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Query: UMLS:C0178874 (
tumor progression
)
40,807
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The expression and organization of the extracellular matrix component fibronectin has been analyzed in a collection of murine epidermal keratinocyte cell lines representative of different stages of mouse skin carcinogenesis. The fibroblastoid phenotype of spindle cells has been found to be associated with high levels of fibronectin expression and the ability to organize this molecule in an extracellular matrix. These observations, together with our previous analysis on the expression of cadherins, alpha 6 beta 4 integrin and the proteoglycan
syndecan
, indicate that profound alterations in cell adhesion behaviour occur in the last stages of
tumor progression
in this system. These alterations could favor the migratory and invasive phenotype of spindle cells.
...
PMID:Cell adhesion and tumor progression in mouse skin carcinogenesis: increased synthesis and organization of fibronectin is associated with the undifferentiated spindle phenotype. 765 10
In the present work the activities of GGT and G-6-Pase and the content of Cyt P-450 were determined in surgically removed liver specimens (16 hepatocellular carcinomas, 8 focal nodular hyperplasias and 4 adenomas). The activities were compared to the surrounding seemingly normal liver tissue. In the adenomas neither of the enzymes studied showed alterations, characteristic for hepatocarcinogenesis. Four out of 8 FNHs had the enzyme pattern that was found in experimental liver carcinogenesis. Liver carcinoma specimens proved to be heterogenous. Neither elevated GGT nor reduced G-6-Pase activity was consistent in these samples although the average of G-6-Pase activity decreased to 50 percent. Cytochrome P-450 was significantly reduced in the majority of cases, showing the best agreement with the tendency observed in experimental models. As an other approach, the qualitative and quantitative alterations of proteoglycans (PG) were analized in the same tumor samples. The amount of sugar components of PGs the glycosaminoglycans (GAG) increased by many times in liver tumors. Carcinoma samples were characterized by about twentyfold increase in chondroitin sulfate content, compared to normal liver. The enhancement of GAGs is partly the consequence of a selective alteration in PG expression. The amount of perlecan and decorin was found to be increased, while
syndecan
disappeared from liver carcinomas. These data suggest that malignant transformation in liver is accompanied by specific alteration in the content, composition and structure of PGs. Presumably, these changes have significance in
tumor progression
and have also the potential to be used as markers for liver tumors.
...
PMID:Potential markers (enzymes, proteoglycans) for human liver tumors. 799 53
In this study, flow cytometry was used to evaluate interleukin-6 (IL-6) production by bone marrow mononuclear cells from 47 patients with multiple myeloma (MM) in different clinical stages and 15 patients with monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance. In patients with MM, autocrine IL-6 production paralleled the clinical disease stage. The largest proportion of
syndecan-1
(+)/IL-6(+) cells was detected in patients with resistant relapse or primary refractory disease, suggesting that
tumor progression
involves expansion of myeloma cells producing IL-6. The authors assessed autocrine IL-6 production and in vitro proliferation and apoptosis of myeloma cells in 6 myeloma cell clones (MCCs) and in 2 myeloma cell lines, namely IM-9 and U-266-1970, which showed different sensitivities to the addition of exogenous IL-6. Autocrine IL-6 production was observed in IL-6-independent MCC-2, MCC-3, and MCC-5 cloned from patients with aggressive disease and in the IM-9 cell line. In contrast, IL-6-dependent MCC-1, MCC-4, and MCC-6 were
syndecan-1
(+) and IL-6(-). Blocking experiments with anti-IL-6 monoclonal antibody from clone AH65, which binds IL-6-IL-6Ralpha complexes, prevented cell proliferation of IL-6(+) MCCs. Flow cytometry evaluations after propidium iodide staining revealed different susceptibilities of MCCs to cell death. IL-6-producing MCCs showed minimal spontaneous and dexamethasone-induced apoptosis, whereas a regular amplitude of apoptosis occurred in the IL-6(-) MCCs. These data provide evidence that autocrine IL-6 reflects a highly malignant phenotype of myeloma cells. In fact, autocrine IL-6 production and deregulated apoptosis may induce expansion of selective IL-6(+) myeloma cells resistant to spontaneous and drug-induced cell death.
...
PMID:Autocrine interleukin-6 production and highly malignant multiple myeloma: relation with resistance to drug-induced apoptosis. 1115 26
Understanding the details of the molecular mechanism of tumor dissemination revealed that several proteoglycan species are involved in the process but their role can be described as Janus-faced. One level of proteoglycan alterations is at the expression of their genes coding for the core protein. Characteristically, in progressing tumors two patterns emerged: loss or neoexpression of surface proteoglycans (PG) depending on the initial expression pattern of the cell type of origin. The situation is similarly complex concerning the changes of glycosaminoglycan (GAG) of the PG during
tumor progression
. This is due to the fact that the majority of PGs involved is hybrid molecule meaning that their core protein can be glycanated both with chondroitin and heparan sulfate. However, such an alteration in glycanation of PG may fundamentally change the function of the molecule, especially the one operating at the cell surface. Among the extracellular PGs, decorin emerged as inhibitor of progression while perlecan as a promoter of the process. Analysis of the available data indicate that during metastatization tumor cells must express at least one cell surface HSPG species from the
syndecan
-glypican-CD44v3 group. Furthermore, the HS-chain of these proteoglycan(s) carry important molecular signatures (suphution or epimerization patterns). Experimental data suggest that tumor cell surface heparan sulfate (PG) may provide a target for specific anti-metastatic interventions.
...
PMID:Proteoglycans and tumor progression: Janus-faced molecules with contradictory functions in cancer. 1208 48
Heparanase (HPSE-1) is involved in the degradation of both cell-surface and extracellular matrix (ECM) heparan sulfate (HS) in normal and neoplastic tissues. Degradation of heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPG) in mammalian cells is dependent upon the enzymatic activity of HPSE-1, an endo-beta-d-glucuronidase, which cleaves HS using a specific endoglycosidic hydrolysis rather than an eliminase type of action. Elevated HPSE-1 levels are associated with metastatic cancers, directly implicating HPSE-1 in
tumor progression
. The mechanism of HPSE-1 action to promote
tumor progression
may involve multiple substrates because HS is present on both cell-surface and ECM proteoglycans. However, the specific targets of HPSE-1 action are not known. Of particular interest is the relationship between HPSE-1 and HSPG, known for their involvement in
tumor progression
.
Syndecan-1
, an HSPG, is ubiquitously expressed at the cell surface, and its role in
cancer progression
may depend upon its degradation. Conversely, another HSPG, perlecan, is an important component of basement membranes and ECM, which can promote invasive behavior. Down-regulation of perlecan expression suppresses the invasive behavior of neoplastic cells in vitro and inhibits tumor growth and angiogenesis in vivo. In this work we demonstrate the following. 1) HPSE-1 cleaves HS present on the cell surface of metastatic melanoma cells. 2) HPSE-1 specifically degrades HS chains of purified
syndecan-1
or perlecan HS. 3)
Syndecan-1
does not directly inhibit HPSE-1 enzymatic activity. 4) The presence of exogenous
syndecan-1
inhibits HPSE-1-mediated invasive behavior of melanoma cells by in vitro chemoinvasion assays. 5) Inhibition of HPSE-1-induced invasion requires
syndecan-1
HS chains. These results demonstrate that cell-surface
syndecan-1
and ECM perlecan are degradative targets of HPSE-1, and
syndecan-1
regulates HPSE-1 biological activity. This suggest that expression of
syndecan-1
on the melanoma cell surface and its degradation by HPSE-1 are important determinants in the control of tumor cell invasion and metastasis.
...
PMID:Heparanase degrades syndecan-1 and perlecan heparan sulfate: functional implications for tumor cell invasion. 1463 Sep 25
Cell-cell and cell-extracellular matrix interaction is crucial in
tumor progression
. Tight junction (TJ) proteins as occludin and claudins (CLDNs) play important role in this process together with several extracellular matrix components, as
syndecan
. Our previous work suggested significant changes in the expression of claudins even in the early stages of cervical carcinogenesis. The aim of our present work was to study the expression of occludin and
syndecan-1
, as compared to CLDNs, in early phases of cervical carcinogenesis. Paraffin sections of 50 samples were studied by immunohistochemistry, including cervical intraepithelial neoplasias (CINI-II-III), in situ carcinomas (CIS) and normal cervical samples. Occludin and CLDN-2 were found colocalized in the basal layer, while
syndecan-1
and CLDN-1, -4 and -7 were coexpressed in the parabasal and intermedier layers in normal epithelia. Intensity of occludin staining decreased in CIN/CIS lesions, although it was more extended towards the upper epithelial layers with inverse relation with grades, as seen in the case of CLDN-2 expression. CLDN-1, -2, -4 and -7 were detected in the entire epithelium in CIN, showing decrease in CIS. The progression of CIN was associated with reduced
syndecan-1
expression, in contrast to CLDN-1, -4 and -7 which increased toward CIS. The obtained data suggest that significant changes occur in the composition of cell adhesion complexes even in early stages of cervical carcinogenesis. The pattern of expression is characteristic for the alteration, the changes in the different components, however, are not parallel with each other.
...
PMID:Changes of cell adhesion and extracellular matrix (ECM) components in cervical intraepithelial neoplasia. 1580 Jun 79
The cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HSPG) glypican-1 is up-regulated by pancreatic and breast cancer cells, and its removal renders such cells insensitive to many growth factors. We sought to explain why the cell surface HSPG
syndecan-1
, which is also up-regulated by these cells and is a known growth factor coreceptor, does not compensate for glypican-1 loss. We show that the initial responses of these cells to the growth factor FGF2 are not glypican dependent, but they become so over time as FGF2 induces shedding of
syndecan-1
. Manipulations that retain
syndecan-1
on the cell surface make long-term FGF2 responses glypican independent, whereas those that trigger
syndecan-1
shedding make initial FGF2 responses glypican dependent. We further show that
syndecan-1
shedding is mediated by matrix metalloproteinase-7 (MMP7), which, being anchored to cells by HSPGs, also causes its own release in a complex with
syndecan-1
ectodomains. These results support a specific role for shed
syndecan-1
or MMP7-
syndecan-1
complexes in
tumor progression
and add to accumulating evidence that syndecans and glypicans have nonequivalent functions in vivo.
...
PMID:Growth factor-induced shedding of syndecan-1 confers glypican-1 dependence on mitogenic responses of cancer cells. 1628 10
Androgen receptor (AR) plays a central role in prostate cancer, and most patients respond to androgen deprivation therapies, but they invariably relapse with a more aggressive prostate cancer that has been termed hormone refractory or androgen independent. To identify proteins that mediate this
tumor progression
, gene expression in 33 androgen-independent prostate cancer bone marrow metastases versus 22 laser capture-microdissected primary prostate cancers was compared using Affymetrix oligonucleotide microarrays. Multiple genes associated with aggressive behavior were increased in the androgen-independent metastatic tumors (MMP9, CKS2, LRRC15, WNT5A, EZH2, E2F3,
SDC1
, SKP2, and BIRC5), whereas a candidate tumor suppressor gene (KLF6) was decreased. Consistent with castrate androgen levels, androgen-regulated genes were reduced 2- to 3-fold in the androgen-independent tumors. Nonetheless, they were still major transcripts in these tumors, indicating that there was partial reactivation of AR transcriptional activity. This was associated with increased expression of AR (5.8-fold) and multiple genes mediating androgen metabolism (HSD3B2, AKR1C3, SRD5A1, AKR1C2, AKR1C1, and UGT2B15). The increase in aldo-keto reductase family 1, member C3 (AKR1C3), the prostatic enzyme that reduces adrenal androstenedione to testosterone, was confirmed by real-time reverse transcription-PCR and immunohistochemistry. These results indicate that enhanced intracellular conversion of adrenal androgens to testosterone and dihydrotestosterone is a mechanism by which prostate cancer cells adapt to androgen deprivation and suggest new therapeutic targets.
...
PMID:Increased expression of genes converting adrenal androgens to testosterone in androgen-independent prostate cancer. 1651 Jun 4
Syndecans are a family of transmembrane heparan sulfate proteoglycans widely expressed in both developing and adult tissues. Until recently, their role in pathogenesis was largely unexplored. In this review, we discuss the reported involvement of syndecans in human cancers, infectious diseases, obesity, wound healing and angiogenesis. In some cancers,
syndecan
expression has been shown to regulate tumor cell function (e.g. proliferation, adhesion, and motility) and serve as a prognostic marker for
tumor progression
and patient survival. The ectodomains and heparan sulfate glycosaminoglycan chains of syndecans can also act as receptors/co-receptors for some bacterial and viral pathogens, mediating infection. In addition, syndecans bind to obesity-related factors and regulate their signaling, in turn modulating food consumption and weight balance. In vivo animal models of tissue injury and in vitro data also implicate syndecans in processes necessary for wound healing, including fibroblast and endothelial proliferation, cell motility, angiogenesis, and extracellular matrix organization. These new insights into the involvement of syndecans in disease and tissue repair coupled with the emergence of
syndecan
-specific molecular tools may lead to novel therapies for a variety of human diseases.
...
PMID:The role of syndecans in disease and wound healing. 1693 44
When shed from the cell surface, the heparan sulfate proteoglycan
syndecan-1
can facilitate the growth, angiogenesis, and metastasis of tumors. Here we report that tumor cell expression of heparanase, an enzyme known to be a potent promoter of
tumor progression
and metastasis, regulates both the level and location of
syndecan-1
within the tumor microenvironment by enhancing its synthesis and subsequent shedding from the tumor cell surface. Heparanase regulation of
syndecan-1
is detected in both human myeloma and breast cancer cell lines. This regulation requires the presence of active enzyme, because mutated forms of heparanase lacking heparan sulfate-degrading activity failed to influence
syndecan-1
expression or shedding. Removal of heparan sulfate from the cell surface using bacterial heparitinase dramatically accelerated
syndecan-1
shedding, suggesting that the effects of heparanase on
syndecan-1
expression by tumor cells may be due, at least in part, to enzymatic removal or reduction in the size of heparan sulfate chains. Animals bearing tumors formed from cells expressing high levels of heparanase or animals transgenic for heparanase expression exhibited elevated levels of serum
syndecan-1
as compared with controls, indicating that heparanase regulation of
syndecan-1
expression and shedding can occur in vivo and impact
cancer progression
and perhaps other pathological states. These results reveal a new mechanism by which heparanase promotes an aggressive tumor phenotype and suggests that heparanase and
syndecan-1
act synergistically to fine tune the tumor microenvironment and ensure robust tumor growth.
...
PMID:Heparanase enhances syndecan-1 shedding: a novel mechanism for stimulation of tumor growth and metastasis. 1734 52
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