Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0178874 (tumor progression)
40,807 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Matrix metalloproteinases (matrixins) constitute a group of extracellular proteinases belonging to the metzincin superfamily. They are involved in both physiological and pathological tissue remodeling processes, including those associated with cancer progression. Stromelysin-3, which is expressed in most invasive human carcinomas, is a matrix metalloproteinase with unusual functional properties. In particular, its mature form does not cleave any of the major extracellular matrix components. To define critical structural determinants involved in controlling stromelysin-3 proteolytic activity, we have used site-directed mutagenesis. We show that the deletion of at least 175 C-terminal amino-acids is sufficient to endow mouse stromelysin-3 with activities against casein, laminin, and type IV collagen. In the case of the human enzyme, however, a further and single Ala-235-->Pro substitution is necessary to observe similar activities. Ala-235, which characterizes human stromelysin-3 among matrixins, is located immediately after the C terminus of the "Met-turn," which forms a hydrophobic basis for the catalytic zinc atom in the metzincin family. We conclude that human stromelysin-3 has gained specific functional properties during evolution by amino acid substitution in the catalytic zinc environment, and that it represents an attractive target for specific inhibitors that may be used to prevent cancer progression.
...
PMID:Identification of structural determinants controlling human and mouse stromelysin-3 proteolytic activities. 755 21

The metalloproteinase matrilysin is widely expressed in the epithelial tumor cells of malignant colorectal adenocarcinomas. Approximately 50% of benign adenomas also express low levels of matrilysin that is focally localized. The expression of stromelysin-1, stromelysin-3, and gelatinase A was observed in the stromal component of several carcinomas and was not present in adenomatous tissue. The expression of interstitial collagenase and gelatinase B was observed in occasional adenomas and carcinomas. Stromelysin-2 transcripts were not detectable in any of the samples examined. Tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase-1 gene expression was widespread and was observed in both epithelial and stromal cells of adenomas and carcinomas. These results indicate that matrilysin gene expression is an early event in colorectal tumorigenesis and that the expression of stromelysin-1, stromelysin-3, and gelatinase A is primarily a late event. The observed gene expression patterns suggest that matrilysin may participate in early events in tumor progression and that multiple members of the metalloproteinase family may work in concert to facilitate late-stage tumor invasion and metastasis.
...
PMID:Expression and localization of matrix-degrading metalloproteinases during colorectal tumorigenesis. 806 80

Matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) family members have been associated with advanced-stage cancer and contribute to tumor progression, invasion, and metastasis as determined by inhibitor studies. In situ hybridization was performed to analyze the expression and localization of all known MMPs in a series of human breast cancer biopsy specimens. Most MMPs were localized to tumor stroma, and all MMPs had very distinct expression patterns. Matrilysin was expressed by morphologically normal epithelial ducts within tumors and in tissue from reduction mammoplasties, and by epithelial-derived tumor cells. Many family members, including stromelysin-3, gelatinase A, MT-MMP, interstitial collagenase, and stromelysin-1 were localized to fibroblasts of tumor stroma of invasive cancers but in quite distinct, and generally widespread, patterns. Gelatinase B, collagenase-3, and metalloelastase expression were more focal; gelatinase B was primarily localized to endothelial cells, collagenase-3 to isolated tumor cells, and metalloelastase to cytokeratin-negative, macrophage-like cells. The MMP inhibitor, TIMP-1, was expressed in both stromal and tumor components in most tumors, and neither stromelysin-2 nor neutrophil collagenase were detected in any of the tumors. These results indicate that there is very tight and complex regulation in the expression of MMP family members in breast cancer that generally represents a host response to the tumor and emphasize the need to further evaluate differential functions for MMP family members in breast tumor progression.
...
PMID:Expression of most matrix metalloproteinase family members in breast cancer represents a tumor-induced host response. 868 51

The matrix-degrading metalloproteinases (MMPs) have been implicated in tumor invasion and metastasis. Recently it has become clear that the expression of MMPs in tumors is frequently localized to stromal cells surrounding malignant tumor cells. In the mouse skin model of multi-stage carcinogenesis, the MMP stromelysin is expressed in stromal fibroblast-like cells surrounding benign and malignant squamous cell carcinomas. Conversion of these tumors to highly invasive and metastatic spindle-cell tumors is however, associated with the expression of stromelysin-1 mRNA in the tumor cells themselves. The analysis of MMPs in human colon adenocarcinomas at different stages of tumor progression revealed that matrilysin was the only MMP expressed in the tumor cells, while stromelysin-1 and stromelysin-3 mRNA was detected in stromal cells surrounding malignant tumor cells. Matrilysin mRNA is detected in benign tumors as well as malignant tumor cells, and the relative level and percent of tumors expressing matrilysin correlates with the stage of tumor progression. These results suggest that both stromal and tumor cell metalloproteinases may contribute to tumor invasion and metastasis, and also suggests that MMPs may play a role in earlier events in the tumor progression pathway. A potential role for MMPs in tumor growth is illustrated by results which suggest that the expression of matrilysin in human colon cancer-derived cells increases tumorigenicity following injection into the cecum, and that transgenic mice expressing matrilysin mRNA show a marked proliferative response. MMPs may therefore play multiple roles in tumor progression.
...
PMID:Matrix-degrading metalloproteinases in tumor progression. 898 72

Human stromelysin-3 and interstitial collagenase are matrix metalloproteinases whose expression by stromal cells in several types of carcinomas has been associated with cancer progression. We compared here the regulation of the expression of both proteinases by retinoids in human fibroblasts. Physiological concentrations of retinoic acid were found to simultaneously induce stromelysin-3 and repress interstitial collagenase. In both cases, the involvement of a transcriptional mechanism was supported by run-on assays. Furthermore, in transient transfection experiments, the activity of the stromelysin-3 promoter was induced by retinoic acid through endogenous receptors acting on a DR1 retinoic acid-responsive element. The ligand-dependent activation of the receptors was also investigated by using selective synthetic retinoids, and we demonstrated that retinoic acid-retinoid X receptor heterodimers were the most potent functional units controlling both stromelysin-3 induction and interstitial collagenase repression. However, specific retinoids dissociating the transactivation and the AP-1-mediated transrepression functions of the receptors were found to repress interstitial collagenase without inducing stromelysin-3. These findings indicate that such retinoids may represent efficient inhibitors of matrix metalloproteinase expression in the treatment of human carcinomas.
...
PMID:Stromelysin-3 induction and interstitial collagenase repression by retinoic acid. Therapeutical implication of receptor-selective retinoids dissociating transactivation and AP-1-mediated transrepression. 911 Oct 3

To elucidate the physiological role of human stromelysin-3 (hST-3) in tumor progression and/or wound healing, insulin-like growth factor-binding protein-1 (IGFBP-1) was analyzed as a potential physiological substrate. hST-3 proteolysis generates two fragments of 16 and 9 kDa that react with IGFBP-1 monoclonal antibody, although they do not bind insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) in ligand blot. N-terminal sequencing shows that hST-3 cleaves IGFBP-1 at the His140-Val141 bond located in the IGFBP-1 midregion. We show that IGFBP-1 inhibits IGF-I-induced survival and proliferation of BAF/3 cells, as well as IGF-I-mediated activation of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI 3-K). Co-incubation of the IGF-I. IGFBP-1 complex with hST-3 restores IGF-I-induced proliferation and PI 3-K kinase activity in these cells. BAF/3 proliferation is significantly increased with the hST-3-treated IGF-I.IGFBP-1 complex compared with that obtained using IGF-I alone. To produce this enhanced proliferation, IGF-I must bind to IGFBP-1 before hST-3 proteolysis, demonstrated using an IGF-I variant that does not bind IGFBP. IGFBP-1 also inhibits IGF-I-induced proliferation of the MCF-7 breast adenocarcinoma, and this inhibition was not seen in hST-3-transfected MCF-7 cells. Such proteolysis may thus play a role in in vivo tumor progression. These results indicate that hST-3 may regulate IGF-I bioavailability by proteolyzing IGFBP, thus favoring cell survival and proliferation.
...
PMID:Identification of insulin-like growth factor-binding protein-1 as a potential physiological substrate for human stromelysin-3. 932 95

Matrix metalloproteinases are believed to play an important role in tumor progression, invasion and metastasis. In order to investigate if the expression of stromelysin-3 (ST3) mRNA could add prognostic information concerning invasive laryngeal cancer and/or be indicative of a high risk for tumor progression in laryngeal dysplasias ST3 expression was analyzed by in situ hybridisation of formalin fixed paraffin embedded laryngeal specimens. Furthermore, all specimens underwent image cytometry (ICM) DNA analysis, and, p53 immunostaining. Invasive epithelial cancer, both localized (T1, T2) cancers, cured, as well as not cured, by radiotherapy, and cases with regional lymph node metastases were studied. Furthermore, high grade and low grade dysplasias, selected for rapid, slow and non-progression, as well as non-neoplastic inflammatory lesions were investigated. Expression of the ST3 gene was found in 9 out of 14 (64%) invasive cancer lesions, and in 3 out of 10 (30%) dysplasias, thus indicating that ST3 expression correlates to tumor progression. The ST3 positive laryngeal cancer lesions displayed a higher degree of DNA aberration than the ST3 negative lesions thus suggesting that ST3 positivity could indicate highly malignant tumors. Of the three ST3 positive dysplasias, the first progressed rapidly to cancer in situ with suspected microinvasion. The second ST3 positive dysplasia progressed to invasive cancer within five months. The third ST3 positive dysplasia had been radically excised and hereby cured. All but one of the dysplastic lesions showed p53 immunoreactivity, and all dysplasias exhibited aneuploid cells. ST3 expression appears to be a late event in the multistage process of carcinogenesis and could prove useful as an indicator of dysplasias with imminent risk for progression to invasive cancer.
...
PMID:Stromelysin-3 mRNA expression in dysplasias and invasive epithelial cancer of the larynx. 949 47

As a model system for the identification of genes involved in the progression of human breast cancer, differential gene expression in cell lines MCF-7 and MCF-7ADR was investigated. The latter cell line is derived from the former. Cell line MCF-7 is estrogen receptor-positive, vimentin-negative and uninvasive in the Matrigel outgrowth assay and in the nude mouse, while MCF-7ADR is estrogen receptor-negative, hormone-resistant, vimentin-positive, invasive in the Matrigel outgrowth assay and in the nude mouse and resistant to adriamycin due to overexpression of glycoprotein gp170. We have shown that tumor progression in this model system is mediated by transcriptional regulation of mitochondria-related genes, proteases, transmembrane receptors and cell cycle-related gene proteins. Among the genes differentially regulated at the transcriptional level in the cell lines MCF-7 and MCF-7ADR are a new mitochondrial transcript, mitochondrial creatine kinase, matrix metalloproteinase-1, stromelysin-3, urokinase and its receptor, tissue factor, E-cadherin, epidermal growth factor receptor, transmembrane proteins Mat-8 and progression associated protein (PAP), cyclin E, cyclin-dependent kinase-2 and cell cycle inhibitory proteins p16, p21 and p27.
...
PMID:Molecular analysis of two mammary carcinoma cell lines at the transcriptional level as a model system for progression of breast cancer. 951 94

Matrix metalloproteases represent a family of proteases secreted as latent inactive enzymes able to degrade the majority of extracellular matrix components. These enzymes are overexpressed during several pathological tissue remodelings including tumor progression and tumor invasion. It was indeed classically admitted that matrix metalloproteases involved in tumoral progression were preferentially expressed by cancerous cells. Our studies on gelatinase A and stromelysin-3 have, however, demonstrated that their messenger RNAS are detected in fibroblasts of the peritumoral stroma in human mammary carcinoma and not in the cancerous cells themselves. By immunohistochemistry, we have detected gelatinase A in the cytoplasm of fibroblasts and at the surface of the tumor cells. This membrane localization of the protein could result from its binding, following secretion by the neighbouring stromal cells, to a specific binding site expressed at the surface of the carcinoma cells. These cells are indeed able to induce an increased proteolytic activity by enhancing the transcription of these enzymes by peritumoral fibroblasts. These enzymes represent therefore potential targets for the development of new therapeutic strategies.
...
PMID:[Stromal proteases in the progression of breast cancer]. 953 65

Molecular markers can improve staging and predict aggressive clinical behavior in esophageal cancer, thus helping to define appropriate therapeutic protocols and to identify patients who will benefit from surgery. We therefore characterized, by Northern blot and/or immunohistochemistry, the relative expression of three effectors involved in the invasion, angiogenesis, and dissemination of tumor cells in esophageal cancer versus nontumoral mucosae: (a) stromelysin-3 (ST3), a member of the metalloproteinase family; (b) basement membrane 40/secreted protein acidic and rich in cysteine (BM-40/SPARC), an extracellular matrix-associated protein involved in angiogenesis; and (c) the hepatocyte growth factor receptor MET, which triggers the scattering of epithelial cells. Results were analyzed in relation to clinicopathological parameters (cpTNE) including tumor size (T), lymph node status (N), periesophageal tissue invasion (E), disease recurrence, and overall survival. The ST3, BM-40/SPARC, and MET genes were found to be overexpressed in tumor samples compared to control mucosa. BM-40/SPARC and MET mRNA levels were not linked to any one of the cpTNE, indicating that this overexpression occurs at an early stage of neoplastic progression. In contrast, ST3 expression, identified by immunohistochemistry in fibroblastic cells surrounding neoplastic islets, correlated with tumor size and periesophageal tissue invasion. Of the 36 patients studied, those with high ST3 levels had shorter disease-free survival than those with low levels, but there was no relationship between the cpTNE and disease recurrence or survival. Our study demonstrates that ST3, BM-40/SPARC, and MET are involved in different steps of esophageal carcinogenesis and that ST3 overexpression is a marker of aggressive clinical behavior. We conclude that in esophageal cancer, ST3 might help to assess survival and the risk of recurrence after surgical resection.
...
PMID:Overexpression of stromelysin-3, BM-40/SPARC, and MET genes in human esophageal carcinoma: implications for prognosis. 962 53


1 2 3 Next >>