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)

Hyaluronidase and hyaluronic acid, two substances thought to be strongly implicated in carcinogenesis, were assessed in the plasma of 35 patients with newly documented monoclonal gammapathy and in 25 control patients. A significant increase was found in plasma hyaluronidase activity in the patients with monoclonal gammapathy. A statistically significant positive correlation was found between hyaluronidase activity and monoclonal immunoglobulin levels in plasma. An increase in serum hyaluronidase activities may be a response to the deleterious effect of hyaluronic acid in cell migration and tumor progression. Further studies are needed to assess the value of hyaluronidase activity as a marker of tumor progression.
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PMID:Hyaluronidase activity in serum of patients with monoclonal gammapathy. 1102 Apr 70

Interactions of hyaluronic acid (HA) with its binding proteins CD44 and RHAMM (receptor for HA-mediating motility) have been proposed to be important in promoting tumor progression and dissemination. However, a comparative study of their expression patterns in stomach cancer and its associated lesions is not yet available. To address this issue, the combined examinations of pathology, immunocytochemistry and Western blot hybridization were performed on advanced gastric cancer specimens as well as their preneoplastic and non-cancerous counterparts. Alternative CD44 expression was observed in the gastric mucosa with different lesions. CD44 proteins harboring variant exon 6 (CD44 v6) was detected only in cancer tissues with a total positive rate of 14% (10/74). Intracellular RHAMM molecules in Mr 93000 to 95000 were expressed in 3/31 non-cancerous mucosa. RHAMM detection rates increased along with tumor progression. Irrespective of the differences of gross and morphological pattern, majority (54/74) of cancer cases expressed multiple RHAMM isoforms in Mr 40000-45000, 64000, 70000-73000, 85000 and 93000-95000 with the appearance of cell surface immunocytochemical labeling. Among CD44 variant isoforms, v6 is more relevant with malignant transformation of gastric epithelium. Expression of RHAMM, especially the cell surface variants, is closely correlated with tumor progression (P<0.01). Expression of CD44 and RHAMM may benefit the invasion and metastasis of gastric cancer cells presumably in a reciprocal manner.
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PMID:Expression of hyaluronan receptors CD44 and RHAMM in stomach cancers: relevance with tumor progression. 1102 94

Interactions of the extracellular matrix component hyaluronic acid and its cellular receptors CD44 and RHAMM/IHABP have been linked to tumor progression and metastasis formation. We investigated the expression and hyaluronic-acid-dependent functions of CD44 and RHAMM/IHABP in human melanoma. Immunohistochemistry of tumor specimens at different stages of melanoma progression revealed an increased expression of CD44 and RHAMM/IHABP. High mRNA expression of CD44 was found in three highly tumorigenic melanoma cell lines compared with less tumorigenic melanoma cells or nontransformed melanocytes. RHAMM/IHABP expression was upregulated in all cell lines analyzed but not in melanocytes. In contrast to the cell surface localization of CD44, RHAMM/IHABP was detected exclusively within the cytoplasm of melanoma cells. Binding and adhesion of melanoma cells to hyaluronic acid is mainly CD44 dependent as it was inhibited to 60%--80% by an anti-CD44 monoclonal antibody whereas anti-RHAMM/IHABP sera had no effect. Culture of melanoma cells in the presence of hyaluronic acid resulted in a dose-dependent, CD44-mediated increase of melanoma cell proliferation and enhanced release of basic fibroblast growth factor and transforming growth factor beta 1. We conclude that (i) the expression of CD44 and RHAMM/IHABP is increased during melanoma progression, (ii) CD44 is the principal hyaluronic acid surface receptor on melanoma cells, and (iii) the hyaluronic-acid-induced increase of the proliferative capacity of melanoma cells is mainly dependent on CD44--hyaluronic acid interactions.
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PMID:CD44 is the principal mediator of hyaluronic-acid-induced melanoma cell proliferation. 1116 3

Hyaluronidase is a hyaluronic acid-degrading endoglycosidase that is present in many toxins and the levels of which are elevated in cancer. Increased concentration of HYAL1-type hyaluronidase correlates with tumor progression and is a marker for grade (G) 2 or 3 bladder cancer. Using bladder tissues and cells, prostate cancer cells, and kidney tissues and performing reverse transcription-PCR, cDNA cloning, DNA sequencing, and in vitro translation, we identified splice variants of HYAL1 and HYAL3. HYAL1v1 variant lacks a 30-amino acid (aa) sequence (301-330) present in HYAL1 protein. HYAL1v1, HYAL1v2 (aa 183-435 present in HYAL1 wild type), HYAL1v3 (aa 1-207), HYAL1v4 (aa 260-435), and HYAL1v5 (aa 340-435) are enzymatically inactive and are expressed in normal tissues/cells and G1 bladder tumor tissues. However, HYAL1 wild type is expressed in G2/G3 tumors and in invasive tumor cells. Stable transfection and HYAL1v1-specific antibody confirmed that the HYAL1 sequence from aa 301 to 330 is critical for hyaluronidase activity. All tumor cells and tissues mainly express HYAL3 variants. HYAL3v1 lacks a 30-aa sequence (299-328) present in HYAL3 protein, that is homologous to the 30-aa HYAL1 sequence. HYAL3v1, HYAL3v2 (aa 251-417 present in HYAL3 wild type), and HYAL3v3 (aa 251-417, but lacking aa 299-328), are enzymatically inactive. Although splicing of a single independent exon generates HYAL1v1 and HYAL3v1, internal exon splicing generates the other HYAL1/HYAL3 variants. These results demonstrate that alternative mRNA splicing controls cellular expression of enzymatically active hyaluronidase and may explain the elevated hyaluronidase levels in bladder/prostate cancer.
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PMID:Regulation of hyaluronidase activity by alternative mRNA splicing. 1208 18

Proteoglycan and glycosaminoglycan content was analyzed in a model of rat mammary carcinoma to study the roles of these compounds in tumorigenesis. Hyaluronic acid and proteoglycans bearing chondroitin and/or dermatan sulfate chains were detected in solid tumors obtained after subcutaneous inoculation of Walker 256 rat carcinoma cells. About 10% of sulfated glycosaminoglycan chains corresponded to heparan sulfate. The small leucine-rich proteoglycan, decorin, was identified as one of the proteoglycans, in addition to others of higher molecular weight, by cross-reaction with an antiserum raised against pig laryngeal decorin and by N-terminal amino acid sequencing. Decorin was separated from other proteoglycans by hydrophobic chromatography and its complete structure was determined. It has a molecular weight of about 85 kDa and a dermatan chain of 45 kDa with 4-sulfated disaccharides. After degradation of the glycosaminoglycan chain, three core proteins of different molecular weight (36, 46 and 56 kDa) were identified. The presence of hyaluronic acid and decorin has been reported in a variety of tumors and tumor cells. In the Walker 256 mammary carcinoma model, hyaluronic acid may play an important role in tumor progression, since it provides a more hydrated extracellular matrix. On the other hand, decorin, which is expressed by stromal cells, represents a host defense response to tumor growth.
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PMID:Decorin is one of the proteoglycans expressed in Walker 256 rat mammary carcinoma. 1288 63

Hyaluronic acid (HA) binds to cell-surface receptors such as CD44, and seems to be involved in cell adhesion, motility, and tumor progression in brain. To identify gene expression changes that are initiated by HA, we explored human cytokine arrays in U87MG glioma cells and identified osteopontin, a secreted matrix protein, as a transcriptional target of HA. Interestingly, expression of osteopontin was induced by HA in glioma cells lacking functional PTEN, a tumor suppressor gene (U87MG, U251MG, and U373MG), but not in wild-type (wt)-PTEN-harboring cells (LN18 and LN428). To confirm the role of PTEN, adenoviral (Ad)-wt-PTEN was used to induce ectopic expression of wt-PTEN in U87MG cells, leading to reduced HA-mediated osteopontin induction. Reciprocally, transfection with dominant-negative Akt repressed HA-induced osteopontin expression. Furthermore, HA promoted the motility of glioma cells, and down-regulation of induced osteopontin activity via a neutralizing anti-osteopontin antibody repressed HA-induced motility in vitro. Together, these results strongly suggest that induction of osteopontin expression by HA is dependent on activation of the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/Akt pathway. Furthermore, our data indicate that PTEN can effectively modulate the expression of osteopontin, and HA-induced osteopontin plays an important role in the motility response induced by HA in human glioma cells.
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PMID:Hyaluronic acid induces osteopontin via the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/Akt pathway to enhance the motility of human glioma cells. 1570 60

In this review we focus on a promising novel histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitor (HA-But) obtained by the esterification of butyric acid (BA), the smallest HDAC inhibitor, with hyaluronic acid (HA), the main constituent of the extracellular matrix which selectively recognizes a transmembrane receptor (CD44) overexpressed in most primary cancers and associated with tumor progression. In vitro, HA-But has proved to be 10-fold more effective than BA in inhibiting the proliferation of a panel of human cancer cell lines, representative of the most common human cancers, and, similar to BA, to regulate the expression of some cell cycle-related proteins, to induce growth arrest in the G1/G0 phase of the cell cycle and to increase histone acetylation. In vivo, HA-But treatment has demonstrated a marked potency in inhibiting primary tumor growth and lung metastases formation from murine Lewis lung carcinoma (LL3) as well as liver metastases formation from intrasplenic implantation of LL3 or B16-F10 murine melanoma cells. In particular, the effect of s.c. and i.p. treatment with HA-But on liver metastases resulted, respectively, in 87 and 100% metastases-free animals, and in a significant prolongation of the survival time compared to the control groups. The results suggest that the presence of the HA backbone does not interfere with the biological activity of butyric residues and that HA-But could represent a promising cell-targetable antineoplastic agent for the treatment of primary and metastatic tumors.
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PMID:Hyaluronic acid butyric esters in cancer therapy. 1574 73

Hyaluronic acid and HYAL1-type hyaluronidase show high accuracy in detecting bladder cancer and evaluating its grade, respectively. Hyaluronic acid promotes tumor progression; however, the functions of hyaluronidase in cancer are largely unknown. In this study, we stably transfected HT1376 bladder cancer cells with HYAL1-sense (HYAL1-S), HYAL1-antisense (HYAL1-AS), or vector cDNA constructs. Whereas HYAL1-S transfectants produced 3-fold more HYAL1 than vector transfectants, HYAL1-AS transfectants showed approximately 90% reduction in HYAL1 production. HYAL1-AS transfectants grew four times slower than vector and HYAL1-S transfectants and were blocked in the G2-M phase of the cell cycle. The expression of cdc25c and cyclin B1 and cdc2/p34-associated H1 histone kinase activity also decreased in HYAL1-AS transfectants. HYAL1-S transfectants were 30% to 44% more invasive, and HYAL1-AS transfectants were approximately 50% less invasive than the vector transfectants in vitro. In xenografts, there was a 4- to 5-fold delay in the generation of palpable HYAL1-AS tumors, and the weight of HYAL1-AS tumors was 9- to 17-fold less than vector and HYAL1-S tumors, respectively (P < 0.001). Whereas HYAL1-S and vector tumors infiltrated skeletal muscle and blood vessels, HYAL1-AS tumors resembled benign neoplasia. HYAL1-S and vector tumors expressed significantly higher amounts of HYAL1 (in tumor cells) and hyaluronic acid (in tumor-associated stroma) than HYAL1-AS tumors. Microvessel density in HYAL1-S tumors was 3.8- and 9.5-fold higher than that in vector and HYAL1-AS tumors, respectively. These results show that HYAL1 expression in bladder cancer cells regulates tumor growth and progression and therefore serves as a marker for high-grade bladder cancer.
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PMID:HYAL1 hyaluronidase: a molecular determinant of bladder tumor growth and invasion. 1578 37

Hyaluronidase (HAase), a class of enzymes which degrade hyaluronic acid (HA), are involved in the spread of infections/toxins, ovum fertilization, and cancer progression. Thus, HAase inhibitors may have use in disease treatments. We evaluated 21 HAase inhibitors against HYAL-1, testicular, honeybee, and Streptomyces HAases. Among these inhibitors, polymers of poly (styrene-4-sulfonate) (PSS) (i.e., molecular weight 1400-990,000 or PSS 1400-PSS 990,000) and O-sulfated HA (sHA) derivatives (sHA2.0, 2.5, and 2.75) were the most effective. HYAL-1 and bee HAases were the most sensitive, followed by testicular HAase; Streptomyces HAase was resistant to all inhibitors, except PSS 990,000 and VERSA-TL 502 (i.e., PSS 10(6) dalton). The length of the PSS polymer determined their potency (e.g., IC50 for HYAL-1, PSS 990,000: 0.0096 microM; PSS 210 no inhibition; IC50 for testicular HAase, PSS 990,000: 0.042 microM; PSS 210 no inhibition). The presence, but not the number, of sulfate groups on the sHA molecule determined its potency (e.g., IC50 for HYAL-1: sHA2.0, 0.019 microM; sHA2.75, 0.0083 microM). Other known HAase inhibitors, such as gossypol, sodium-aurothiomalate, 1-tetradecane sulfonic acid, and glycerrhizic acid, were not effective. Both PSS and sHA inhibited HAases by a mixed inhibition mechanism (i.e., competitive + uncompetitive) and were 5- to 17-fold better as uncompetitive inhibitors than as competitive inhibitors. These results demonstrate that HAase inhibitors show selectivity toward the different types of HAases, which could be exploited to inhibit specific HAases involved in a variety of pathophysiologic conditions.
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PMID:Differential selectivity of hyaluronidase inhibitors toward acidic and basic hyaluronidases. 1616 2

The interaction between epithelial tumor cells and their surrounding stroma is important in tumor progression and metastasis. This is accomplished through a number of transmembrane receptors that interact with stromal extracellular matrix molecules. One of these receptors, CD44, binds to extracellular matrix component hyaluronic acid (HA). The purpose of this study was to evaluate the significance of HA, CD44s, and CD44v6 in benign, hyperplastic, atypical, and malignant endometrial epithelia. Archival paraffin-embedded cell blocks from proliferative endometrium (n = 11), secretory endometrium (n = 12), simple hyperplasia (n = 13), complex hyperplasia without atypia (n = 9), complex hyperplasia with atypia (n = 17), and adenocarcinoma (n = 21) were stained for HA, CD44s, and CD44v6. HA was detected throughout the normal menstrual cycle but was more intense during the secretory phase. Only during the secretory phase was CD44s expressed in the stromal cells in 11 cases (92%), whereas CD44v6 was detected in glandular epithelium in 9 (75%). CD44s was expressed in the glandular epithelium in 2 (15%) cases of simple hyperplasia, 4 (44%) of complex hyperplasia without atypia, 14 (82%) of complex hyperplasia with atypia, and in 16 (76%) of adenocarcinoma. CD44v6 was expressed in the glandular epithelium in 1 (11%) case of complex hyperplasia without atypia, 17 (100%) cases of complex hyperplasia with atypia, and in 18 (86%) cases of adenocarcinoma, but in none of the cases of simple hyperplasia. The endometrial stromal cells expressed CD44v6 in 1 (8%) case of simple hyperplasia, 6 (67%) of complex hyperplasia without atypia, 8 (47%) of complex hyperplasia with atypia, and in 3 (14%) of adenocarcinoma. We concluded that in the normal menstrual cycle, the timing of peak staining of HA and CD44s in the stroma and the up-regulation of CD44v6 in secretory glands are coincident with the period in which the endometrium is most receptive to embryo implantation. HA is more abundant in the stroma adjacent to the tumor, suggesting that interactions between tumor cells and stromal HA promote tumorigenesis. With progression from hyperplasia and with increasing atypia to adenocarcinoma, levels of stromal HA, glandular CD44v6, and glandular and stromal CD44s all increase. Thus, HA and CD44 are both involved in the development and progression of endometrial cancer.
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PMID:Expression of hyaluronic acid and its receptors, CD44s and CD44v6, in normal, hyperplastic, and neoplastic endometrium. 1630 59


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