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

Using murine transplantable transitional cell carcinoma (MBT2), the effect of ethylchlorformate (ECF) polymerized tumor protein was compared with that of bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG). Seventy-five C3H/He mice were challenged with an intradermal inoculation of 5 X 10(5) viable MBT2 tumor cells and divided into five groups. Each group was intradermally administered with 0.01 mg of ECF (low ECF), 0.25 mg of ECF (high ECF), 0.1 mg of ECF and 10(6) CFU BCG (ECF/BCG), 10(6) CFU of BCG alone or normal saline (control) weekly for 10 weeks. The mean survival rate for the treatment groups was 64 to 73 days and significantly longer than that for the control group (P less than 0.001, Savage). The incidence of biologically active tumor progression was significantly less for the treatment groups (low ECF, 53%; high ECF, 33%; ECF/BCG, 7%; BCG, 27%) compared with the control group (87%; P less than 0.5, chi-square. The mean rate of tumor growth was significantly lower for all treatment groups than for the control group (P less than 0.001, ANOVA and SNK), and the ECF/BCG group had the lowest growth rate despite a higher incidence of local granulomatous reaction. In this study, immunotherapy significantly prolonged the survival rate, decreased the incidence of biologically active tumor progression, and slowed the rate of tumor growth. The combination of ECF polymerized tumor protein and BCG had the greatest effect, suggesting that the effect of the vaccine was increased with BCG.
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PMID:Ethylchlorformate polymerized tumor protein immunotherapy of the murine bladder tumor. 291 72

A recent trend in cancer control programmes is the development of early detection strategies and chemoprevention of premalignant lesions. The present study evaluates the potential of selected markers in the biological staging of tumor progression in oral mucosa for better management of the disease. The expression patterns of various cytokeratin protein types such as 10/11, 13 & 16, 19, 18, 14 and pancytokeratin, involucrin, ras p21, epidermal growth factor (EGF) and its receptor (EGFR) were assessed immunohistochemically in various stages of tumor progression in oral mucosa. Statistical analyses such as the Kruskal-Wallis one-way ANOVA, Spearman's rank correlation and multiple regression analysis were carried out to see which proteins have a significant association with tumor progression in oral mucosa. Statistical analysis showed that the expression patterns of cytokeratin types 10/11, 14 and 19, involucrin and epidermal growth factor were significantly correlated with tumor progression in oral mucosa in both univariate and multivariate analysis. Thus the biological stage of a lesion can be calculated from the multiple regression equation derived for these proteins, which could be more useful in assessing the stage of tumor progression in oral mucosa than histopathological grading.
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PMID:Potential biological markers for the staging of tumor progression in oral mucosa: a multivariate analysis. 877 6

Cell cycle progression is facilitated by cyclin-dependent kinases that are activated by cyclins including cyclin D1 and inactivated by cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors (CDKIs) such as p27. Our previous studies have demonstrated decreased p27 expression in both papillary and more aggressive carcinomas of the thyroid compared to thyroid adenoma and almost similar level of cyclin D1 expression between thyroid adenoma and papillary carcinoma. These results indicate that CDKIs may have an important role in the carcinogenesis of the thyroid and that they probably have a limited role in malignant progression of the thyroid cancer. The role of cyclin D1 in malignant progression of thyroid carcinoma has yet to be established. We studied the expression of cyclin D1 by immunohistochemistry in 34 cases of conventional papillary carcinoma (CPC), 10 cases of minimally invasive follicular carcinoma (MIFC), and 32 cases of more aggressive thyroid carcinoma (ATC), which included 11 tall cell variants, one columnar cell variant of papillary carcinoma, seven insular carcinomas, and 13 anaplastic carcinomas. Cyclin D1 staining was classified by staining score as 0, negative; 1+, less than 25%; 2+, 25 to 50%; and 3+, more than 50% tumor cells staining positive. Kruskal-Wallis one-way ANOVA and Wilcoxon Rank Sum/Mann-Whitney U Test was used to assess the difference in the expression of cyclin D1 between the study groups. Twenty-eight out of the 34 CPCs were cyclin D1 positive, 24 (70%) were 1+, 3 (9%) were 2+, and one (3%) were 3+ positive. Seven of 10 MIFCs were cyclin D1 positive, five (71%) were 1+, and the remaining two (29%) were 2+ positive. On the other hand, 28 of 32 ATCs showed cyclin D1 immunostaining. Of these, three (9%) were 1+, five (13%) were 2+, and 20 (63%) were 3+ positive. This study demonstrates a significant overexpression of cyclin D1 in ATC compared CPC (P < .001) and MIFC (P < .005), suggesting that the cyclin D1 expression may play a role in tumor progression and may have prognostic significance in thyroid cancer.
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PMID:The role of cell cycle regulatory protein, cyclin D1, in the progression of thyroid cancer. 1095 55

Reduction in apoptosis has been associated with tumor metastases and response to chemotherapy in breast cancer. We examine the influence of apoptosis status and the expression of antiapoptotic proteins Bcl-2 and Bcl-x(L) on metastatic progression and response to therapy in an experimental model of breast cancer. We used human breast cancer cells (MDA-MB 435, MDA-MB 468 and MCF-7) to induce orthotopic xenograft tumors in nude mice. The overexpression of Bcl-2 or Bcl-x(L) influenced tumorigenicity, 468 transfectants being less tumorigenic than control (p < 0.0001). Lung metastasis appeared at day 120 in animals injected with 435/Bcl-2 or 435/Bcl-x(L) and they showed higher metastatic activity than control 435/Neo tumors (p = 0.02). In contrast, mice with 468 tumors were followed for 1 year after tumor excision, but they did not develop metastatic foci. 435/Bcl-2 and 435/Bcl-x(L) transfectant cells bound less readily to laminin (ANOVA, p < 0.0001), fibronectin (ANOVA, p < 0.0001) and collagen type-IV (ANOVA, p < 0.0001) than 435/Neo cells. The overexpression of antiapoptotic proteins in 435 transfectants rescued 20-40% of cells from anoikis at 64 hr in rocking conditions. In contrast, at this time only 5-10% of 468 and MCF-7 transfectant cells were rescued. Thus, the overexpression of the Bcl-2 or Bcl-x(L) associated with the loss of apoptosis in breast cancer cells in vivo may account for their metastatic behavior. These genes increase tumor metastasis when the oncogenic background has triggered the metastatic process, in which anoikis might determine tumor progression when the life span of the cells is extended.
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PMID:Inhibition of apoptosis in human breast cancer cells: role in tumor progression to the metastatic state. 1220 55

Dichloroacetic acid (DCA) is a major by-product of water disinfection by chlorination. Several studies have demonstrated that DCA exhibits hepatocarcinogenic effects in rodents when administered in drinking water. This chemical does not appear to be highly mutagenic, and the mechanism(s) involved in DCA induction of cancer are not clear. The present work was aimed at identifying changes in gene expression which may indicate critical alterations/pathways involved in this chemical's carcinogenic activities. We used cDNA microarray methods for analyses of gene expression in livers of mice treated with the tumorigenic dose of 2 g/l DCA in drinking water for 4 weeks. Total RNA samples obtained from livers of the control and DCA-treated mice were evaluated for gene expression patterns with Clontech Atlas Mouse 1.2 cDNA and Atlas mouse stress/toxicology arrays, and the data analyzed with AtlasImage 2.01 and one-way ANOVA in JMP4 software. From replicate experiments, we identified 24 genes with altered expression, of which 15 were confirmed by Northern blot analysis. Of the 15 genes, 14 revealed expression suppressed two- to five-fold; they included the following: MHR 23A, cytochrome P450 (CYP) 2C29, CYP 3A11, serum paraoxonase/arylesterase 1 (PON 1), liver carboxylesterase, alpha-1 antitrypsin, ER p72, glutathione S-transferase (GST) Pi 1, angiogenin, vitronectin precursor, cathepsin D (CTSD), plasminogen precursor (contains angiostatin), prothrombin precursor and integrin alpha 3 precursor (ITGA 3). An additional gene, CYP 2A4/5, had a two-fold elevation in expression. Further, in ancillary Northern analyses of total RNA isolated from DCA-induced hepatocellular carcinomas (from earlier reported studies of mice treated with 3.5 g/l DCA for 93 weeks), many of the same genes (11 of 15) noted above showed a similar alteration in expression. In summary, we have identified specific genes involved in the functional categories of cell growth, tissue remodeling, apoptosis, cancer progression and xenobiotic metabolism that have altered levels of expression following exposures to DCA. These findings serve to highlight new pathways in which to further probe DCA effects that may be critical to its tumorigenic activity.
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PMID:Altered gene expression in mouse livers after dichloroacetic acid exposure. 1264 86

Human heparanase has been shown to function in tumor progression, metastatic spread, and tumor angiogenesis. The aim of the present study was to assess heparanase expression in endometrial cancer in correlation with neovascularization and clinicopathological factors. Forty endometrial cancers were obtained from previously untreated patients (median age 55.5, range 33-78 years). The expression of heparanase mRNA was evaluated using a semiquantitative reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction. Tumor angiogenesis was assessed using microvessel counting. The Mann-Whitney U test, one-factor ANOVA test, and Spearman's test were used to determine the relationship between heparanase expression, microvessel density, and clinicopathological parameters. The expression of heparanase mRNA was detected in 20 of 40 (50%) endometrial cancers, and was significantly correlated with FIGO stage IIIc (p=0.0075), the presence of lymph-vascular space involvement (p=0.0041), lymph node metastasis (p=0.0049), and histological tumor grade (p=0.0030). Microvessel density was also associated with FIGO stage IIIc (p=0.027), the presence of lymph-vascular space involvement (p=0.001), lymph node metastasis (p=0.038), ovarian metastasis (p=0.030) and histological tumor grade (p=0.0030). Moreover, we found a strong positive correlation between heparanase expression and microvessel density (r2=0.475, p=0.0001). These results suggest that the expression of heparanase may influence different malignant behaviors in endometrial cancer.
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PMID:Heparanase expression and angiogenesis in endometrial cancer. 1290 90

Intracellular factors that regulate nitric oxide (NO) synthesis represent important targets in tumor progression. Overexpression of dimethylarginine dimethylaminohydrolase (DDAH), which metabolizes the endogenous inhibitors of NO synthesis asymmetric dimethylarginine and N-monomethyl-L-arginine, results in C6 gliomas with enhanced growth rate compared with wild type. To investigate the effects of DDAH on tumor vascular morphogenesis in vivo, we have measured the transverse relaxation rates R(2)* and R(2) in clone D27 gliomas overexpressing DDAH and C6 wild-type gliomas using intrinsic susceptibility magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), sensitive to changes in endogenous [deoxyhemoglobin], and susceptibility contrast-enhanced MRI using the intravascular blood pool contrast agent NC100150, and we compared the results with fluorescence microscopy of the tumor uptake of the perfusion marker Hoechst 33342. The baseline R(2)* was significantly faster in the D27 tumors, consistent with a greater vascular development (P < 0.02, ANOVA). There was no significant difference between the response of the two tumor types to hypercapnia (5% CO(2)/95% air), used as a probe for vascular maturation, or hyperoxia (5% CO(2)/95% O(2)), used as a probe for vascular function. NC100150 increased the R(2)* and R(2) rates of both tumor types and demonstrated a significantly larger blood volume in the D27 tumors (P < 0.02, ANOVA). This correlated with a significantly greater uptake of Hoechst 33342 in the D27 tumors compared with C6 wild-type tumors (P < 0.02, ANOVA). Despite the increased tumor blood volume, the Delta R(2)*/Delta R(2) ratio, an index of microvessel size, showed that the capillaries in the two tumor types were of a similar caliber. The data highlight the potential of susceptibility MRI-derived quantitative end points to noninvasively assess tumor angiogenesis, and in this regard, the use of intravascular blood pool contrast agents such as NC100150 appears very promising. Overexpression of DDAH results in increased neovascularization of C6 gliomas in vivo. The lack of significant difference in hypercapnic/hyperoxic response between the C6 and D27 tumors and the similar vessel caliber are also consistent with a role for DDAH in the initial stages of vasculogenesis.
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PMID:Effects of overexpression of dimethylarginine dimethylaminohydrolase on tumor angiogenesis assessed by susceptibility magnetic resonance imaging. 1294 21

Meal timing can reset circadian clocks in peripheral tissues. We investigated the effects of such non-photic entrainment on tumor growth rate. Two experiments involved a total of 61 male B6D2F(1) mice synchronized with an alternation of 12 h of light (L) and 12 h of darkness (D) (LD12:12). Mice were randomly allocated to have access to food ad libitum, or restricted to 4 or 6 h during L or D. Rest-activity and body temperature, two circadian outputs, were monitored with an intra-peritoneal sensor. Glasgow osteosarcoma was inoculated into both flanks of each mouse ten days after meal timing onset. Before tumor inoculation, meal timing during D amplified the 24-h rhythms in rest-activity and body temperature with minimal phase alteration as compared to ad libitum feeding. Conversely, meal timing during L induced dominant 12-h or 8-h rhythmic components in activity, nearly doubled the 24-h amplitude of body temperature and shifted its acrophase (time of maximum) from approximately mid-D to approximately mid-L. Thirteen days after tumor inoculation, mean tumor weight (+/- SEM, mg) was 1503 +/- 150 in ad libitum mice, 1077 +/- 157 in mice fed during D and 577 +/- 139 in mice fed during L (ANOVA, p < 0.0001). Overall survival was prolonged in the mice fed during L (median, 17.5 days, d) as compared with those fed during D (14.5 d) or ad libitum (14 d) (Log Rank, p = 0.0035). The internal desynchronization produced by meal timing during L slowed down tumor progression, an effect possibly resulting from improved host-mediated tumor control and/or altered tumor circadian clocks.
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PMID:Effects of meal timing on tumor progression in mice. 1521 6

Progression of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a stepwise process that proceeds from pre-neoplastic lesions--including low-grade dysplastic nodules (LGDNs) and high-grade dysplastic nodules (HGDNs)--to advanced HCC. The molecular changes associated with this progression are unclear, however, and the morphological cues thought to distinguish pre-neoplastic lesions from well-differentiated HCC are not universally accepted. To understand the multistep process of hepato-carcinogenesis at the molecular level, we used oligo-nucleotide microarrays to investigate the transcription profiles of 50 hepatocellular nodular lesions ranging from LGDNs to primary HCC (Edmondson grades 1-3). We demonstrated that gene expression profiles can discriminate not only between dysplastic nodules and overt carcinoma but also between different histological grades of HCC via unsupervised hierarchical clustering with 10,376 genes. We identified 3,084 grade-associated genes, correlated with tumor progression, using one-way ANOVA and a one-versus-all unpooled t test. Functional assignment of these genes revealed discrete expression clusters representing grade-dependent biological properties of HCC. Using both diagonal linear discriminant analysis and support vector machines, we identified 240 genes that could accurately classify tumors according to histological grade, especially when attempting to discriminate LGDNs, HGDNs, and grade 1 HCC. In conclusion, a clear molecular demarcation between dysplastic nodules and overt HCC exists. The progression from grade 1 through grade 3 HCC is associated with changes in gene expression consistent with plausible functional consequences.
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PMID:Molecular changes from dysplastic nodule to hepatocellular carcinoma through gene expression profiling. 1617

Bile reflux has been implicated in the neoplastic progression of Barrett's esophagus (BE). Bile salts increase proliferation in a Barrett's-associated adenocarcinoma cell line (SEG-1 cells) by activating ERK and p38 MAPK pathways. However, it is not clear that these findings in cancer cells are applicable to non-neoplastic cells of benign BE. We examined the effect of bile salts on three human cell lines: normal esophageal squamous (NES) cells, non-neoplastic Barrett's cells (BAR cells), and SEG-1 cells. We hypothesized that bile salt exposure activates proproliferative and antiapoptotic pathways to promote increased growth in BE. NES, BAR, and SEG-1 cells were exposed to glycochenodeoxycholic acid (GCDA) at a neutral pH for 5 min. Proliferation was measured by Coulter counter cell counts and a 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine (BrdU) incorporation assay. GCDA-induced MAPK activation was examined by Western blot analysis for phosphorylated ERK and p38. Apoptosis was measured by TdT-mediated dUTP nick-end labeling and annexin V staining after GCDA and UV-B exposure. Statistical significance was determined by ANOVA. NES cells exposed to 5 min of GCDA did not increase cell number. In BAR cells, GCDA exposure increased cell number by 31%, increased phosphorylated p38 and ERK levels by two- to three-fold, increased BrdU incorporation by 30%, and decreased UV-induced apoptosis by 15-20%. In conclusion, in a non-neoplastic Barrett's cell line, GCDA exposure induces proliferation by activation of both ERK and p38 MAPK pathways. These findings suggest a potential mechanism whereby bile reflux may facilitate the neoplastic progression of BE.
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PMID:Bile salt exposure increases proliferation through p38 and ERK MAPK pathways in a non-neoplastic Barrett's cell line. 1623 4


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