in pancreatic cancer. Using 125I-GRP, we demonstrated binding to specific, saturable, high-affinity sites (Kd = 1 nM; Bmax = 245 fmol/mg protein) in membrane preparations from the pancreatic tumor cell line Capan. The receptors were found to be biologically active. In whole cells, a GRP analogue bound to these receptors and stimulated rapid transfer of tritium from the tritiated lipid inositol pool to inositol triphosphates. Exogenous GRP addition stimulated incorporation of [3H]thymidine into DNA 20-60%. This stimulatory effect was blocked by the addition of a monoclonal antibody that complexed specifically with the receptor-binding portion of the peptide. In addition, the monoclonal antibody inhibited the growth of Capan cells in an in vitro growth assay without exogenous peptide. Bombesin receptor-specific antagonists also inhibited growth in a similar fashion. These data suggest that paracrine production of GRP may be important in pancreatic tumor growth, or that low-levels of a GRP-like peptide may play an autocrine role in this tumor.
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PMID:Effect of gastrin-releasing peptide on the pancreatic tumor cell line (Capan). 828 Mar 69

Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death in the United States. Small cell lung cancer (SCLC) accounts for 20% to 25% of all bronchogenic carcinoma and is associated with the poorest 5-year survival of all histologic types. SCLC differs in its etiologic, pathologic, biologic, and clinical features from non-SCLC, and these differences have translated to distinct approaches to its prevention and treatment. Compared with other histologic types of lung cancer, exposures to tobacco smoke, ionizing radiation, and chloromethyl ethers pose a substantially greater risk for development of SCLC. The histologic classification of SCLC has been revised to include three categories: (1) small cell carcinoma, (2) mixed small cell/large cell, and (3) combined small cell carcinoma. Ultrastructurally, SCLC displays a number of neuroendocrine features in common with pulmonary neuroendocrine cells, including dense core vesicles or neurosecretory granules. These dense core vesicles are associated with a variety of secretory products, cell surface antigens, and enzymes. The biology of SCLC is complex. The activation of a number of dominant proto-oncogenes and the inactivation of tumor suppressor genes in SCLC have been described. Dominant proto-oncogenes that have been found to be amplified or overexpressed in SCLC include the myc family, c-myb, c-kit, c-jun, and c-src. Altered expression of two tumor suppressor genes in SCLC, p53 and the retinoblastoma gene product, has been demonstrated. Cytogenetic and molecular evidence for chromosomal loss of 3p, 5q, 9p, 11p, 13q, and 17p in SCLC has intensified the search for other tumor suppressor genes with potential import in this malignancy. Bombesin/gastrin-releasing peptide, insulin-like growth factor I, and transferrin have been identified as autocrine growth factors in SCLC, with a number of other peptides under active investigation. Several mechanisms of drug resistance in SCLC have been described, including gene amplification, the recently described overexpression of multi-drug resistance-related protein (MRP), and the expression of P-glycoprotein. The classic SCLC staging system has been supplanted by a revised TNM staging system where limited disease and extensive disease are equivalent to the TNM stages I through III and stage IV, respectively. Therapeutically, recent strategies have attained small improvements in survival but significant reductions in the toxicities of chemotherapeutic regimens. Presently, the overall 5-year survival for SCLC is 5% to 10%, with limited disease associated with a significantly higher survival rate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Small cell lung cancer: etiology, biology, clinical features, staging, and treatment. 839 98

Analogues of the amphibian neuropeptide, bombesin, and of the mammalian homologue, gastrin-releasing peptide, have been synthesized and their biological activity studied in small cell lung carcinoma and rat pancreatic acinar cells. The compounds are truncated sequences of the active tetradecapeptide BN(1-14) or GRP(20-27). Peptides were cyclized between position 5 or 7 and the carboxyl end of the des-Met14 fragment with D and L Ala11 and Lys5 substitutions, as well as various N-terminal groups attached. The smallest cyclic peptide, BN(7-13), bound to SCLC membranes with microM potency and inhibited BN stimulation of intracellular Ca++ levels. The most potent inhibitor is N-chloroambucil-[His7,D-Ala11]BN(7-13)ethyl ester, which antagonized BN function in SCLC and acinar cells with nM potency and also inhibited clonal growth of carcinoma cell lines.
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PMID:Inhibitory cyclic analogues and chlorambucil derivatives of bombesin-like peptides. 853 95

DAB389 GRP is composed of the catalytic and transmembrane domains of diphtheria toxin fused to gastrin-releasing peptide (GRP). DAB389 GRP is selectively targeted to, and inhibits protein synthesis in, cell lines expressing GRP receptors. Protein synthesis in 5'ET4 cells (BALB/3T3 fibroblasts transfected with the gene encoding the GRP receptor) was inhibited by 50% in the presence of 20 pM DAB389 GRP (IC50, 20 pM). DAB389 GRP did not inhibit protein synthesis in untransfected BALB/3T3 cells. A second neuropeptide-conjugated toxin, DAB389 SP, directed to cells expressing substance P receptors, was not cytotoxic to 5'ET4 cells, nor was DAB389 GRP cytotoxic to substance P receptor-bearing cells. DAB389 GRP cytotoxic effects were receptor specific and were inhibited either by excess GRP or anti-GRP antibody. Cytotoxicity was mediated by passage through an acidic vesicle, because addition of 10 microM chloroquine to the reaction inhibited cytotoxicity. DAB389 GRP and DAB389 SP were tested on a number of tumor cell lines. DAB389 GRP inhibited protein synthesis in AR42J rat pancreatic acinar cells and HuTu 80 human duodenal adenocarcinoma cells with IC50s of 65 and 200 pM, respectively. DAB389 SP had an IC50 of 9.5 pM for the AR42J cells and 12 nM for the HuTu 80 cell line. A number of small cell lung cancer cell (SCLC) lines were tested, and the IC50 for DAB389 GRP ranged from 1.1 to 85 nM. Sensitivity to DAB389 GRP appeared to be based on receptor number and receptor type (i.e., GRP or neuromedin B preferring). SCLC cells were also sensitive to DAB389 SP, with IC50s ranging from 2.4 to 11.5 nM. These results suggest that a potential use exists for diphtheria-based fusion toxins as therapeutic agents for treatment of SCLC and other neuropeptide receptor-bearing cancers.
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PMID:Inhibition of protein synthesis in small cell lung cancer cells induced by the diphtheria toxin-related fusion protein DAB389 GRP. 900 May 70

Substance P derivatives are potential therapeutic compounds for the treatment of small cell lung cancer and can cause apoptosis in small cell lung cancer cells in culture. These peptides act as broad spectrum neuropeptide antagonists, blocking calcium mobilization induced by gastrin-releasing peptide, bradykinin, cholecystokinin, and other neuropeptides. We show that [D-Arg1,D-Phe5,D-Trp7,9, Leu11]substance P has unique agonist activities in addition to this described antagonist function. At doses that block calcium mobilization by neuropeptides, this peptide causes activation of c-Jun N-terminal kinase and cytoskeletal changes in Swiss 3T3 fibroblasts and stimulates migration and calcium flux in human neutrophils. Activation of c-Jun N-terminal kinase is dependent on the expression of the gastrin-releasing peptide receptor in rat 1A fibroblasts, demonstrating that the responses to the peptide are receptor-mediated. We hypothesize that [D-Arg1,D-Phe5,D-Trp7,9, Leu11]substance P acts as a biased agonist on neuropeptide and related receptors, activating certain guanine nucleotide-binding proteins through the receptor, but not others.
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PMID:[D-Arg1,D-Phe5,D-Trp7,9,Leu11]Substance P acts as a biased agonist toward neuropeptide and chemokine receptors. 944 27

The Ewing tumor family of peripheral primitive neuroectodermal tumors (pPNETs) are characterized by chromosomal translocations leading to EWS-ETS gene fusions. These hybrid genes express chimeric proteins that are thought to act as aberrant transcription factors. We therefore used differential display-PCR to compare gene expression patterns in pPNET cell lines with those of other small round cell tumors (SRCTs) of childhood. This technique detected differential expression of sequences corresponding to human gastrin-releasing peptide (GRP) in pPNET cell lines but not in other SRCT cell lines. Subsequent Northern and reverse transcription-PCR analysis of SRCT cell lines confirmed GRP positivity in all pPNET lines tested. Of primary tumors tested by reverse transcription-PCR, GRP expression was found in 7 (44%) of 16 pPNETs but in no other primary SRCTs examined. Expression of the GRP receptor gene was demonstrable in 55% of pPNET cell lines and 25% of primary pPNET tumors but also in several other SRCTs. Radioimmunoassays and immunohistochemistry confirmed expression of bioactive GRP peptide in pPNET cell lines and primary tumors, respectively. Moreover, in vitro growth of a pPNET cell line was slowed by treatment with a GRP receptor antagonist and accelerated by a GRP receptor agonist. GRP is a known autocrine growth factor in small cell lung cancer and other neuroendocrine tumors. Its expression in pPNETs provides further evidence for a neuroectodermal histogenesis of these tumors and suggests that autocrine growth of this family of tumors may be at least partially regulated by GRP.
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PMID:The Ewing tumor family of peripheral primitive neuroectodermal tumors expresses human gastrin-releasing peptide. 962 91

Small cell carcinoma of the lung (SCCL) accounts for 25% of all lung cancers and has a very poor prognosis. It is known that SCCL cells produce gastrin-releasing peptide, a peptide which has similar biological actions to that of bombesin, an amphibian counterpart of gastrin-releasing peptide, and express high affinity cell surface bombesin/gastrin-releasing peptide receptors. These receptors can serve as targets for specific immunotherapy. Cell surface receptors for the Fc portion of IgG (FcgammaR) are a family of molecules that can mediate a variety of immune reactions, including tumor cell cytotoxicity. We hypothesized that an immunoconjugate of bombesin and a mAb directed to the high-affinity FcgammaRI (mAb 22) should be able to trigger specific cytotoxicity against SCCL cells. In this article, we report the construction of this immunoconjugate and demonstrate its capacity to redirect immune effector cells toward SCCL cells and elicit lysis of these target cells. The immunoconjugate stained the majority of cells from four SCCL cell lines and reacted with FcgammaRI on activated monocytes and neutrophils. After preincubating monocytes and neutrophils with recombinant gamma interferon to enhance the expression of FcgammaRI on the cell surface, we demonstrated that 60-98% of SCCL cells could be lysed in the presence of the immunoconjugate in a chromium release assay. Tumor cell lysis was observed over a wide range of immunoconjugate concentrations, was dependent on the ratio of E:T cells, and could be blocked by the addition of either parental molecule of the immunoconjugate. Bispecific molecules redirecting immune effector cells to target SCCL cells may have clinical application in the therapy of SCCL.
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PMID:An immunoconjugate of Lys3-bombesin and monoclonal antibody 22 can specifically induce FcgammaRI (CD64)-dependent monocyte- and neutrophil-mediated lysis of small cell carcinoma of the lung cells 981


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