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)

The peroxidase and estradiol-metabolizing activities of mammary tumors induced by 7,12-dimethylbenz(a)anthracene were determined in fresh and stored tissue. In both cases, a wide variation in peroxidase activity was observed in 47 different tumors tested. The properties of the enzyme found in the tumors were similar to those of lactoperoxidase. It is suggested that the amount of peroxidase present might reflect the ability of tumor cells to differentiate in response to hormonal stimulation and be indicative of the degree of tumor progression.
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PMID:Metabolism of (4-14C)estradiol by 7,12-dimethylbenz(a) anthracene-induced mammary tumor peroxidase. 81 11

The aim of this study was to evaluate whether interferon [IFN] can affect intracerebrally grown glioma and how alteration of the blood-brain barrier [BBB] may influence this effect. An intracerebrally implanted glioma G-26 (G-26) mouse brain-tumor model was developed and used in these studies. Histological characterization of this intracerebrally grown tumor revealed its anaplastic character. The astrocytic origin of G-26 was evidenced by glial fibrillary acidic protein staining and electron microscopic visualization of glial filaments. A study of tumor progression and animal survival showed development of a well defined tumor nodule within approximately seven days after the implantation. The median animal survival time was 27 +/- 3.8 days. The integrity of the blood-brain barrier [BBB] within the tumor was evaluated by the intravenous injection of horseradish peroxidase at days 3, 7, 10 and 20 after brain tumor implant and compared to 'sham' controls. The tumor-induced BBB alteration was progressive from day 3 to day 20. Glioma-26 subcutaneously passed in C57BL/6 mice was also continuously cultured in vitro. Its proliferation was inhibited by homologous mouse interferon alpha/beta [MuIFN alpha/beta] but not by human interferon alpha lymphoblastoid or human interferon beta. The in vivo studies of G-26 glioma treatment with MuIFN alpha/beta were performed using single bolus of IFN in osmotically altered animals or slow IFN infusion through osmotic micro-pumps. The slow infusion of IFN had no effect on animal survival. However, a statistically significant increase in animal survival was observed after single bolus IFN treatment following osmotic BBB alteration.
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PMID:Evaluation of blood-brain barrier permeability and the effect of interferon in mouse glioma model. 128 Dec 26

White suckers (Catostomus commersoni) are one of two species of bottom-feeding fish in which various liver neoplasms are more prevalent in urban/industrial sites in western Lake Ontario than in less polluted sites in the Great Lakes. Previous studies indicate that white suckers excrete metabolites of various polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in bile, and that glutathione transferase (GST)-mediated conjugation is a major detoxification pathway for the PAH benzo[alpha]pyrene. To determine whether hepatocarcinogenesis in these wild fish is associated with induced GST-dependent resistance to carcinogens, we examined the expression of immunoreactive GSTs in liver neoplasms and putatively preneoplastic altered hepatocellular foci from white suckers collected from several polluted sites in western Lake Ontario. Histological sections of liver with altered hepatocellular foci, hepatocellular adenomas, hepatocellular carcinomas, bile duct adenomas and bile duct carcinomas were examined for GST immunoreactivity by the peroxidase-antiperoxidase (PAP) technique with polyclonal antiserum specific for all major GST isoenzyme subunits found in normal liver of white suckers. All bile duct adenomas, bile duct carcinomas and hepatocellular carcinomas were markedly or completely deficient in immunoreactive GST in comparison with surrounding normal hepatocytes. The majority of the hepatocellular adenomas were also deficient. Most altered hepatocellular foci had normal GST staining, but several GST-deficient altered hepatocellular foci were observed. However, none of the preneoplastic or advanced liver neoplasms expressed induced GST, suggesting that carcinogenesis is not associated with selection for GST-dependent resistance. Loss of hepatocellular GSTs may be incidental to neoplastic progression in these fish, or might be important in increasing susceptibility of some preneoplastic populations of hepatocytes to further DNA damage by environmental or endogenous chemicals that are normally detoxified by GSTs.
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PMID:Loss of glutathione S-transferases in pollution-associated liver neoplasms in white suckers (Catostomus commersoni) from Lake Ontario. 166 Jul 92

The distribution of sex hormone-binding globulin-like antigens (SHBG-LA) in normal and neoplastic human breast tissues was investigated by immunohistochemistry, employing a monospecific polyclonal antiserum against highly purified human SHBG and an avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex (ABC) method in formalin-fixed paraffin embedded tissue sections. In normal breast tissues the staining of SHBG-LA was present exclusively in the cytoplasm of epithelial cells of ductal and ductular types. Nuclei as well as stromal and lymphatic tissues remained unstained. While the staining was positive in all cases of intraductal carcinoma, only 4 out of 15 infiltrating carcinomas revealed SHBG-LA. The demonstration of a plasma sex steroid binding globulin in the cytoplasm of endocrine target cells is consistent with the hypothesis that steroid-binding globulins are able to enter target cells. The apparent loss of this specific cell function in infiltrating carcinomas may result from dedifferentiation and change of cell membrane properties occurring during the process of neoplastic progression.
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PMID:Immunohistochemical localization of sex hormone-binding globulin in normal and neoplastic breast tissue. 168 89

We examined 35 cases of stomach carcinoma and 40 cases of colonic carcinoma with PNA associated with peroxidase (peanut agglutinin, lectin which binds to the terminal disaccharide galactose beta (1,3)-N-acetil-galacto-samine). In this way evaluation of the functional aspects of the normal-neoplastic sequence was undertaken. This method was carried out for histological and ultrastructural investigations. The results obtained in both cases showed a different reactivity in the evolution of neoplastic disease: in fact, positivity in dysplasia is finely granular intracytoplasmic, whereas in well-differentiated neoplastic transformation such a reactivity is preferentially localized along the cellular membranes, with restoration of gross positivity in the cytoplasm for the poorly-differentiated neoplasm. We therefore believe PNA to be a marker not only of neoplastic progression but of differentiation as well: we also hypothesize it to reveal glycoprotein groups with possible antigenic power, involved in immunologic interactions between tumor and host.
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PMID:PNA: a marker of neoplastic progression and differentiation in the gastro-intestinal tract. 228 82

A sandwich method was developed for the detection of carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) and CEA-like molecules and immunoglobulin G (IgG) containing immune complexes (CEA-IgG-IC) in human sera. Rabbit anti-CEA ( Dako , FRG) was adsorbed to polypropylene tubes. CEA-like molecules and IgG containing immune complexes bound to the solid phase. They were detected by binding peroxidase-labelled anti-IgG antibodies and quantified by measuring the optical density (OD) at 492 nm after oxidation of orthophenylene diamine. Sera of 68 controls had a mean OD 492 of 1.19 +/- 0.26 (means +/- SD). An extinction of more than 1.97 (means + 3 SD) was judged as elevated. Fourteen of 69 patients after surgical treatment of colorectal carcinoma showed elevated OD 492 up to a value of 3.92. In five patients with benign diseases of colon or rectum normal values were found. In 7 of 41 patients without recurrence or metastases CEA-IgG-IC were elevated although the CEA was normal, and in one case both parameters were elevated. In four of 22 patients with tumor progression CEA-IgG-IC and CEA were elevated, whereas in two cases only CEA-IgG-IC were found.
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PMID:[Demonstration of circulating CEA or CEA-like antigens and immunoglobulin G containing immune complexes in colorectal carcinoma]. 637 76

Uroplakins (UPs) Ia, Ib, II, and III, transmembrane proteins constituting the asymmetrical unit membrane of urothelial umbrella cells, are the first specific urothelial differentiation markers described. We investigated the presence and localization patterns of UPs in various human carcinomas by applying immunohistochemistry (avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex method), using rabbit antibodies against UPs II and III, to paraffin sections. Positive reactions for UP III (sometimes very focal) were noted in 14 of the 16 papillary noninvasive transitional cell carcinomas (TCCs) (88%), 29 of the 55 invasive TCCs (53%), and 23 of the 35 TCC metastases (66%). Different localization patterns of UPs could be distinguished, including superficial membrane staining like that found in normal umbrella cells (in papillary carcinoma), luminal (microluminal) membrane staining (in papillary and invasive carcinoma), and, against expectations, peripheral membrane staining (in invasive carcinoma). Non-TCC carcinomas of various origins (n = 177) were consistently negative for UPs. The presence of UPs in metastatic TCCs represents a prime example of even advanced tumor progression being compatible with the (focal) expression of highly specialized differentiation repertoires. Although of only medium-grade sensitivity, UPs do seem to be highly specific urothelial lineage markers, thus operating up interesting histodiagnostic possibilities in cases of carcinoma metastases of uncertain origin.
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PMID:Uroplakins, specific membrane proteins of urothelial umbrella cells, as histological markers of metastatic transitional cell carcinomas. 748 1

Formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded surgical specimens from 137 primary central nervous system tumors, including 26 astrocytomas (21 fibrillary, 1 protoplasmic, 1 gemistocytic and 3 pilocytic), 26 anaplastic astrocytomas, 9 glioblastomas, 1 gliosarcoma, 8 oligodendrogliomas, 4 ependymomas, 1 anaplastic ependymoma, 2 subependymomas, 3 paragangliomas, and 57 meningiomas, were immunostained with the CM1 polyclonal (pAb) and the DO-7 monoclonal (mAb) antibodies against the p53 protein, using the streptavidin/peroxidase method. In addition, two series of 17 and 9 medulloblastomas were also immunostained with the above pAb and mAb, respectively. p53 protein expression was observed in 7 fibrillary astrocytomas, 17 anaplastic astrocytomas, 5 glioblastomas, 1 gliosarcoma, 1 oligodendroglioma, 1 anaplastic ependymoma, and 4 meningiomas with the CM1 pAb. An additional 10 cases (i.e., 3 anaplastic astrocytomas and 7 meningiomas) were found to be p53 protein positive with the DO-7 mAb. Of the medulloblastomas, 8 (of the 17) and 4 (of the 9) were found to express p53 protein with CM1 pAb and DO-7 mAb, respectively. Our results indicate that p53 protein is expressed in a number of central nervous system neoplasms, and suggest that in astrocytic tumors a possible association may exist between p53 protein expression and tumor progression through increasing histological grades of malignancy.
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PMID:p53 protein expression in central nervous system tumors: an immunohistochemical study with CM1 polyvalent and DO-7 monoclonal antibodies. 833 39

We have studied the expression of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) in esophageal cancer using immunohistochemistry. A total of 101 specimens of esophageal cancer tissue were fixed by formalin, embeded in paraffin wax, and examined in 3 microns sections by avidin-biotin peroxidase complex method. VEGF was noted in the cytoplasm of normal esophageal glandular cells, monocyte-macrophages, squamous carcinoma cells and of the vascular endothelial cells themselves. VEGF expression by monocyte-macrophages was observed in all cases, in contrast the incidence of VEGF expression in the tumor cells was relatively low at 26.7% of all specimens. However, in the cases where the tumor cells were positive for VEGF, it was discovered that the main source of the VEGF production was the tumor cells themselves. In the cases with proper mucosal invasion the incidence of VEGF expression by the tumor cells was quite low at 7.6%. However, when the tumor invaded the submucosal layer the expression increased to 33.3%. There was also a significant correlation in those with the submucosal invasion between the expression of VEGF in the tumor cells and that VEGF may play an important role in tumor progression and in the angiogenesis via auto-crine and para-crine mechanisms in esophageal cancer.
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PMID:Immunohistochemical localization of vascular endothelial growth factor in esophageal cancer. 875 19

The role of cell-specific metabolism in benzene toxicity was examined in both murine and human bone marrow. Hemopoietic progenitor cells and stromal cells are important control points for regulation of hemopoiesis. We show that the selective toxicity of hydroquinone at the level of the macrophage in murine bone marrow stroma may be explained by a high peroxidase/nicotanimide adenine dinucleotide phosphate, reduced [NAD(P)H]:quinone oxidoreductase (NQO1) ratio. Peroxidases metabolize hydroquinone to the reactive 1,4-benzoquinone, whereas NQO1 reduces the quinones formed, resulting in detoxification. Peroxidase and NQO1 activity in human stromal cultures vary as a function of time in culture, with peroxidase activity decreasing and NQO1 activity increasing with time. Peroxidase activity and, more specifically, myeloperoxidase, which had previously been considered to be expressed at the promyelocyte level, was detected in murine lineage-negative and human CD34+ progenitor cells. This provides a metabolic mechanism whereby phenolic metabolites of benzene can be bioactivated in progenitor cells, which are considered initial target cells for the development of leukemias. Consequences of a high peroxidase/NQO1 ratio in HL-60 cells were shown to include hydroquinone-induced apoptosis. Hydroquinone can also inhibit proteases known to play a role in induction of apoptosis, suggesting that it may be able to inhibit apoptosis induced by other stimuli. Modulation of apoptosis may lead to aberrant hemopoiesis and neoplastic progression. This enzyme-directed approach has identified target cells of the phenolic metabolites of benzene in bone marrow and provided a metabolic basis for benzene-induced toxicity at the level of the progenitor cell in both murine and human bone marrow.
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PMID:Cell-specific activation and detoxification of benzene metabolites in mouse and human bone marrow: identification of target cells and a potential role for modulation of apoptosis in benzene toxicity. 911 90


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