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Query: UMLS:C0242379 (
lung cancer
)
71,905
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Wnt-induced-secreted-protein-1 (WISP-1) is a
cysteine
-rich, secreted factor belonging to the CCN family. These proteins have been implicated in the inhibition of metastasis; however, the mechanisms involved have not been described. We demonstrated that overexpression of WISP-1 in H460
lung cancer
cells inhibited lung metastasis and in vitro cell invasion and motility. We investigated the possibility that WISP-1 may regulate activation of Rac, a small GTPase important for cytoskeletal reorganizations during motility. In an indirect assay, WISP-1-expressing cells exhibited marked reduction in Rac activation compared with control cells. Blocking antibodies to alpha(v)beta(5) and alpha(1) integrins restored Rac activation in WISP-1 cells, suggesting that the inhibitory effect of WISP-1 on Rac lies downstream of integrins. Constitutively activated Rac mutant (RacG12V) was transfected into WISP-1 cells to restore Rac activation and these WISP-1/RacG12V transfectants were used for further studies. We performed microarray and real-time PCR analyses to identify genes involved in invasion that may be differentially regulated by WISP-1. Here, we showed decreased expression of metalloproteinase-1 (MMP-1) in WISP-1 cells compared with controls but increased expression in WISP-1/RacG12V cells. In an invasion assay across collagen I, an MMP-1 target matrix, WISP-1 cells were significantly less invasive compared with controls, whereas WISP-1/RacG12V cells showed elevated invasion levels. This work illustrates a negatively regulated pathway by WISP-1 involving integrins and Rac in the down-regulation of invasion.
...
PMID:Overexpression of WISP-1 down-regulated motility and invasion of lung cancer cells through inhibition of Rac activation. 1252 80
The dietary consumption of antioxidant-rich fruits and vegetables is inversely correlated with the incidence of various diseases like cardiovascular diseases and
lung cancer
. We have tried to find out how far the S-allyl
cysteine
sulfoxide (SACS) isolated from garlic (Allium Sativum L.) can combat the nicotine-induced peroxidative damage in rats. The effects have been compared with the standard antioxidant vitamin E. Administration of SACS or vitamin E (100 mg/kg) to nicotine (0.6 mg/kg) treated rats for 21 days showed decreased concentrations of thiobarbituric acid reactive substances, hydroperoxides, and conjugated dienes in liver, lungs, and heart as compared with the values found in rats treated with nicotine alone. The activities of catalase and superoxide dismutase increased. The levels of the antioxidants like vitamins A, C, and E in the liver and glutathione in all tissues increased significantly in SACS-treated or vitamin E fed rats. However, the antioxidant status was higher when vitamin E was administered as compared with SACS administered to nicotine-treated rats.
...
PMID:A comparative study of antioxidants S-allyl cysteine sulfoxide and vitamin E on the damages induced by nicotine in rats. 1257 5
The epidemic of
lung cancer
and the increase of other tumours and chronic degenerative diseases associated with tobacco smoking have represented one of the most dramatic catastrophes of the 20th century. The control of this plague is one of the major challenges of preventive medicine for the next decades. The imperative goal is to refrain from smoking. However, chemoprevention by dietary and/or pharmacological agents provides a complementary strategy, which can be targeted not only to current smokers but also to former smokers and passive smokers. This article summarises the results of studies performed in our laboratories during the last 10 years, and provides new data generated in vitro, in experimental animals and in humans. We compared the ability of 63 putative chemopreventive agents to inhibit the bacterial mutagenicity of mainstream cigarette smoke. Modulation by ethanol and the mechanisms involved were also investigated both in vitro and in vivo. Several studies evaluated the effects of dietary chemopreventive agents towards smoke-related intermediate biomarkers in various cells, tissues and organs of rodents. The investigated end-points included metabolic parameters, adducts to haemoglobin, bulky adducts to nuclear DNA, oxidative DNA damage, adducts to mitochondrial DNA, apoptosis, cytogenetic damage in alveolar macrophages, bone marrow and peripheral blood erytrocytes, proliferation markers, and histopathological alterations. The agents tested in vivo included N-acetyl-
L-cysteine
, 1,2-dithiole-3-thione, oltipraz, phenethyl isothiocyanate, 5,6-benzoflavone, and sulindac. We started applying multigene expression analysis to chemoprevention research, and postulated that an optimal agent should not excessively alter per se the physiological background of gene expression but should be able to attenuate the alterations produced by cigarette smoke or other carcinogens. We are working to develop an animal model for the induction of lung tumours following exposure to cigarette smoke. The most encouraging results were so far obtained in models using A/J mice and Swiss albino mice. The same smoke-related biomarkers used in animal studies can conveniently be applied to human chemoprevention studies. We participated in trials evaluating the effects of N-acetyl-
L-cysteine
and oltipraz in smokers from Italy, The Netherlands, and the People's Republic of China. We are trying to develop a pharmacogenomic approach, e.g. based on genetic metabolic polymorphisms, aimed at predicting not only the risk of developing cancer but also the individual responsiveness to chemopreventive agents.
...
PMID:Modulation of cigarette smoke-related end-points in mutagenesis and carcinogenesis. 1262 22
Gene methylation and K-ras mutations were examined in tumor and paired serum DNA of 50 resected non-small-cell
lung cancer
patients. RASSF1A, death associated protein kinase and target of methylation-induced silencing were methylated in 17/50 (34%), 23/50 (45%) and 18/50 (35%) tumors, respectively, and in 17/50 (34%), 20/50 (40%) and 17/50 (34%) sera, respectively. Methylation in tumor and serum were closely correlated (P=0.001), but no correlation was found with survival. Twelve K-ras mutations (
cysteine
) were found in serum and nine mutations were found in tumor (five
cysteine
, one alanine, one aspartic, one arginine, and one valine). K-ras mutations in serum correlated significantly with survival (P=0.01).
...
PMID:Methylation patterns and K-ras mutations in tumor and paired serum of resected non-small-cell lung cancer patients. 1474 28
We carried out an open, non-randomized phase II study including all patients treated with whatever chemotherapy or combined modality regimen for whatever cancer who were in clinical objective response (complete response, CR, or partial response, PR) or stable disease (SD). The treatment consisted of administration of recombinant interleukin-2 (rIL-2) at a dose of 1.8 MIU subcutaneously three times/week (every other day) for the first 2 weeks of every month plus medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA) 500 mg/day every other day plus antioxidant agents alpha-lipoic acid 300 mg/day and N-acetyl
cysteine
1800 mg/day or carbocysteine lysine salt oral solution 2.7 g/day. The treatment was administered for 1 year except when progression of disease occurred. The primary study endpoints were to define clinical outcome, i.e. duration of response, survival (overall survival, OS and progression-free survival, PFS), the toxicity profile, and the evaluation of quality of life (QL). As secondary endpoints, we measured the changes of lymphocyte count, serum levels of proinflammatory cytokines, IL-2, C-reactive protein (CRP) and leptin, blood levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and antioxidant enzymes (glutathione peroxidase, GPx and superoxide dismertase, SOD). From July 1998 to June 2003, 42 patients were enrolled in the study (M/F ratio, 39/3; mean age, 62.5 years). Twenty (47.6%) patients were elderly (> 65 years). The majority of patients had either head and neck cancer or
lung cancer
, 88% had locally advanced or metastatic disease at diagnosis, and 76% had ECOG 0. Forty patients were previously treated with chemotherapy (27 also with radiotherapy), two with IL-2 and interfiron (IFN), one with endocrine therapy and one with only surgery. We obtained an objective response to maintenance treatment of 50%. Median duration of response was 19 months and median PFS was 33 months. Median duration of maintenance treatment was 12 months, median follow-up duration from diagnosis to June 2003 was 40 months, and median follow-up duration from study entry to June 2003 was 17 months. The median overall survival has not been reached. Toxicity was negligible. As for QL, a significant improvement of cognitive functions was observed, whereas all other functioning and symptom scales did not change significantly. As for laboratory parameters, absolute lymphocyte count increased significantly, IL-6, IL-1 beta, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, CRP, and fibrinogen decreased significantly whereas IL-2 and leptin increased significantly after treatment. ROS decreased significantly, whereas GPx increased significantly after treatment. Patients alive at study end showed a significant increase in absolute lymphocyte count, IL-2, leptin, and GPx and a significant decrease of proinflammatory cytokines, CRP, fibrinogen, and ROS, whereas patients who died before study end exhibited only a significant increase in absolute lymphocyte count, IL-2, and GPx and a significant decrease of ROS. Long-term combined maintenance therapy with rIL-2 + MPA + antioxidant agents is feasible, has a very low toxicity, and results in the improvement of clinical outcome, QL, and laboratory parameters.
...
PMID:Subcutaneous interleukin-2 in combination with medroxyprogesterone acetate and antioxidants in advanced cancer responders to previous chemotherapy: phase II study evaluating clinical, quality of life, and laboratory parameters. 1456 91
Vaccination with class I tumor peptides has been performed to induce tumor-reactive CD8(+) T cells in vivo. However, the kinds of immune responses that vaccination might elicit in patients are not fully understood. In this study we tried to elucidate the mechanisms by which vaccination of class I binding tumor peptides into an HLA-A2(+)
lung cancer
patient elicited dramatic amounts of IgG1 and IgG2 specific to a nonamer peptide, ubiquitin-conjugated enzyme variant Kua (UBE2V)(43-51). The UBE2V(43-51) peptide contains
cysteine
at the sixth position. HLA-DR-restricted and UBE2V(43-51) peptide-recognizing CD4(+) T cells were induced from postvaccination, but not from prevaccination, PBMCs of the cancer patient. In addition, a CD4(+) T cell line (UB-2) and its clone (UB-2.3), both of which recognize the UBE2V(43-51) peptide in the context of HLA-DRB1*0403 molecules, were successfully established from postvaccination PBMCs. The peptide vaccination increased the frequency of peptide-specific T cells, especially CD4(+) T cells. In contrast, mass spectrometric analysis revealed that the vaccinated UBE2V(43-51) peptide contained both monomeric and dimeric forms. Both forms, fractionated by reverse phase HPLC, were recognized by UB-2 and UB-2.3 cells. Recognition by these CD4(+) T cells was observed despite the addition of a reduction reagent or the fixation of APC. Overall, these results indicate that vaccination with class I tumor peptides can induce HLA-DR-restricted CD4(+) T cells in vivo and elicit humoral immune responses, and that a
cysteine
-containing peptide can be recognized by CD4(+) T cells not only as a monomer, but also as a dimer.
...
PMID:In vivo evidence that peptide vaccination can induce HLA-DR-restricted CD4+ T cells reactive to a class I tumor peptide. 1476 41
beta-Hydroxyisovalerylshikonin (beta-HIVS), a compound isolated from the traditional oriental medicinal herb Lithospermum radix, is an ATP non-competitive inhibitor of protein-tyrosine kinases, such as v-Src and EGFR, and it induces apoptosis in various lines of human tumor cells. However, the way in which beta-HIVS induces apoptosis remains to be clarified. In this study, we performed cDNA array analysis and found that beta-HIVS suppressed the expression of the gene for tumor necrosis factor receptor-associated protein 1 (TRAP1), which is a member of the heat-shock family of proteins. When human leukemia HL60 cells and human
lung cancer
DMS114 cells were treated with beta-HIVS, the amount of TRAP1 in mitochondria decreased in a time-dependent manner during apoptosis. A similar reduction in the level of TRAP1 was also observed upon exposure of cells to VP16. Treatment of DMS114 cells with TRAP1-specific siRNA sensitized the cells to beta-HIVS-induced apoptosis. Moreover, the reduction in the level of expression of TRAP1 by TRAP1-specific siRNA enhanced the release of cytochrome c from mitochondria when DMS114 cells were treated with either beta-HIVS or VP16. The suppression of the level of TRAP1 by either beta-HIVS or VP16 was blocked by N-acetyl-
cysteine
, indicating the involvement of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in the regulation of the expression of TRAP1. These results suggest that suppression of the expression of TRAP1 in mitochondria might play an important role in the induction of apoptosis caused via formation of ROS.
...
PMID:Involvement of tumor necrosis factor receptor-associated protein 1 (TRAP1) in apoptosis induced by beta-hydroxyisovalerylshikonin. 1529 18
Objective of the paper was to review the latest scientific reference data on chemoprevention possibilities of
lung cancer
.
Lung cancer
is the leading cause of cancer death in Lithuania. The current
lung cancer
therapy includes surgery, radiation and chemotherapy. These interventions have not produced declines in mortality rates. This overview argues strongly for new approach for controlling this disease. Chemoprevention is the use of specific natural or synthetic substances with the objective of reversing, suppressing or preventing carcinogenic progression to invasive cancer. Whether primary, secondary or tertiary prevention has the potential to improve the dismal statistics associated with this cancer? Several randomized clinical or translational chemoprevention trials have been conducted. All have so far produced either neutral (using retinal, retinyl palmitate, N-acetyl
cysteine
or isotretinoin) or harmful (using beta-carotene) primary endpoint results showing that
lung cancer
was not prevented in smokers. Secondary results supporting treatment with isotretinoin in "never" and former smokers and data from prevention trials involving selenium and vitamin E, however, are encouraging and offer a promising direction for future clinical study.
...
PMID:[Chemoprevention possibilities of lung cancer]. 1563 Mar 40
Iron-regulatory protein 2 (IRP2), a posttranscriptional regulator of iron metabolism, undergoes proteasomal degradation in iron-replete cells, while it is stabilized in iron deficiency or hypoxia. IRP2 also responds to nitric oxide (NO), as shown in various cell types exposed to pharmacological NO donors and in gamma interferon/lipopolysaccharide-stimulated macrophages. However, the diverse experimental systems have yielded conflicting results on whether NO activates or inhibits IRP2. We show here that a treatment of mouse B6 fibroblasts or human H1299
lung cancer
cells with the NO-releasing drug S-nitroso-N-acetyl-penicillamine (SNAP) activates IRP2 expression. Moreover, the exposure of H1299 cells to SNAP leads to stabilization of hemagglutinin (HA)-tagged IRP2, with kinetics analogous to those elicited by the iron chelator desferrioxamine. Similar results were obtained with IRP2(Delta)(73), a mutant lacking a conserved, IRP2-specific proline- and
cysteine
-rich domain. Importantly, SNAP fails to stabilize HA-tagged p53, suggesting that under the above experimental conditions, NO does not impair the capacity of the proteasome for protein degradation. Finally, by employing a coculture system of B6 and H1299 cells expressing NO synthase II or IRP2-HA cDNAs, respectively, we demonstrate that NO generated in B6 cells stabilizes IRP2-HA in target H1299 cells by passive diffusion. Thus, biologically synthesized NO promotes IRP2 stabilization without compromising the overall proteasomal activity. These results are consistent with the idea that NO may negatively affect the labile iron pool and thereby trigger responses to iron deficiency.
...
PMID:Nitric oxide inhibits the degradation of IRP2. 1568 86
The death receptors Fas and DR5 are known to be expressed not only in immune cells but also in various tumor cells. The aim of the present study was to determine whether X irradiation enhanced induction of apoptosis in Tp53 wild type and Tp53-mutated tumor cell lines treated with agonists against these death receptors. We showed that 5 Gy of X irradiation significantly up-regulated the expression of death receptors Fas and DR5 on the plasma membrane in gastric cancer cell lines MKN45 and MKN28,
lung cancer
cell line A549, and prostate cancer cell line DU145, and that subsequent treatments with agonistic molecules for these death receptors, Fas antibody CH11 and TRAIL, increased the formation of active fragment p20 of caspase 3 followed by the induction of apoptosis. This death-receptor-mediated apoptosis was independent of Tp53 status since MKN28 and DU145 were Tp53-mutated. The post-irradiation treatment of the cells with N-acetyl-
L-cysteine
(NAC) abolished the up-regulation of the expression of Fas and DR5 on the plasma membrane. NAC also attenuated the increase in the formation of p20 and the induction of apoptosis by agonistic molecules. These results suggested that the increase in the induction of apoptosis by combined treatment with X irradiation and CH11 or TRAIL occurred through a change of the intracellular redox state independent of Tp53 status in human carcinoma cell lines.
...
PMID:Enhanced induction of apoptosis by combined treatment of human carcinoma cells with X rays and death receptor agonists. 1580 65
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