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Query: UMLS:C0278883 (
metastatic melanoma
)
6,224
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Transformation of normal melanocytes to
metastatic melanoma
cells is characterized by loss of dependency on external growth factors required for the viability and proliferation of normal melanocytes. The molecular events that lead to melanoma cell autonomous growth are not well defined, but are likely to include sustained activity of cyclin-dependent kinases (
CDK2
, CDK4 and CDK6) as a result of loss of CDK inhibitors (such as p16INK4a and possibly p27KIP1), and persistent upregulation of several cyclins (cyclin D1, cyclin A and cyclin E), the positive regulators of CDKs. CDKs phosphorylate, and consequently, inactivate the retinoblastoma family of tumor suppressor proteins (pRb, p107 and p130), termed pocket proteins. The inactivation of pocket proteins liberates E2F transcription factors from suppressive complexes ('free' E2F) that, in turn, induces the continuous expression of target genes whose products promote cell cycle progression. In normal melanocytes, external growth factors suppress the activity of all three pocket proteins, allowing E2F activity to accumulate and sustain transcription of target genes required for cell proliferation. In contrast, in melanoma cells from advanced lesions, all three pocket proteins are highly phosphorylated and inactive, even in the absence of environmental mitogens, and free E2F activity is constitutively high. Manipulations of normal mouse melanocytes in vitro, and in vivo in transgenic mouse expressing ectopic genes, further support the notion that growth rate, and release from dependency on external mitogens, positively correlate with inactivation of pocket proteins. The latter has been accomplished by sustained cell surface receptor stimulation, such as constitutive high expression of a growth factor, or by sequestration with dominantly acting viral proteins. Taken together, chronic hyperphosphorlyation/inactivation of pRb, p107 and p130 is probably one of the key events in converting growth-factor dependent normal melanocytes, to autonomously growing melanoma cells. Since all pocket proteins are regulated by CDKs activity, it is likely that agents that inhibit this class of enzymes will be effective in treating melanoma patients.
...
PMID:Melanoma cell autonomous growth: the Rb/E2F pathway. 1072 88
Although remission rates for
metastatic melanoma
are generally very poor, some patients can survive for prolonged periods following metastasis. We used gene expression profiling, mitotic index (MI), and quantification of tumor infiltrating leukocytes (TILs) and CD3+ cells in metastatic lesions to search for a molecular basis for this observation and to develop improved methods for predicting patient survival. We identified a group of 266 genes associated with postrecurrence survival. Genes positively associated with survival were predominantly immune response related (e.g., ICOS, CD3d, ZAP70, TRAT1, TARP, GZMK, LCK, CD2, CXCL13, CCL19, CCR7, VCAM1) while genes negatively associated with survival were cell proliferation related (e.g., PDE4D,
CDK2
, GREF1, NUSAP1, SPC24). Furthermore, any of the 4 parameters (prevalidated gene expression signature, TILs, CD3, and in particular MI) improved the ability of Tumor, Node, Metastasis (TNM) staging to predict postrecurrence survival; MI was the most significant contributor (HR = 2.13, P = 0.0008). An immune response gene expression signature and presence of TILs and CD3+ cells signify immune surveillance as a mechanism for prolonged survival in these patients and indicate improved patient subcategorization beyond current TNM staging.
...
PMID:Immune profile and mitotic index of metastatic melanoma lesions enhance clinical staging in predicting patient survival. 2030 34
A major focus of melanoma research continues to be the search for genes/proteins that may be suitable targets for molecular therapy of primary and
metastatic melanoma
. In line with this effort, the objective of the study presented herein was to determine whether interfering with cell cycle progression and in particular, the expression and function of select cyclin-dependent kinases, would impair the biological features of advanced melanoma. We provide data, which document that unlike nevi and melanoma in situ, primary and metastatic melanomas express high levels of
CDK2
, CDK1, and CDK5. Furthermore, we present the results of in vitro and preclinical in vivo studies, which demonstrate that treatment with a small-molecule cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor that selectively blocks the function of
CDK2
, CDK5, CDK1, and CDK9, leads not only to inhibition of melanoma cell proliferation and apoptosis of melanoma cells, but also impairs the growth of human melanoma xenografts.
...
PMID:Expression analysis and molecular targeting of cyclin-dependent kinases in advanced melanoma. 2146 16