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Query: UMLS:C0376358 (
prostate cancer
)
59,338
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Both amplification and overexpression of c-erb B-2/
neu
have been associated with the progression and possible prognosis of a number of human cancers. In this study, we demonstrated that c-erb B-2/
neu
may also play an important role in human
prostate cancer
. Our conclusion is based on the following observations: (1) A monoclonal antibody raised against a peptide sequence from the C-terminal domain of the human c-erb B-2/
neu
gene product reacted positively with 68.7% (11 of 16) of the human
prostatic cancer
tissue extracts analyzed by western blot procedure. These results were supported by the immunohistochemical staining of the
prostatic cancer
specimens; 80% (12 of 15) showed positive staining, primarily around the plasma membranes of the
prostatic cancer
cells. c-erb B-2/
neu
oncoprotein was not detectable in normal prostate tissues (five examined by immunohistochemical staining and three by western blotting) or in human benign prostatic hyperplasia (two examined by immunohistochemical staining and six by western blotting) and was expressed less abundantly with lower intensity in "normal" human prostate tissues adjacent to cancerous prostate tissue (5 of 12 examined by immunohistochemical staining). We observed no evidence of c-erb B-2/
neu
gene amplification in 10 fresh human
prostatic cancer
specimens examined by Southern blotting and in the cultured human
prostatic cancer
cell lines PC-3, DU-145, and LNCaP. (2) The c-erb B-2/
neu
protein was detected in both androgen-receptor-positive (LNCaP) and -negative (PC-3 and DU-145) human
prostate cancer
cell lines. Positive immunostaining of c-erb B-2/
neu
protein was found to be associated predominantly with the plasma membranes of PC-3 cells, but was also found to be widespread in the cytoplasmic region of the LNCaP cells and in the perinuclear region of the DU-145 cells. (3) Like prostate-specific antigen (PSA) expression, c-erb B-2/
neu
mRNA expression was also positively regulated by androgen in androgen-receptor-positive LNCaP cells in vitro and LNCaP tumors in vivo. When LNCaP tumors were grown in castrated male hosts, levels of c-erb B-2/
neu
and PSA mRNA expression decreased initially, but rebounded at 3 wk to levels comparable to those expressed by tumors maintained in intact adult male hosts.
...
PMID:Expression of c-erb B-2/neu proto-oncogene in human prostatic cancer tissues and cell lines. 135 65
The long-term propagation of primary human
prostate cancer
(
PCA
) in vivo or in vitro has been rare. Most such PCAs are phenotypically different from most PCAs in humans; i.e., they make little prostate specific antigen and respond little, if at all, to androgen deprivation. A serially transplantable, primary human
PCA
, designated CWR22, exhibits a clonal cytogenetic aberration, causes high elevations of prostate specific antigen in the peripheral blood of nude mice, and is unusually responsive to androgen deprivation as compared with other xenografts. Studies of mRNA from CWR22 have demonstrated the expression of prostate specific antigen and the epidermal growth factor receptor family including erbB1/epidermal growth factor receptor, erbB2/
neu
, and erbB3, but not erbB4. A ligand for these receptors, the neu differentiation factor, is also expressed.
...
PMID:CWR22: androgen-dependent xenograft model derived from a primary human prostatic carcinoma. 752 52
In search of biomarkers that predict of human
prostate cancer
progression, we hypothesized that these markers must be expressed in prostatic epithelial cells during multi-step prostate carcinogenesis. Since both genetic and epigenetic factors have been implicated in human
prostate cancer
development, two osseous-metastatic experimental models were developed in our laboratory, one based on gene transfection and the other on stromal-epithelial interaction studies. In the genetic model, PC-3 cells transfected with point-mutated c-erbB-2/
neu
oncogene subsequently acquired the potential to metastasize from the prostate to soft tissues and the skeleton. In the epigenetic model, sublines derived from the parental androgen-dependent LNCaP cell line metastasized from the primary tumor to the lymph node and bone. Cells with known lineage relationships were cloned from both the primary and the metastatic tumors and were characterized extensively using cellular, biochemical, immunohistochemical, and molecular techniques. Relevant stage-specific biomarkers associated with
prostate cancer
progression in these two models were defined and used to evaluate human prostate tissues obtained from the clinic. In this communication, we focused our discussion on the potential importance of c-erbB-2/
neu
oncogene, vimentin, hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor and its receptor, c-met oncogene, tumor angiogenesis and neuroendocrine factors as biomarkers for human
prostate cancer
progression.
...
PMID:Biomarkers associated with prostate cancer progression. 752 53
Previous reports have shown that Her-2/
neu
oncogene expression in human breast cancer and ovarian cancer may be associated with poorer prognosis. We report the expression of Her-2/
neu
on fresh samples of known prostatic adenocarcinoma but not on those of benign prostatic hypertrophy. Using a monoclonal antibody (TA1) directed against human Her-2/
neu
oncogene product and an immunohistochemical staining method, no Her-2/
neu
expression was noted with benign prostatic hypertrophy (15 samples). With prostatic adenocarcinoma samples, a subset (9 of 25) showed overexpression of Her-2/
neu
. Such overexpression is correlated with higher histological grade, higher stage of disease, and high S phase and aneuploidy on flow cytometric analysis. These findings suggest that Her-2/
neu
may be a prognostic marker in
prostate cancer
as well.
...
PMID:Overexpression of Her-2/neu may be an indicator of poor prognosis in prostate cancer. 768 20
c-erb B2/
neu
has been demonstrated to be a transforming oncogene in both rodent and human prostatic epithelial cells. To understand the potential role of
neu
in human
prostatic cancer
progression, we used a transfer procedure to determine whether
neu
amplification/overexpression leads to increased tumor growth and metastasis. We chose an androgen-independent human prostatic epithelial cell line, PC-3, as the target for gene transfer. PC-3 cells were cotransfected with pSVneu-T (a point-mutated rat
neu
oncogene construct) and pSV2neo, and single-cell cloned. Fifty cell clones were isolated and characterized, of which two
neu
-transfected clones (N17 and N35) and a neo control clone (C32) were studied extensively with respect to
neu
gene integration, levels of
neu
mRNA and protein expression, anchorage-independent growth, and tumorigenic and metastatic potential. Results showed that: 1) Clone N35 contained 70 copies of the
neu
oncogene and a high level of
neu
mRNA transcripts. It acquired increased anchorage-independent growth potential in vitro and increased tumorigenicity in vivo. 2) Clone N17 contained 10 copies of the
neu
oncogene and a low level of
neu
mRNA transcripts. It did not acquire additional capability for anchorage-independent growth and tumorigenic potential as compared to the controls. 3) Despite an increased level of
neu
mRNA transcripts present in clone N35, there was no corresponding increase of the steady-state levels of
neu
protein in this particular clone. 4) When administered subcutaneously, none of the cell clones tested, including the control neomycin-resistant clone, acquired metastatic potential. However, clone N35 exhibited marked metastatic potential when administered orthotopically; this cell clone was found to disseminate widely to the lymph nodes, kidney, skeletal muscle, lung, liver, and bone. 5) When
neu
-transfected cell subclones from N35-induced primary and metastatic lymph node, kidney, and bone tumors were analyzed for cytoskeletal, extracellular matrix, and cell adhesion protein expression, the bone metastatic subclone exhibited increased levels of vimentin and collagen IV and decreased levels of cytokeratin and ICAM-1. These results, taken together, suggest that
neu
transfection induces secondary changes, which, rather than
neu
protein per se, are responsible for the acquisition of tumorigenic and metastatic potential of
prostate cancer
cells when an appropriate host microenvironment is present.
...
PMID:Transfected neu oncogene induces human prostate cancer metastasis. 860 95
Overexpression of the
neu
oncoprotein has been described in several tumor models including breast and
prostate cancer
. Overexpression of
neu
has been reported to have prognostic significance in certain tumors but controversy continues regarding the role and frequency of
neu
overexpression in
prostatic cancer
. The objectives of the study were twofold. First, to characterize
neu
expression in
prostate cancer
in comparison to benign prostatic hyperplasia. Second, to determine whether
neu
expression correlates with Gleason grade in
prostate cancer
. Thirty-nine prostate cancers obtained from radical prostatectomy specimens and 10 benign prostatic hyperplasia specimens were included in the study. Specimens were formalin fixed and paraffin-embodied.
neu
expression was studied by immunohistochemical staining using a monoclonal
neu
specific AB-3 antibody. All 39 specimens (100%) of
prostate cancer
showed positive immunostaining of variable degree while 2 (20%) benign prostatic hyperplasia specimens showed positive staining. Thus,
neu
oncogene is overexpressed in localized
prostate cancer
compared to benign prostatic hyperplasia. The degree of
neu
immunostaining did not correlate with Gleason grade and there appeared to be a tendency towards an inverse relationship. The prognostic significance of the varying overexpression is unknown.
...
PMID:Overexpression of her-2/neu in human prostate cancer and benign hyperplasia. 861 23
An androgen-repressed human
prostate cancer
cell line, ARCaP, was established and characterized. This cell line was derived from the ascites fluid of a patient with advanced metastatic disease. In contrast to the behavior of androgen-dependent LNCaP and its androgen-independent C4-2 subline, androgen and estrogen suppress the growth of ARCaP cells in a dose-dependent manner in vivo and in vitro. ARCaP is tumorigenic and highly metastatic. It metastasizes to the lymph node, lung, pancreas, liver, kidney, and bone, and forms ascites fluid in athymic hosts. ARCaP cells express low levels of androgen receptor mRNA and prostate-specific antigen mRNA and protein. Immunohistochemical staining shows that ARCaP cells stain intensely for epidermal growth factor receptor, c-erb B2/
neu
, and c-erb B3. Staining is negative for chromogranin A and positive for bombesin, serotonin, neuron-specific enolase, and the c-met protooncogene (a hepatic growth factor/scatter factor receptor). ARCaP cells also secrete high levels of gelatinase A and B and some stromelysin, which suggests that this cell line may contain markers representing invasive adenocarcinoma with selective neuronendocrine phenotypes. Along with its repression of growth, androgen is also found to repress the expression of prostate-specific antigen in ARCaP cells as detected by a prostate-specific antigen promoter-beta-galactosidase reporter assay. Our results suggest that the androgen-repressed state may be central to
prostate cancer
progression and that advanced
prostate cancer
can progress from an androgen-independent to an androgen-repressed state.
...
PMID:Androgen-repressed phenotype in human prostate cancer. 898 79
Overexpression of p185erbB2/
neu
has been detected in many adenocarcinomas, including
prostatic cancer
. In this study, a nontumorigenic cell line isolated from the rat prostatic epithelium (NbE) transfected with the activated oncogene p185neu-T was used to investigate the role of this oncogene in tumor progression. When clones overexpressing p185neu-T were injected orthotopically (1.5 to 2 x 10(6) cells) into the dorsal-lateral prostates of nude mice, prostatic tumors were detected in all mice injected and metastasis to the skeletal muscle in the rib area in 60-80% of the mice injected. Tumor and metastasis origin was confirmed by reselection with G418 and reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction. Control cell lines produced no prostatic tumors or metastases. Incubation at low density (12500 cells/2 cm2) in serum-free medium revealed that clones overexpressing p185neu-T had a higher rate of [3H]thymidine incorporation than did control clones on 3, 5, and 7 d after plating (P < or = 0.0001) and constitutively overexpressed the 2.6-kb ornithine decarboxylase transcript. Additionally, clones overexpressing p185neu-T demonstrated an increased expression of epidermal growth factor receptor and p180erbB4, as judged by RNA blot analysis. Together these data support the hypothesis that overexpression of p185neu-T fosters tumor progression by several pathways, including induction of the metastatic cascade, increased proliferative capabilities, and increased expression of other members of the erbB2 gene family.
...
PMID:Metastasis induced by overexpression of p185neu-T after orthotopic injection into a prostatic epithelial cell line (NbE). 925 83
The class I IgG receptor (Fc gamma RI or CD64 receptor), which is present on key cytotoxic effector cells, has been shown to initiate the destruction of tumor cells in vitro and has been hypothesized to play a role in the destruction of antibody-coated cells such as platelets in idiopathic thrombocytopenia purpura (ITP). This overview summarizes the clinical experience with CD64-directed immunotherapy in cancer patients with the bispecific antibodies MDX-447 [humanized Fab anti-CD64 x humanized Fab anti-(epidermal growth factor receptor, EGFR)] and MDX-H210 (humanized Fab anti-DC64 x Fab anti-HER2/
neu
), and with the anti-CD64 monoclonal antibody (mAB) MDX-33 (H22) in the modulation of monocyte CD64 in vivo. In an ongoing phase I/II open-label trial with progressive dose escalation (1-15 mg/m2), patients with treatment refractory EGFR-positive cancers (renal cell carcinoma (RCC), head and neck, bladder, ovarian,
prostate cancer
and skin cancer) are treated weekly with intravenous MDX-447, with and without granulocyte-colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF). MDX-447 has been found to be immunologically active at all doses, binding to circulating monocytes and neutrophils (when given with G-CSF), causing monocytopenia and stimulating increases in circulating plasma cytokines. MDX-447 is well tolerated, the primary toxicities being fever, chills, blood pressure lability, and pain/ myalgias. Of 36 patients evaluable for response, 9 have experienced stable disease of 3-6 month's duration. The optimal dose and the maximal tolerated dose (MTD) have yet to be defined; dose escalation continues to define better the dose, toxicity, and the potential therapeutic role of this bispecific antibody. Three MDX-H210 phase II trials are currently in progress, all using the intravenous dose of 15 mg/m2 given with granulocyte/macrophage (GM-CSF). These consist of one trial each in the treatment of RCC patients, patients with
prostate cancer
, and colorectal cancer patients, all of whom have failed standard therapy. At the time of writing, 11 patients have been treated in these phase II trials. Four patients have demonstrated antitumor effects. Patients demonstrating responses include 2 with RCC and 2 with
prostate cancer
. One RCC patient has had a 54% reduction in size of a hepatic metastatic lesion and the other has had a 49% decrease in the size of a lung metastasis with simultaneous clearing of other non-measurable lung lesions. Regarding the two patients with
prostate cancer
, one has had a 90% reduction in serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA; 118-11 ng/ml), which has persisted for several months; the other patient with prostate has had a 70% reduction of serum PSA (872 ng/ml to 208 ng/ml) within the first month of treatment. Both patients have also demonstrated symptomatic improvement. In a completed phase I and in ongoing phase I/II clinical trials, patients with treatment-refractory HER2/
neu
positive cancers (breast, ovarian, colorectal, prostate) have been treated with MDX-H210, which has been given alone and in conjunction with G-CSF, GM-CSF, and interferon gamma (IFN gamma). These trials have been open-label, progressive dose-escalation (0.35-135 mg/m2) studies in which single, and more often, multiple weekly doses have been administered. MDX-H210 has been well tolerated, with untoward effects being primarily mild-to-moderate flu-like symptoms. The MTD has not yet been defined. MDX-H210 is immunologically active, binding to circulating monocytes, causing monocytopenia, as well as stimulating increases in plasma cytokine levels. Furthermore, some patients have evidence of active antitumor immunity following treatment with MDX-210. Antitumor effects have been seen in response to MDX-H210 administration; these include 1 partial, 2 minor, and 1 mixed tumor response; 15 protocol-defined stable disease responses have occurred. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)
...
PMID:Clinical experience with CD64-directed immunotherapy. An overview. 943 76
Defining the expression of tumor-associated antigens on primary and metastatic
prostate cancer
is the crucial first step in selecting appropriate targets for immune attack. In this study, the distribution of the tumor-associated antigens GM2, Tn, sTn, Thompson-Friedenreich antigen (TF), Globo H, Le(y), MUC1, MUC2, MUC3, MUC4, MUC5AC, MUC5B, MUC7, carcinoembryonic antigen, beta chain of human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG beta), HER2/
neu
, PSMA, and KSA on primary and metastatic
prostate cancer
and 16 types of normal tissues was compared by immunohistochemistry, using a panel of well-characterized monoclonal antibodies. Our results show that GM2, KSA, and MUC2 were strongly expressed on 8 or 9 of 9 metastatic
prostate cancer
biopsy specimens and, with PSMA, hCG beta, TF, Tn, and sTn, on 8 or more of 11 primary
prostate cancer
specimens. Tn, MUC1, and PSMA were expressed on 4-6 of 9 metastatic specimens. The remaining antigens were expressed on no more than three of nine metastatic specimens. Normal tissues were also tested with all antibodies. With regard to the eight antigens most widely expressed on prostate cancers, PSMA was not expressed significantly on any of the normal tissues except prostate epithelium. Tn, sTn, hCG beta, and MUC2 were detected on up to 3 of 10 types of normal epithelia. GM2, TF, MUC1, and KSA were more broadly distributed on normal epithelia, all primarily at the secretory borders. STn, KSA, and hCG beta were also detected in the testis, and GM2 was expressed on gray matter of brain. From the 30 antigens that we have screened, this study provides the basis for selecting GM2, TF, Tn, sTn, hCG beta, MUC1, MUC2, KSA, and PSMA as target antigens for specific immunotherapy of
prostate cancer
.
...
PMID:Expression of potential target antigens for immunotherapy on primary and metastatic prostate cancers. 951 14
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