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Query: UMLS:C0178874 (
tumor progression
)
40,807
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Down-regulation of the epithelial cell-
cell adhesion molecule
E-cadherin is frequently associated with tumor formation and progression. Besides its role in physical cell-cell adhesion, E-cadherin is also thought to be involved in intracellular signaling in normal epithelial cells. In these cells, the Armadillo catenin p120ctn binds to the cytoplasmic domain of E-cadherin and stabilizes the adhesion complexes. On loss of E-cadherin, cytoplasmic p120ctn might accumulate and contribute to tumor malignancy. We used suppression subtractive hybridization to search for genes regulated by E-cadherin expression. We isolated human Nanos1 as a transcript of which levels decrease on E-cadherin reexpression in a human breast cancer cell line. The hNanos1 protein bears a COOH-terminal (CCHC)(2) zinc finger domain and belongs to an evolutionarily conserved protein family sharing functions in germ cell development in both vertebrates and invertebrates. We found an inverse correlation between E-cadherin and hNanos1 expression in various cell lines and under diverse conditions. Conditional expression of hNanos1 in human colorectal DLD1 cancer cells functionally abolished cell-cell adhesion. It induced cytoplasmic translocation of p120ctn, as well as strong migratory and invasive properties. We also found that the NH(2)-terminal domain of hNanos1, which is conserved only among mammals, interacts with p120ctn. hNanos1 counteracted the stimulatory effect of p120ctn on cell protrusion formation. Together, these findings describe a new function for hNanos1 as a downstream effector of E-cadherin loss contributing to
tumor progression
. Targeting hNanos1 might be a promising strategy in the treatment of E-cadherin-negative tumors in particular.
...
PMID:E-cadherin regulates human Nanos1, which interacts with p120ctn and induces tumor cell migration and invasion. 1704 63
Epithelial
cell adhesion molecule
(Ep-CAM) is believed to have a critical role in carcinogenesis and cell proliferation. However, the association of Ep-CAM with cancer invasion and progression is less clear. We found that Ep-CAM was highly expressed on low-invasive cells compared with highly invasive cells. Forced expression of Ep-CAM decreased cancer invasiveness, and silencing Ep-CAM expression elevated cancer invasiveness. Ep-CAM expression was associated with promoter methylation. Treatment with a demethylating agent, and/or the histone deacetylase inhibitor reactivated Ep-CAM expression in Ep-CAM-negative cells and inhibited cancer invasiveness. Using a promoter-reporter construct, we demonstrated methylation of the promoter fragment drive Ep-CAM-silenced transcription. Additionally, silenced Ep-CAM gene in cancer cells was enriched for hypermethylated histone 3 lysine 9. When unmethylated and active, this promoter was associated with acetylated histone 3 lysine 9. Furthermore, we observed an increased association of Ep-CAM promoter with repression components as tumor invasiveness increased. In cancer tissues, Ep-CAM expression significantly correlated with
tumor progression
and associated with promoter methylation. Our data support the idea that modulation of Ep-CAM plays a pivotal role in tumor invasion and progression. Moreover, aberrant DNA methylation of Ep-CAM is implicated in enhancing invasive/metastatic proclivity of tumors.
...
PMID:DNA methylation and histone modification regulate silencing of epithelial cell adhesion molecule for tumor invasion and progression. 1721 11
High expression of EpCAM and the tetraspanin CO-029 has been associated with colorectal cancer progression. However, opposing results have been reported on
CD44 variant
isoform v6 (CD44v6) expression. We recently noted in rat gastrointestinal tumors that EpCAM, claudin-7, CO-029, and CD44v6 were frequently coexpressed and could form a complex. This finding suggested the possibly that the complex, rather than the individual molecules, could support
tumor progression
. The expression of EpCAM, claudin-7, CO-029, and CD44v6 expression was evaluated in colorectal cancer (n = 104), liver metastasis (n = 66), and tumor-free colon and liver tissue. Coexpression and complex formation of the molecules was correlated with clinical variables and apoptosis resistance. EpCAM, claudin-7, CO-029, and CD44v6 expression was up-regulated in colon cancer and liver metastasis. Expression of the four molecules did not correlate with tumor staging and grading. However, coexpression inversely correlated with disease-free survival. Coexpression was accompanied by complex formation and recruitment into tetraspanin-enriched membrane microdomains (TEM). Claudin-7 contributes to complex formation inasmuch as in the absence of claudin-7, EpCAM hardly associates with CO-029 and CD44v6 and is not recruited into TEMs. Notably, colorectal cancer lines that expressed the EpCAM/claudin-7/CO-029/CD44v6 complex displayed a higher degree of apoptosis resistance than lines devoid of any one of the four molecules. Expression of EpCAM, claudin-7, CO-029, and CD44v6 by themselves cannot be considered as prognostic markers in colorectal cancer. However, claudin-7-associated EpCAM is recruited into TEM and forms a complex with CO-029 and CD44v6 that facilitates metastasis formation.
...
PMID:A complex of EpCAM, claudin-7, CD44 variant isoforms, and tetraspanins promotes colorectal cancer progression. 1757 17
Carbohydrate antigen sialyl Lewis a (CA19-9) is the most frequently applied serum tumor marker for diagnosis of cancers in the digestive organs. Recent progress disclosed the presence of a normal counterpart of the determinant, namely disialyl Lewis a, which is predominantly expressed in non-malignant epithelial cells of the digestive organs, while sialyl Lewis a is preferentially expressed in cancers. The disialyl Lewis a determinant carries one extra sialic residue attached through a 2 --> 6 linkage to the GlcNAc moiety compared to cancer-associated sialyl Lewis a, which carries only one 2 --> 3 linked sialic acid residue (monosialyl Lewis a). Disialyl Lewis a in normal epithelial cells serves as a ligand for immunosuppressive receptors such as sialic acid binding immunoglobulin (Ig)-like lectins (siglec-7) and -9 expressed on resident monocytes/macrophages and maintains immunological homeostasis of mucosal membranes in digestive organs. Epigenetic silencing of a gene for a 2 --> 6 sialyl-transferase in the early stages of carcinogenesis results in an impairment of 2 --> 6 sialylation, leading to incomplete synthesis and accumulation of sialyl Lewis a, which lacks the 2 --> 6 linked sialic acid residue, in cancer cells. Simultaneous determination of serum levels of sialyl- and disialyl Lewis a, and calculation of the monosialyl/disialyl Lewis a ratio provide information useful for excluding a false-positive serum diagnosis, and also for averting the undesired influence of the Lewis blood group of patients on serum antigen levels. During the course of
cancer progression
in locally advanced cancers, tumor hypoxia induces transcription of several glycogenes involved in sialyl Lewis a synthesis. Expression of the determinant, consequently, is further accelerated in more malignant hypoxia-resistant cancer cell clones, which become predominant clones in advanced stage cancers and frequently develop hematogenous metastasis. Sialyl Lewis a, as well as its positional isomer sialyl Lewis x, serves as a ligand for vascular
cell adhesion molecule
E-selectin and facilitates hematogenous metastasis through mediating adhesion of circulating cancer cells to vascular endothelium. Patients having both strong sialyl Lewis a expression on cancer cells and enhanced E-selectin expression on vascular beds are at a greater risk of developing distant hematogenous metastasis.
...
PMID:Carbohydrate antigen sialyl Lewis a--its pathophysiological significance and induction mechanism in cancer progression. 1776 Feb 70
L1 cell adhesion molecule (L1CAM) is a transmembrane
cell adhesion molecule
initially defined as a promigratory molecule in the developing nervous system that appears to be also expressed in some endothelial cells. However, little is known about the functional role of L1CAM on endothelial cells. We observed that L1CAM expression was selectively enhanced on endothelium associated with pancreatic adenocarcinoma in situ and on cultured pancreatic tumor-derived endothelial cells in vitro. L1CAM expression of endothelial cells could be augmented by incubation with immunomodulatory cytokines such as tumor necrosis factor alpha, interferon gamma, or transforming growth factor beta 1. Antibodies to L1CAM and the respective ligand neuropilin-1 blocked tube formation and stromal cell-derived factor 1beta induced transmigration of tumor endothelial cells in vitro. L1CAM expression on tumor-derived-endothelial cells enhanced Panc1 carcinoma cell adhesion to endothelial cell monolayers and transendothelial migration. Our data demonstrate a functional role of L1CAM expression on tumor endothelium that could favor metastasis and angiogenesis during
tumor progression
.
...
PMID:Enhanced L1CAM expression on pancreatic tumor endothelium mediates selective tumor cell transmigration. 1893 29
MTA (metastasis-associated gene) is a newly discovered family of
cancer progression
-related genes and their encoded products. MTA1, the first gene found in this family, has been repeatedly reported to be overexpressed along with its protein product MTA1 in a wide range of human cancers. In addition, the expression of MTA1/MTA1 correlates with the clinicopathological properties (malignant properties) of human cancers. MTA proteins are transcriptional co-repressors that function in histone deacetylation and are involved in the NuRD complex, which contains nucleosome remodeling and histone deacetylating molecules. MTA1 expression correlates with tumor formation in the mammary gland. In addition, MTA1 converts breast cancer cells to a more aggressive phenotype by repression of the estrogen receptor (ER) alpha trans-activation function through deacetylation of the chromatin in the ER-responsive element of ER-responsive genes. Furthermore, MTA1 plays an essential role in c-MYC-mediated cell transformation. Another member of this family, MTA3, is induced by estrogen and represses the expression of the transcriptional repressor Snail, a master regulator of "epithelial to mesenchymal transitions", resulting in the expression of the
cell adhesion molecule
E-cadherin and maintenance of a differentiated, normal epithelial phenotype in breast cells. In addition, tumor suppressor p53 protein is deacetylated and inactivated by both MTA1 and MTA2, leading to inhibition of growth arrest and apoptosis. Moreover, a hypoxia-inducible factor-1alpha (HIF-1alpha) is also deacetylated and stabilized by MTA1, resulting in angiogenesis. Thus, MTA proteins, especially MTA1, represent a possible set of master co-regulatory molecules involved in the carcinogenesis and progression of various malignant tumors. MTA proteins are proposed to be important new tools for clinical application in cancer diagnosis and treatment.
...
PMID:The role of the MTA family and their encoded proteins in human cancers: molecular functions and clinical implications. 1911 62
The importance of loss of the cell-
cell adhesion molecule
E-cadherin (encoded by CDH1) to
tumor progression
is well established. However, CDH1 germ-line mutations predispose to the cancer susceptibility syndrome hereditary diffuse gastric cancer (HDGC), suggesting a role for E-cadherin in tumor initiation. The earliest indications of cancer in the stomachs of CDH1 mutation carriers are microscopic foci of intramucosal signet-ring cell carcinoma (SRCC; designated "eHDGC"). Here, we used N-methyl-N-nitrosourea (MNU) to promote gastric carcinogenesis in wild-type (wt) and cdh1(+/-) mice. MNU induced a variety of gastric tumors; however, intramucosal SRCC developed with an 11 times higher incidence in cdh1(+/-) mice compared with wt mice. The murine SRCC resembled the human eHDGCs in that they were hypoproliferative, lacked nuclear beta-catenin accumulation, and had reduced membrane localization of E-cadherin and its interacting junctional proteins. The down-regulation of E-cadherin in the murine SRCCs confirmed the importance of the second CDH1 hit to the initiation of diffuse gastric cancer. CDH1 promoter hypermethylation has been proposed to be a major second hit in advanced HDGC; however, its contribution to eHDGC was unknown. We thus examined a series of human eHDGC and detected CDH1 promoter methylation in 50% of foci. Promoter methylation was accompanied by reduced wt CDH1 mRNA levels in the foci and had a monoclonal pattern, consistent with an epigenetic initiation of disease. Together, these findings provide compelling evidence for a deficiency in cell-to-cell adhesion being sufficient to initiate diffuse gastric cancer in the absence of hyperproliferation and beta-catenin activation.
...
PMID:E-cadherin deficiency initiates gastric signet-ring cell carcinoma in mice and man. 1922 45
Initiation of cell growth and neoplastic transformation frequently involves activation of growth factor receptor-coupled tyrosine kinases and stimulation of the phosphoinositide second messenger system. Altered expression of CD44 variants was reported in several malignant tumor types with possible implications for
tumor progression
and prognosis.
CD44 variant
expression was reported to be associated with second messenger activation and differentiation. We therefore investigated the effects of butyrate-induced short-term differentiation on phosphoinositide signaling, phospholipase C and protein kinase C activity and alteration of
CD44 variant
expression in human HT-29 colon carcinoma cells. HT-29 cells were cultured with sodium butyrate for 6 days. Phosphoinositide turnover was measured by [32P]orthophosphate incorporation and phospholipase C activity by determination of the release of [3H]inositolphosphates from [3H]myoinositol prelabeled cells. Protein kinase C activity was determined by histone III-S phosphorylation, PKC subtype expression by RNase protection analysis, and
CD44 variant
expression was determined by RT-PCR using variant-specific primers. Treatment of HT-29 human colon carcinoma cells with sodium butyrate caused a dose-dependent inhibition of cell proliferation (IC50, 2.5 mM) with morphologic signs of an enterocytic differentiation following 6 days of treatment. The phosphoinositide turnover as determined by 32P-incorporation under non-equilibrium conditions showed a 30-40% inhibition of labeled phosphoinositides and phosphatidic acid and a dose-dependent inhibition of cholinergically stimulated phospholipase C activity as a secondary event following butyrate-induced enterocytic differentiation. However, long-term incubation of HT-29 cells with phorbol ester or an inhibitor of classical and novel PKC subtypes did not affect cell proliferation. In butyrate-treated HT-29 cells activation of calcium-dependent protein kinase C by cholinergic stimulation or phorbolester treatment induced an increase in membrane-bound cPKC activity, while expression of distinct high- molecular
CD44 variant
transcripts v3 (670 bp), v5 (940 bp) and v8 (535 bp) were drastically reduced after butyrate pretreatment. Enterocytic differentiation of HT-29 colon carcinoma cells seems to be associated with alterations in phosphoinositide resynthesis, phospholipase C activity and ligand/receptor-induced PKC translocation. The observed reduction of distinct high-molecular CD44v3, v5 and v8 variants following butyrate-induced differentiation indicates an association of specific
CD44 variant
expression with the malignant phenotype of HT-29 colon cancer cells, thus being possible targets for new diagnostic and therapeutic strategies.
...
PMID:Butyrate-induced alterations of phosphoinositide metabolism, protein kinase C activity and reduced CD44 variant expression in HT-29 colon cancer cells. 1936 Mar 23
The
cell adhesion molecule
, N-cadherin, stabilizes cell-cell junctions and promotes cellular migration during tissue morphogenesis in development. N-cadherin is also implicated in mediating
tumor progression
and metastasis in cancer. Therefore, developing antagonists of N-cadherin adhesion may be of therapeutic value in cancer treatment. The amino acid sequence HAV in the extracellular domain of N-cadherin is required for N-cadherin-mediated adhesion and migration. A cyclic peptide, ADH-1, derived from the N-cadherin HAV site is an effective antagonist of N-cadherin-mediated processes and is now in clinical trials for cancer chemotherapy. Because it is a peptide, ADH-1 has certain limitations as a drug, namely its metabolic instability and lack of oral delivery. Adherex set out to identify small molecule antagonists of N-cadherin, which would be more amenable to therapeutic use. Using three-dimensional computational screening, Adherex identified a set of small molecules as potential antagonists with sufficient structural similarity to the HAV region of N-cadherin. We tested the ability of these small molecules to interfere with two N-cadherin-dependent processes: neurite outgrowth (axonal migration) and N-cadherin-dependent cell adhesion. We identified 21 N-cadherin antagonists of varying potency. More importantly, our studies demonstrate that these compounds are significantly more potent than ADH-1 at perturbing N-cadherin-mediated processes. The IC(50) of ADH-1 is 2.33 mM while the IC(50) of the small molecules ranges from 4.5 to 30 microM. Given the efficacy of ADH-1 for treating cancer, these small molecule antagonists will be highly effective in treatment of cancer metastasis and conditions of aberrant neurite outgrowth, such as neuropathic pain.
...
PMID:Novel peptide mimetic small molecules of the HAV motif in N-cadherin inhibit N-cadherin-mediated neurite outgrowth and cell adhesion. 1976 27
CD44 is a transmembrane glycoprotein involved in the interaction between cells and the extracellular matrix. A large variety of alternatively spliced CD44 variants are expressed by different tumors with possible implication for
tumor progression
, formation of metastasis and survival. In colon carcinomas, previous reports described higher molecular bands of CD44 transcripts in neoplastic colonic tissue, although a complete analysis of multiple combinations of CD44v transcripts were not performed. We therefore analyzed the pattern of CD44 standard and variant (v2-v10) transcripts in colorectal adenomas and carcinomas by exon-specific RT-PCR amplification and sought CD44v transcripts specific for colonic neoplasias. Our data indicate that CD44 standard transcripts, including the
epithelial form
(C-v8,v9,v10-C) corresponding to a 720 bp transcript, were detected in 2/38 (5.2%) samples of normal mucosa, 20/20 (100%) adenomas and in 21/33 (63%) colorectal carcinomas. High molecular CD44v3,v8-10 (673 bp) transcripts were found in 2/33 (6%) samples from normal mucosa, 19/20 (95%) from adenomas and in 29/31 from colorectal carcinomas (93%). Similar CD44v3,v8-10 transcripts were detected in five from seven colorectal liver metastases, while normal liver did not contain high molecular CD44v3 variants. The same CD44v3,v8-10 (673 bp) variant was detected in HT-29 human colon carcinoma cells. Direct sequencing of the CD44v3 (673 bp) transcript in samples from colorectal carcinomas and HT-29 cells confirmed the assumed CD44v (-C-v3-v8-v9-v10-C-) cDNA sequence. Analysis of other
CD44 variant
transcripts (v4-v10) using exon specific primers were less frequently associated with colorectal neoplasias. These data report for the first time frequent expression of neoplasia-associated CD44v3,v8-10 variants in colorectal adenomas and carcinomas supporting the role of increased
CD44 variant
expression as an early event in colorectal carcinogenesis. The described CD44v3,v8-10 (673 bp) variant might be relevant for diagnosis and treatment of colorectal cancer.
...
PMID:Frequent expression of the high molecular, 673-bp CD44v3,v8-10 variant in colorectal adenomas and carcinomas. 1978 2
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