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)

Tumor cell adherence to and migration on the extracellular matrix is an important aspect of cancer progression. This interaction with the extracellular matrix is mediated primarily through the integrin class of cell adhesion molecules. We identified a restricted expression of alphavbeta3 in highly metastatic K1735M2 and of alphavbeta5 in poorly metastatic K1735C23 murine melanoma cells. The highly metastatic cells were ten times more motile on vitronectin and fibronectin and approximately three times more invasive through a reconstituted basement membrane than the poorly metastatic cells. This motility was inhibited by addition of anti-beta3 antibodies. Injection of the alphavbeta3-negative K1735C23 cells into syngeneic mice resulted in the generation of a metastatic variant (K1735C23PM) that neo expressed the alphavbeta3 complex, indicating that expression of alphavbeta3 is required for K1735 melanoma metastasis. Injection of highly metastatic K1735M2 cells in the presence of blocking antibody to beta3 reduced tumor size by approximately 80%. Treatment of the K1735M2 cells with a retroviral antisense beta3 construct significantly reduced their expression of alphavbeta3 and also reduced their motility on extracellular matrix ligands and their invasion through a reconstituted basement membrane. In contrast, when the K1735C23 cells were treated with a construct containing the full-length beta3 cDNA, their motility on extracellular matrix proteins and invasion of a reconstituted basement membrane were significantly increased. These results indicate that alphavbeta3 is required for migration and invasion of K1735 melanoma cells in vitro and primary tumor growth and metastasis in vivo.
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PMID:Differential expression of alphav integrins in K1735 melanoma cells. 1020 46

The expression of the beta3 integrin subunit was investigated in 130 fixed, paraffin-embedded specimens of human melanomas and nevi using two different monoclonal antibodies. Expression was not observed in melanocytes and was absent or low in most nevi. In primary melanomas, expression was absent or low in the nontumorigenic radial growth phase, which includes the classes of in situ and microinvasive melanomas. In contrast, expression was high in the tumorigenic or vertical growth phase compartment of many primary melanomas and in most metastatic melanomas. Expression patterns were similar with the two antibodies, SSA6 and SAP, and was membrane-related as well as cytoplasmically expressed. In those nevi that reacted focally, the reactivity tended to occur in the dermal component of neurotized nevi, and in Spitz nevi, where the reactivity was stronger and more diffuse. A few dysplastic nevi showed focal reactivity of the junctional component. These results are consistent with tumor progression-related expression of the beta3 integrin, which is expressed in melanocytic tumors as the alphavbeta3 integrin, having affinity for matrix molecules, including vitronectin and fibronectin. In all melanomas, and in the subset of tumorigenic vertical growth phase melanomas, expression increased with thickness (P < .01). For this reason, and because ligation of this integrin has been shown in vitro to have several properties that may be related to the malignant phenotype, it is likely that expression of this marker may have prognostic value. However, because of its consistent and strong expression in Spitz nevi, the diagnostic utility of this marker will likely be limited.
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PMID:Progression-related expression of beta3 integrin in melanomas and nevi. 1033 28

The expression of fibronectin (FN) isoforms including extra domain A (EDA) and extra domain B (EDB) segments, was investigated in 36 invasive ductal carcinomas and 13 benign tumors of human breast tissues by in situ hybridization using probes specific to alternative splicing sites. Signals for the constant region of FN mRNA in cancer cells were found in 53% of the invasive ductal carcinomas. The EDA+ and EDB+ mRNA signals were found in 47% and 33%, respectively. Stromal cells expressing FN, EDA+ and EDB+ mRNA signals were present in 100%, 69% and 14% of cases, respectively. Expression of FN mRNAs by cancer cells was most frequent in intraductal lesions or large cancer nests, and that by stromal cells was associated with desmoplastic areas. In representative cases, proportions of FN mRNA-positive cancer cells expressing EDA and EDB segments were 45% and 39%, respectively, signals for both being frequently found in the same cells. EDA+ and EDB+ mRNA were labeled in 25% and 6% of the FN mRNA-positive stromal cells, a large proportion thus being EDA-/EDB- FN. In conclusion, the splicing pattern of FN pre-mRNA is dependent on the cell type and histology of breast cancer tissues. The observed lack of expression in fibroadenomas and other benign conditions suggests a link with tumor progression.
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PMID:Expression of fibronectin isoforms in human breast tissue: production of extra domain A+/extra domain B+ by cancer cells and extra domain A+ by stromal cells. 1035 47

Decorin is a member of the small leucine-rich proteoglycan (SLRP) gene family that has recently become a focus in various areas of cancer research. The decorin protein consists of a core protein and a covalently linked glycosaminoglycan chain. Decorin binds to collagens type I, II and IV in vivo and promotes the formation of fibers with increased stability and changes in solubility. Further, the decorin core protein binds to growth factors, including transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta), to other intercellular matrix molecules such as fibronectin and thrombospondin, and to the decorin endocytosis receptor. Decorin may directly interfere with the cell cycle via the induction of p21WAF1/CIP1 (p21), a potent inhibitor of cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs). Here, we discuss interactions of decorin with TGF-beta and with p21, both of which are relevant to carcinogenesis and tumor progression. TGF-beta is released by tumors of various histogenetic origins and promotes immunosuppression in the host and tumor immune escape by induction of growth arrest and apoptosis in immune cells, by downregulation of MHC II antigen expression and by changes in the cytokine release profiles of immune and tumor cells. Moreover, TGF-beta may modulate tumor growth in an autocrine and paracrine fashion, may mediate drug resistance, and may facilitate tumor angiogenesis. Decorin binds to TGF-beta, thus inhibiting its bioactivity, and is a direct or indirect negative modulator of TGF-beta synthesis. Ectopic expression of decorin results in the regression of rat C6 gliomas, an antineoplastic effect attributed to the reversal of TGF-beta-induced immunosuppression. On the other hand, de novo expression of decorin in colon cancer cells and some other tumor cells, even though not in glioma cells, results in an upregulation of p21 expression and a cell cycle arrest, presumably in a TGF-beta-independent manner. Decorin expression is downregulated in many tumors but upregulated in the peritumoral stroma. By virtue of its growth regulatory and immunomodulatory properties, decorin promises to become a novel target for the experimental therapy of human cancers.
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PMID:Transforming growth factor-beta and p-21: multiple molecular targets of decorin-mediated suppression of neoplastic growth. 1038 66

Cell interactions with extracellular matrices are important to pathological changes that occur during cell transformation and tumorigenesis. Several extracellular matrix proteins including fibronectin, thrombospondin-1, laminin, SPARC, and osteopontin have been suggested to modulate tumor phenotype by affecting cell migration, survival, or angiogenesis. Likewise, proteases including the matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) are understood to not only facilitate migration of cells by degradation of matrices, but also to affect tumor formation and growth. We have recently demonstrated an in vivo role for the RGD-containing protein, osteopontin, during tumor progression, and found evidence for distinct functions in the host versus the tumor cells. Because of the compartmentalization and temporal regulation of MMP expression, it is likely that MMPs may also function dually in host stroma and the tumor cell. In addition, an important function of proteases appears to be not only degradation, but also cleavage of matrix proteins to generate functionally distinct fragments based on receptor binding, biological activity, or regulation of growth factors.
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PMID:Functions of the extracellular matrix and matrix degrading proteases during tumor progression. 1045 37

The metastatic potential of tumor cells has been shown to be correlated with the expression of tri- and tetra-antennary beta1,6-N-acetylglucosamine (beta1,6-GlcNAc)-bearing N-glycans, which are recognized by Phaseolus vulgaris leukoagglutinating lectin (L-PHA). The expression of beta1,6-GlcNAc-bearing N-glycans also has been used as a marker of tumor progression in human breast and colon cancers. In this report, the role of N-glycan branching in regulating glioma migration and invasion was examined. The expression of beta1,6-GlcNAc-bearing N-glycans was found in human glioma specimens, whereas astrocytes from normal adult brain were negative. The expression of N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase V (GnT-V) mRNA, which is responsible for the biosynthesis of beta1,6-GlcNAc-bearing N-glycans, was high in glioma cell lines with robust ets-1 expression. To study the molecular mechanism of GnT-V expression in human glioma cells, an inducible ets-1 gene was stably transfected into SNB-19 cells using a tetracycline repressor system. GnT-V mRNA expression was increased by the induction of c-ets-1, suggesting that the Ets-1 transcription factor directly regulates the transcription of GnT-V. Stable transfection of GnT-V into human glioma U-373 MG cells resulted in changes in cell morphology and focal adhesions and a marked increase in glioma invasivity in vitro. L-PHA has little effect on cell migration. On the contrary, Phaseolus vulgaris erythroagglutinating lectin (E-PHA), which recognizes bisecting beta1,4-GlcNAc-bearing N-glycans, strongly inhibits cell migration (haptotaxis) on a fibronectin substrate in U-373 MG transfectants and other glioma cell lines tested. These results suggest that the increased beta1,6-GlcNAc-bearing N-glycan expression found in malignant gliomas is modulated by GnT-V through the Ets-1 transcription factor, and that the branching of complex type N-glycans plays a major role in glioma invasivity.
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PMID:Beta1,6-N-acetylglucosamine-bearing N-glycans in human gliomas: implications for a role in regulating invasivity. 1064 65

The integrin family plays a major role in complex biological events such as differentiation, development, wound healing, and the altered adhesive and invasive properties of tumor cells. Integrin (alpha5beta1 is a classical fibronectin receptor, and it has been known as a tumor suppressor gene because tumor cells overexpressing alpha5beta1 are less tumorigenic than their parent cells. However, this finding conflicts with some recent data that suggests that the emergence of alpha5beta1 expression correlates with the tumor progression. We, therefore, investigated the expression of alpha5beta1 integrin in 20 lung cancer cell lines by flow cytometric analysis and in 88 node-negative non-small cell lung cancers (NSCLCs) by RT-PCR and immunohistochemical assays to determine the significance of this prognostic factor. In the 20 lung cancer cell lines, 8 (40.0%) cell lines strongly expressed integrin alpha5, 3 (15.0%) cell lines had moderate or weak alpha5 expression, and the remaining 9 (45.0%) cell lines expressed no integrin alpha5. In the 88 node-negative NSCLC patients, 44 samples (50.0%) were evaluated as having integrin alpha5 overexpression, and the integrin alpha5 expression was significantly associated with the status of differentiation and the age of the patients (P = 0.0379 and 0.0312, respectively). In the node-negative patients, the overall survival rate for patients with integrin alpha5 overexpressed tumors was significantly worse than for those individuals whose tumors had normal integrin alpha5 expression (P = 0.016).
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PMID:Significance of integrin alpha5 gene expression as a prognostic factor in node-negative non-small cell lung cancer. 1065 37

Galectin-3 is a carbohydrate-binding protein endowed with affinity for beta-galactosides. It plays a role in cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions. Furthermore, it has been hypothesized to be involved in tumor progression and metastasis. To address the role of galectin-3 in the invasive and metastatic processes, we stably overexpressed galectin-3 in human breast carcinoma cell lines, and we evaluated the influence of elevated galectin-3 expression on several cell features, including cellular homotypic and heterotypic interactions and cell survival. No differences in various parameters related with cell growth features and proliferation were detected. By contrast, we found that galectin-3 overexpressing cells, with respect to low galectin-3 expressing cells, exerted: (1) a significantly enhanced adhesion to laminin, fibronectin and vitronectin exerted both directly or via increased expression of specific integrins, e.g., alpha-4 and beta-7; (2) a remodeling of those cytoskeletal elements associated with cell spreading, i.e., microfilaments; (3) an enhanced survival upon exposure to different apoptotic stimuli, such as cytokine and radiation. Collectively, our results indicate that overexpression of galectin-3 may play a role in tumor cell invasion and metastasis by specifically influencing cell adhesion to the extracellular matrix. This may confer selective survival advantage and resistance to the particular homeless-induced apoptosis called anoikia.
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PMID:Galectin-3 overexpression protects from apoptosis by improving cell adhesion properties. 1069 29

Adhesion and signaling by integrins require their dynamic association with nonintegrin membrane proteins. One such protein, the glycolipid-anchored urokinase receptor (uPAR), associates with and modifies the function of the beta(2)-integrin Mac-1 (CD11b/CD18). In this study, a critical non-I-domain binding site for uPAR on CD11b (M25; residues 424-440) is identified by homology with a phage display peptide known to bind uPAR. Recombinant soluble uPAR and cells expressing uPAR bound to immobilized M25, binding being promoted by urokinase and blocked by soluble M25, but not a scrambled control or homologous peptides from other beta(2)-associated alpha-chains. Mac-1, but not a mutated Mac-1 in which M25 was replaced with the homologous sequence of CD11c, co-precipitated with uPAR. In the beta-propeller model of alpha-chain folding, M25 spans an exposed loop on the ligand-binding, upper surface of alphaM, identifying uPAR as an atypical alphaM ligand. Although not blocking ligand binding to Mac-1, M25 (25-100 microM) inhibited leukocyte adhesion to fibrinogen, vitronectin, and cytokine-stimulated endothelial cells. M25 also blocked the association of uPAR with beta(1)-integrins and impaired beta(1)-integrin-dependent spreading and migration of human vascular smooth muscle cells on fibronectin and collagen. These observations indicate that uPAR associates with integrins directly and that disruption of this association broadly impairs integrin function, suggesting a novel strategy for regulation of integrins in the settings of inflammation and tumor progression.
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PMID:Identification of a urokinase receptor-integrin interaction site. Promiscuous regulator of integrin function. 1074 8

Transforming growth factor-beta 1 (TGF-beta 1) stimulates migration/invasion of mouse transformed keratinocytes and increases urokinase (u-PA) expression/secretion. In this report, we analyzed the biological behavior of two naturally occurring inhibitors of protein tyrosine kinases, genistein and curcumin, that could abrogate the enhancement of u-PA levels induced by TGF-beta 1 in transformed keratinocytes. Our results showed that genistein and curcumin blocked this response in a dose-dependent manner and also inhibited the TGF-beta 1-induced synthesis of fibronectin, an early responsive gene to the growth factor. Both compounds also reduced TGF-beta 1-stimulated cell migration and invasiveness. These results suggest that a tyrosine kinase-signaling pathway should be involved in TGF-beta 1-mediated increased malignancy of transformed keratinocytes and that genistein and curcumin could play an important role in inhibiting tumor progression.
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PMID:Genistein and curcumin block TGF-beta 1-induced u-PA expression and migratory and invasive phenotype in mouse epidermal keratinocytes. 1096 19


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