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Query: UMLS:C0178874 (
tumor progression
)
40,807
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Following the formation of hyperplastic nodules at a late stage of azo dye hepatocarcinogenesis, some areas of parenchyma show an intense RNA staining, and such hyperbasophilic foci apparently develop hepatomas. Radioautographic analyses with [3H]thymidine labeling indicate the foci to be areas of continued cell proliferation, and the hepatocytes are morphologically distinguishable from the surrounding tissue. The increase of basophilia occurs simultaneously with histochemically demonstrable decreases in bound cations and concomitant increases in pyroantimonate-precipitable free cations. Thus, the phenomenon of hyperbasophilia and the ensuing alteration of cell cycle appears to be associated with changes in intracellular homeostasis. Ultrahistochemical localizations of adenosine triphosphatase and alkaline phosphatase suggest topographic alterations of membrane enzyme activities in the foci and the persistence of altered patterns during
tumor progression
. The developmental feature of surface adenosine triphosphatase activity has been further studied with subcultures of epithelial cells, which were derived from normal and precancerous livers. The enzyme activity of nontumorigenic cells is minimal, while a considerably high activity is detectable in situ at the outer surface of plasma membranes of tumorigenic cells. A
Ca2+
- Mg2+-dependent adenosine triphosphatase is identified at the cell surface, and the ectoenzyme would be a useful marker for detection of malignant liver epithelial cells.
...
PMID:Ultrastructural and cytochemical studies on hyperbasophilic foci with special reference to the demonstration of cell surface alterations in hepatocarcinogenesis. 13 71
Initiation and promotion in mouse skin carcinogenesis produce multiple benign tumors, squamous papillomas, but only a few squamous cell carcinomas. The spontaneous conversion from the benign to the malignant phenotype occurs over many months and in stages, but induced malignant conversion can be accomplished more rapidly by exposure of papilloma-bearing mice to mutagens or by transfection of papilloma cell lines with specific oncogenes. The analysis of genetic targets responsible for carcinogen-induced
neoplastic progression
would be facilitated by the development of in vitro models where the process is rapid, focal, and quantitative. To this end, primary newborn mouse keratinocytes were initiated in vitro by the introduction of the v-rasHa oncogene via a defective retrovirus. Recipient cells produce squamous papillomas and have a high proliferation rate in culture medium with 0.05 mM
Ca2+
, but fail to grow in medium with 0.5 mM
Ca2+
which is permissive for growth of malignant keratinocytes. When v-rasHa-keratinocytes were exposed to mutagens in vitro, proliferative foci emerged after culture in 0.5 mM
Ca2+
for 4 weeks. These foci stained intensely red with rhodamine stain, could be easily quantitated, and readily incorporated bromodeoxyuridine. Dose-response studies with several mutagens indicated that the number of foci increased with concentration to the point where excessive cytotoxicity developed. Mutagens varied in potency for producing foci in the following order: cis-diamminedichloroplatinum greater than or equal to benzo(a)pyrene diolexpoxide I greater than N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine greater than or equal to 4-nitroquinoline-N-oxide greater than N-acetoxy-acetyl- aminofluorene. The tumor promoter 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate was inactive in the assay. A subset of cell lines derived from foci produced malignant tumors in vivo, while others were not tumorigenic. Analysis of DNA from cell lines and tumors revealed that most tumorigenic cell lines maintained the v-rasHa genome, whereas the viral sequences were deleted in nontumorigenic cell lines. Immunohistochemical analysis indicated that proliferative foci and quiescent v-rasHa keratinocytes expressed keratin 8, a marker of v-rasHa expression in cultured keratinocytes. Cells in foci, but not v-rasHa control cells, expressed keratin 13, a marker which is strongly associated with the malignant progression of skin tumors in vivo. This in vitro assay provides a quantitative model to study chemically induced focal
neoplastic progression
at the cellular level and to identify agents which may be selective for enhancing malignant conversion.
...
PMID:Development of an in vitro model to study carcinogen-induced neoplastic progression of initiated mouse epidermal cells. 137 35
Transfected ras oncogenes have been shown to induce metastatic properties in some cells. This altered behavior is likely due to changes in ras-mediated signal transduction pathways, resulting in altered expression of genes important to metastasis. Clarification of the mechanisms by which ras is able to induce metastatic ability in model systems will improve our understanding of
tumor progression
, even in those cells in which ras activation has not been implicated. Many of the consequences of ras expression also have been detected in cells that have become metastatic in the absence of altered ras, suggesting that there is a set of common changes that can lead to metastasis, with multiple signals capable of eliciting these changes. We have identified several changes in metastatic, ras-transformed NIH 3T3 cells that may contribute to their increased malignancy, including expression of proteolytic enzymes and their inhibitors, and adhesive and
calcium
-binding proteins. Not all cells, however, respond in this way to expression of oncogenic ras. We have found that murine LTA cells, which are tumorigenic but nonmetastatic, are ras resistant and remain nonmetastatic when expressing high levels of transfected ras, in contrast to NIH 3T3 cells, which are ras sensitive and become both tumorigenic and metastatic in response to comparable levels of ras. LTA cells differ in their patterns of gene expression in response to ras when compared with NIH 3T3 cells, suggesting that the two cell lines process the ras signal differently. Here we review our results with ras-transfected NIH 3T3 and LTA cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Mechanisms of oncogene-mediated alterations in metastatic ability. 148 59
The calcium channel antagonists (CCAs) amlodipine, diltiazem, and verapamil inhibited HT-39 human breast cancer cell proliferation in a concentration-dependent manner. The apparent 50% inhibitory dose values were 1.5 microM for the dihydropyridine amlodipine, 5 microM for the benzothiazapine diltiazem, and 10 microM for the phenylalkylamine verapamil. Amlodipine treatment caused a rapid concentration-dependent decrease of intracellular
calcium
concentration in the HT-39 cell line. Addition of 1 microM amlodipine had no effect on intracellular
calcium
levels, 3 microM amlodipine lowered intracellular
calcium
levels in the HT-39 cells by 13.7%, and 10 microM amlodipine lowered intracellular
calcium
levels by 33.2%. Also, lowering medium
calcium
levels from 2.0 mM to 0.5 microM resulted in a rapid 41.3% decrease in intracellular
calcium
and a concomitant 60% inhibition of HT-39 cell DNA synthesis. When HT-39 cells were transplanted into athymic mice, marked hypercalcemia developed. Serum
calcium
levels from control mice were 8.3 +/- 0.6 mg/dl (mean +/- SE; n = 4); those from tumor-bearing mice were 11.3 +/- 0.08 mg/dl (mean +/- SE; n = 17). Blood
calcium
levels correlated directly with tumor size (r = 0.91, P less than 0.01). We examined the capacity of three CCAs to specifically inhibit HT-39 tumor growth in vivo. One week after inoculation of HT-39 cells, mice were acclimated to vehicle or 0.1 mg/day amlodipine, 1.0 mg/day diltiazem, or 1.0 mg/day verpamil, in their drinking water, for 7 days. Oral administration of the dihydropyridine amlodipine (0.35 mg/day) for 10 days inhibited HT-39 breast tumor growth by 83.5 +/- 20.1% (mean +/- SE). Oral administration of diltiazem (3.5 mg/day) inhibited HT-39 breast tumor growth rate by 46.5 +/- 6.6% over a 2-week measurement period, and verapamil (3.5 mg/day) inhibited tumor growth rate by 68.2 +/- 9.7% (mean +/- SE). The CCAs had no effect on mouse body weight or gross organ morphology at the concentrations used. Lack of depolarization-induced
calcium
fluxes in the HT-39 cell line suggests that these cells do not express voltage-operated
calcium
channels. Thus, our study correlates an effect of amlodipine to lower intracellular
calcium
levels, by a mechanism not known at present, with its effect to inhibit HT-39 cell proliferation. These findings are important since they demonstrate that amlodipine and other CCAs with known pharmacodynamics and side effects act to blunt breast
tumor progression
in vivo.
...
PMID:Inhibition of cancer cell growth by calcium channel antagonists in the athymic mouse. 153 73
Since our aim was to isolate and identify new progression markers of human cutaneous melanoma, we applied the differential hybridization technique, in which we compared the gene expression in two subsequent stages of this progression. Tumors in nude mice arising after transplantation and serial passage in vivo of either the horizontally and early vertically growing part or the advanced vertically growing part of a primary melanoma of the same patient were used for this assay. This resulted in the isolation of a number of complementary DNA clones that were differentially expressed. Based on the marked difference in expression, one of them, designated pMW1, was chosen for further characterization and appeared to be coding for calcyclin, a cell cycle-regulated protein, belonging to a family of small
calcium
-binding proteins. Calcyclin expression was elevated in high-metastatic human melanoma cell lines in nude mice compared to low-metastatic ones. Immunoprecipitation of calcyclin showed that the differential expression at the RNA level is also reflected at the protein level. These findings show that expression of calcyclin is related to metastasis of human melanoma cell lines in nude mice and emphasize the role of this family of
calcium
-binding proteins in
neoplastic progression
as was reported for the mouse homologue of calcyclin and other members of the same family.
...
PMID:Expression of calcyclin in human melanoma cell lines correlates with metastatic behavior in nude mice. 173 92
Using a human keratinocyte model of
tumor progression
, we have examined the regulation of gene expression and secretion of a parathyroid hormone-like peptide (PLP) that has been implicated in the pathogenesis of hypercalcemia in cancer. A rapid and transient induction of PLP mRNA in response to serum stimulation was demonstrated in both established (HPK1A) and malignant (HPK1A-ras) cells; however the dose dependent increases were greater in HPK1A than in HPK1A-ras. Significant inhibition of this induction was noted with the addition of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 at a lower concentration in HPK1A than in HPK1A-ras. Amino-terminal PLP immunoreactivity and bioactivity correlated well (r = 0.98) when measured in conditioned medium. In the absence of mitogenic stimuli, malignant keratinocytes (HPK1A-ras) secreted significantly more PLP than established (HPK1A) keratinocytes. However, in response to increasing concentrations of epidermal growth factor and fetal bovine serum, PLP release was far greater from HPK1A (maximum 13 x basal) than from HPK1A-ras (maximum 3 x basal) cells. In addition, 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 was more effective in inhibiting both basal and stimulated PLP secretion in HPK1A than in HPK1A-ras cultures. Reduction of extracellular
Ca2+
from 2.0 mM to 0.5 mM appeared to be more effective at an early time point in reducing PLP secretion from the established cells compared with the malignant cells. These studies therefore demonstrate a progressive dysregulation of PLP expression and secretion in human keratinocytes in the transformation from established to malignant phenotype and may have important implications for understanding the pathogenetic mechanisms involved in vivo in the development of hypercalcemia in cancer.
...
PMID:Dysregulation of parathyroid hormone-like peptide expression and secretion in a keratinocyte model of tumor progression. 174 25
SC1, an integral membrane glycoprotein of 100 kd, is uniquely and transiently expressed on spinal cord motoneurons early in development and appears in peripheral neurons and several other tissues during development. SC1 has been purified by immunoaffinity techniques, and SC1 cDNA clones have been obtained by screening an E4 chick embryo phage expression library with a rabbit polyclonal antibody produced against purified SC1. The deduced protein sequence of 588 amino acids consists of a signal peptide, five immunoglobulin-like domains, a transmembrane region, and a short cytoplasmic tail. The sequence is most similar to MUC18, reported as a
tumor progression
marker in human melanoma. Transfection of SC1 cDNA into mammalian cells leads to cell surface expression of SC1 antigen and a subsequent increase in cell-cell adhesion. SC1 molecules bind to each other via a homophilic adhesion mechanism, independently of
calcium
or magnesium ions. SC1 may have a role in lateral motor column formation or neurite growth or fasciculation.
...
PMID:Molecular cloning and expression of a novel adhesion molecule, SC1. 193 Oct 49
Detailed records were maintained prospectively of all medications taken by 719 patients with advanced carcinoma of the lung or colon. Of this total, a cohort of 19 patients was identified who had ingested incidentally either nifedipine, diltiazem, verapamil, or trifluoperazine in standard therapeutic doses for a minimum of one month and a mean of 5.8 months and median of three months. Treatment with these
calcium
antagonists was well tolerated and, upon comparison with otherwise comparable patients who did not ingest a
calcium
antagonist, appeared to be associated with certain favorable outcomes, including delayed
tumor progression
and prolonged survival. These preliminary findings suggest that beneficial effects of such drugs observed with chronic treatment in experimental animal tumor models may occur in human disease and that definitive prospective, randomized, clinical trials of
calcium
antagonists administered continuously in ordinary therapeutic doses are both feasible and justified.
...
PMID:Chronic calcium antagonist use in carcinoma of the lung and colon: a retrospective cohort observational study. 217 24
To facilitate understanding of the mechanisms underlying pulmonary diseases, including lung cancer and cystic fibrosis, we have transformed and characterized cultures of human tracheal epithelial cells. Cells were transfected by
calcium
phosphate precipitation with a plasmid containing a replication-defective simian virus 40 (SV40) genome. Colonies of cells with enhanced growth potential were isolated and analyzed for transformation- and epithelial-specific characteristics. Precrisis cells were observed to express the SV40 large tumor antigen, produce cytokeratins, have microvilli, and form tight junctions. After crisis, cells continued to express the SV40 large tumor antigen as well as epithelial-specific cytokeratins and to display the apical membrane microvilli. Apical membrane Cl channels were opened in postcrisis cells exposed to 50 microM forskolin. These channels showed electrical properties similar to those observed in primary cultures. The postcrisis cells have been in culture for greater than 250 generations and are potentially "immortal." In addition to providing a useful in vitro model for the study of ion transport by human airway epithelial cells, the cells can be used to examine stages of
neoplastic progression
.
...
PMID:Characterization of human tracheal epithelial cells transformed by an origin-defective simian virus 40. 245 4
The mechanisms of hypercalcemia were assessed in 15 patients with humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy (HHM) who had tumors at various stages of progression. In patients with early tumors, bone biopsies were generally normal and the hypercalcemia was due to an elevation in renal tubular resorption of
calcium
. Conversely, osteoclastic resorption was markedly increased in patients with advanced tumors, particularly those in whom the biopsies were obtained postmortem. Osteoclast surface (Oc.S) correlated positively with the stage of
tumor progression
(r = 0.80, p less than 0.002), degree of immobility (r = 0.87, p less than 0.002), and level of urinary cyclic AMP excretion (r = 0.60, p less than 0.02). When compared with a group of ambulant patients with primary hyperparathyroidism (HPT), osteoblast surface (Ob.S%) in HHM was depressed (median and range): 1.2% (0-11.6%) versus 5.3% (1.1-32.0%) (p less than 0.001). However, a relatively low Ob.S (4%) and raised Oc.S (43.5%) were also seen in an immobilized patient with severe HPT. These data suggest that the PTH-related peptides currently invoked in the pathogenesis of HHM may initially cause hypercalcemia by enhancing renal tubular
calcium
resorption. The increase in osteoclastic activity and depression of osteoblastic activity that subsequently occurs is probably due to the combined effects of immobilization and higher circulating levels of PTHrP on the skeleton. However, the release of other bone-resorbing factors by the tumor, which have a depressant effect on osteoblastic activity, remains possible.
...
PMID:Contrasting mechanisms of hypercalcemia in patients with early and advanced humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy. 271 73
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