Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0278883 (metastatic melanoma)
6,224 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Twenty-five early-passage (less than or equal to 8) melanoma cell lines, isolated from ten patients with metastatic melanoma, were analyzed by a combination of serological, immunochemical, and molecular methods for mRNA levels, synthesis, and surface expression of MHC class I and class II antigens prior to and following exposure to recombinant human leukocyte (IFN-alpha A), fibroblast (IFN-beta), and immune (IFN-gamma) interferon. All the cell lines expressed variable levels of HLA class I gene products that were up-regulated to different extents upon exposure to specific interferons (IFNs). HLA class II antigens were expressed in 22 of the 25 melanoma lines and IFN-gamma increased the levels of class II mRNA, protein synthesis, and surface expression in all cultures displaying baseline expression. A significant up-regulation of class II antigen expression by IFN-alpha or -beta, associated with higher levels of class II transcripts and enhanced synthesis, was found only in two early-passage human melanoma cell lines. In three lesions from the same patient which did not constitutively express class II antigens, no expression of these glycoproteins could be induced with any of the IFNs. These results indicate that IFN-gamma does not act as a de novo inducer of class II antigen expression in early-passage human melanoma cell lines. This hypothesis is further supported by analysis of class II-associated invariant chain (Ii) expression, which is expressed and induced by IFNs in a manner similar to that of class II antigens. The present study also indicates that early-passage metastatic melanoma lesions from the same patient are heterogeneous in their de novo expression of major histocompatibility antigens and in their modulation by IFNs.
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PMID:Effect of recombinant human leukocyte, fibroblast, and immune interferons on expression of class I and II major histocompatibility complex and invariant chain in early passage human melanoma cells. 170 42

We have evaluated immunohistochemical characteristics of tumors and the infiltrating cells in patients treated with various immunotherapy regimens. Forty-eight patients with advanced malignancies were treated with high dose i.v. recombinant interleukin-2 alone or in combination with cyclophosphamide, recombinant tumor necrosis factor, recombinant interferon-alpha, antimelanoma antibody 9.2.27, adoptively transferred tumor infiltrating lymphocytes, or lymphokine-activated killer cells. Thirty-four patients with metastatic melanoma and two patients with breast carcinoma underwent excision of one or more s.c. metastases either before, during, or after treatment. Twelve patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma underwent pretreatment nephrectomy and these tumors were also studied. Tumor cells were evaluated for class I (HLA-A,B,C) and II (HLA-DR) antigen expression and the mononuclear infiltrate was characterized using an avidin-biotin immunoperoxidase technique. All melanomas were class I antigen positive. Fifty-three % of biopsied metastatic melanoma lesions, 58% of primary renal cell carcinomas, and neither of the two breast carcinomas expressed class II antigen prior to therapy. The pretreatment expression of class II antigens by a tumor was not predictive of a clinical response to recombinant interleukin 2-based therapy. After treatment, however, seven of seven biopsied regressing individual metastases intensely expressed DR antigen on over fifty percent of the cells while only three of ten nonresponding lesions did so. Regressing lesions were permeated with macrophages and both CD4 and CD8 T-cell subsets. There were no CD1 or NKH-1 positive infiltrating cells detected in any lesion. The response to recombinant interleukin 2-based immunotherapy is associated with T-cell as well as macrophage infiltration. DR antigen expression by tumor cells and T-cell infiltrate appear in individual lesions to be associated with this response.
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PMID:Immunohistochemical correlates of response to recombinant interleukin-2-based immunotherapy in humans. 258 50

Recombinant gamma-interferon (rIFN-gamma) induced or augmented the expression of HLA-DR class II antigens on melanocytes isolated from newborn foreskin, from congenital, common acquired, and dysplastic nevi, and from primary and metastatic melanoma. The stimulatory effect of rIFN-gamma on HLA-DR antigen expression was suppressed by the addition of the phorbol ester TPA or its analog PDBu to the culture medium. Whereas rIFN-gamma did not significantly alter the expression of melanoma-associated, non-class II antigens on melanoma cells, there was a marked decrease in the expression of antigens associated with nevus cells. In addition, rIFN-gamma stimulated shedding of antigens. Increased antigen shedding was most apparent for an intracytoplasmic melanoma-associated protein of 80kd, followed by the ganglioside GD2 and by an alkali labile ganglioside. The simultaneous stimulation of class II antigen expression and shedding of melanoma-associated antigens as well as suppression of nevus-associated antigen expression could play an important role in the host immune response to premalignant and malignant melanocytic lesions.
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PMID:Recombinant gamma-interferon induces changes in expression and shedding of antigens associated with normal human melanocytes, nevus cells, and primary and metastatic melanoma cells. 298 6

MHC antigen expression on 20 nevi, and 35 primary and 95 metastatic melanomas was studied by immunoperoxidase techniques using monoclonal antibodies to identify the antigens on frozen tissue sections. DR antigens were not detected on nevi but were detected on 71% of primary melanomas and 56% of metastases, suggesting that this antigen may be a useful marker of malignant transformation of nevi. Expression of class II antigen could not be related to other prognostic histological features of primary melanoma such as tumour thickness, but comparison of the common phenotypes of primary and metastatic melanoma suggested that expression of DR antigens alone in the absence of DP, DQ and ABC antigens may be an indicator of metastatic potential. Class I (HLA-A,B,C) antigens were also expressed infrequently on nevi but were detected on 43% of primary melanomas and 34% of metastases. HLA-A,B,C expression was inversely related to thickness of the primary melanoma. This as well as the lower expression of class I antigens on metastases, may indicate that growth and spread of melanoma may be inhibited by MHC (class I) dependent cytotoxic T cell responses. Expression of class I MHC antigens was unrelated to class II antigens. Expression of DR was more common than DP or DQ, but the latter with one exception, were not expressed in the absence of DR antigens. Significant differences were not found in MHC antigen expression on metastases in lymph nodes compared to those in subcutaneous sites, but further studies are needed to determine whether such differences may exist between metastases in other visceral sites.
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PMID:Immunohistological evaluation of MHC class I and II antigen expression on nevi and melanoma: relation to biology of melanoma. 332 39