Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0376358 (prostate cancer)
59,338 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Aberrations of 13q occur frequently in prostate cancer and this chromosome contains two known tumor suppressor genes, BRCA2 and Rb1. This study analysed 13q LOH, DNA ploidy, BRCA2 mutation and pRb expression in prostate cancers. In total, 13q deletions were found in 18 of 36 tumors but did not correlate with histological grade, stage or DNA ploidy. Two smallest regions of overlapping deletions were defined: one flanked by D13S218 and D13S153; the other flanked by D13S31 and D13S137. BRCA2 was less frequently deleted whereas Rb1 did have a high frequency of deletion. None of the two genes was located in any of these two regions. Furthermore, BRCA2 mutation was not found in the five tumors where deletions had involved the BRCA2 locus. Neither did the Rb1 deletion correlate with absent pRb expression. In addition, tetraploidy was found in 14 out of 25 tumors analysed and correlated with aberrant pRb expression. Our results indicate that 13q deletion is an early non-random event. Tumor suppressor genes other than BRCA2 or Rb1 may be the target of 13q deletions. Aberrant pRb expression may not reflect the two-hit Rb1 inactivation but may be involved in the tetraploidization of prostate cancer cells.
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PMID:Identification of two distinct deleted regions on chromosome 13 in prostate cancer. 948 37

The INK4A gene maps to the 9p21 region and was initially described [M. Serrano et al., Nature (Lond.), 366: 704-707, 1993; A. Kamb et al., Science (Washington DC), 264: 436-440, 1994] as encoding a 148-amino-acid protein termed p16. The p16 protein associates exclusively with Cdk4 and Cdk6, inhibiting their complexation with D-type cyclins and the consequent phosphorylation of pRb. This contributes to cell cycle arrest. The purpose of the present study was to evaluate patterns of p16 expression in a well-characterized cohort of prostatic adenocarcinomas while exploring potential associations between alterations of p16 and clinicopathological variables. Normal and malignant tissues from 88 patients with prostate carcinoma were examined. In situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry assays were used to determine the status of the INK4A exon 1alpha transcripts and levels of p16 protein, respectively. Associations between altered patterns of expression and clinicopathological variables, including pretreatment prostate-specific antigen (PSA) level, Gleason grade, pathological stage, and hormonal status, were evaluated using the Mantel-Haenszel chi2 test. Biochemical (PSA) relapse after surgery was evaluated using the Kaplan-Meier method and the log-rank test. Levels of p16 expression and INK4A exon 1alpha transcripts in normal prostate and benign hyperplastic tissues were undetectable. However, p16 nuclear overexpression was observed in 38 (43%) prostate carcinomas, whereas the remaining 50 (57%) cases showed undetectable p16 levels. Overexpression of p16 protein was found to correlate with increased INK4A exon 1alpha transcripts. Moreover, p16 overexpression was associated with a higher pretreatment PSA level (P = 0.018), the use of neoadjuvant androgen ablation (P = 0.001), and a sooner time to PSA relapse after radical prostatectomy (P = 0.002). These data suggest that p16 overexpression is associated with tumor recurrence and a poor clinical course in patients with prostate cancer.
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PMID:Overexpression of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p16 is associated with tumor recurrence in human prostate cancer. 1035 29

Here we report the characterization of an SV40 large-T antigen-immortalized stromal cell line, WPMY-1, derived from the same prostate as our previously described epithelial cell lines. The WPMY-1 cells were determined to be myofibroblasts on the basis of co-expression of smooth muscle alpha-actin and vimentin. They also show positive staining for androgen receptor, large-T antigen, and positive but heterogeneous staining for p53 and pRb. Their growth is stimulated by the synthetic androgen mibolerone to 145% of control (100%). Platelet-derived growth factor BB, epidermal growth factor and basic fibroblast growth factor, at 10 ng/ml, stimulated growth to 138, 143 and 146% of control, respectively. Transforming growth factor-beta, at 10 ng/ml, inhibited serum-induced growth to 65% of control in the presence of 1% serum, and bFGF-induced growth to 30% of control. A serum-free medium was developed for optimal growth of WPMY-1 cells. They show anchorage-independent growth in soft agar. Studies on paracrine interactions show that myofibroblast-conditioned medium causes a marked inhibition of growth in WPE1-10 cells, while conditioned medium from WPE1-10 prostatic epithelial cells caused only a small increase in the growth of WPMY-1 cells. WPMY-1 cells secrete very low levels of MMP-9 but high levels of MMP-2, markedly higher than the epithelial cells. These epithelial and myofibroblast cell lines, derived from the same prostate, provide novel and useful models for studies on paracrine stromal-epithelial interactions in carcinogenesis, tumor progression, prevention and treatment of prostate cancer and benign prostatic hyperplasia.
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PMID:A human prostatic stromal myofibroblast cell line WPMY-1: a model for stromal-epithelial interactions in prostatic neoplasia. 1038 88

Aberrations of the long arm of chromosome 13 are common in prostate cancer and were initially attributed to alterations of the RB1 gene in band q14 of the chromosome. However, prostate tumors generally yield normal p110RB1 nuclear staining despite loss of heterozygosity (LOH) at the RB1 locus. Our previous analysis of chromosome arm 13q showed allelic loss in 41% of primary prostate tumors. To refine our knowledge of 13q, we extended our previous LOH study by using more polymorphic markers to analyze more prostate tumors. Sixty human prostate carcinomas were screened for allelic loss on 13q by using 13 13q-specific markers. LOH on the long arm of chromosome 13 was found in 39 (65%) of the 60 tumors. Furthermore, 33 of these 39 tumors had evidence of allelic loss involving a region of 13q14 containing RB1. Because immunohistochemical assessment of pRb expression is controversial in prostate tumors, we used a quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) method to determine whether RB1 is the target tumor suppressor gene in this region. RB1 mRNA steady-state levels were determined in 12 prostate tumors preselected on the basis of presumed deletion at the RB1 locus and four prostate tumors without LOH at the RB1 locus; five normal prostate specimens were used as controls. One of the 12 assessable prostate tumors with presumed LOH at RB1 showed a corresponding decreased in RB1 mRNA expression, whereas none of the four tumors without LOH at RB1 locus showed such a decrease. This study, based on another technical approach, confirms that RB1 is not the main target of the observed LOH at 13q14.3, and raises the possibility that another tumor suppressor gene in this region plays a key role in prostate cancer.
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PMID:Loss of heterozygosity at chromosome arm 13q and RB1 status in human prostate cancer. 1041

Evidence has been presented that tumor suppressor genes p53 and Rb play a crucial role in the development of both human prostate and bladder cancer. Patients with either cancer are at an increased risk for developing the other malignancy as compared to the general population. The purpose of the present study was to investigate whether there is abnormal expression of these two suppressor proteins in both the bladder and prostate cancers of the same patient. The expression of p53 and pRb in bladder and prostate cancer specimens obtained from 15 patients having both cancers was studied using immunohistochemical staining with antibodies against these proteins. The expression of p53 and pRb in both bladder and prostate cancers of the same patient was congruent in 8 of 15 cases (53%) for p53 and 9 of 15 cases (60%) for pRb. The significance of these findings warrants further investigations.
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PMID:Expression of p53 and pRb in bladder and prostate cancers of patients having both cancers. 1069 70

Tumor suppressor gene p16 is a cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor and an important negative cell cycle regulator. The inactivation of p16 appears to be a common event in prostate cancer. Replacement of p16 inhibits prostate tumor cell growth, but the mechanism is not known. Human prostate cancer cell lines PPC-1, which has an inactivated p16, and DU145, which has a nonfunctional retinoblastoma Rb protein (pRb), were used to determine the possible mechanism of p16 mediated growth inhibition. PPC-1 cells treated with 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine (5-aza-dC), a demethylating agent, induced p16 expression, inhibited cell growth, and induced senescence. Similarly, PPC-1 cells transduced by an adenoviral vector containing the p16 gene (AdRSVp16) produced a p16 protein that suppressed cellular proliferation and induced senescence. Co-staining of AdRSVp16-transduced PPC-1 cells by p16 immunohistochemistry and by beta-galactosidase substrate X-gal showed that the morphologically enlarged cells expressed both p16 and senescence-associated beta-galactosidase. In contrast, AdRSVp16 did not induce senescence in DU145 cells, but did inhibit its growth. However, when wild-type pRb was introduced in DU145 cells, AdRSVp16 was able to induce senescence. Thus, the mechanism by which p16 suppressed prostate cancer was dependent on the pRb functional status of cells whereby p16 caused pRb+ cells to undergo inhibition by senescence, whereas pRb- cells were also inhibited, but not by senescence.
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PMID:p16/MTS1/INK4A suppresses prostate cancer by both pRb dependent and independent pathways. 1071 71

Osteocalcin (OC) is a major noncollagenous bone protein whose expression is limited almost exclusively to osteotropic tumors and mature calcified tissue (differentiated osteoblasts). The function of OC, a highly conserved gamma-carboxyglutamic acid-containing protein, relies in part on its ability to bind hydroxyapatite and act as a chemoattractant for bone-resorbing cells. Serum osteocalcin levels are used clinically as an index of active bone turnover. Research in our laboratory has revealed that OC is expressed in several solid tumors, including osteosarcoma and ovarian, lung, brain, and prostate cancers. Evidence arising from reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR; detection of OC mRNA), immunohistochemical staining (detection of OC protein), and transient transfection and reporter assay (detection of OC mRNA transcription) reveals that OC expression is up-regulated in numerous solid tumors, with its expression being further elevated in androgen-independent prostate cancers. A recombinant, replication-defective adenovirus, Ad-OC-TK (OC promoter-driven herpes-simplex-virus thymidine kinase) was constructed and, when combined with the appropriate prodrug, either ganciclovir (GCV) or acyclovir (ACV), was found to be effective at destroying prostate-cancer cell lines in vitro and prostate tumor xenografts in vivo in both subcutaneous and bone sites. Additionally, via use of the OC promoter the supporting bone stromal cells are cotargeted when the prostate cancer interdigitates with bone stroma at the metastatic skeletal sites. Thus, maximal tissue-specific cell toxicity is achieved by the interruption of cellular communication between the prostate cancer and the bone stroma. We describe herein the preclinical foundation as well as the design and implementation of an ongoing phase I clinical trial at the University of Virginia that targets androgen-independent metastatic prostate cancer using the Ad-OC-TK vector.
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PMID:Osteocalcin-directed gene therapy for prostate-cancer bone metastasis. 1085 44

The development of prostate cancer through a multistep process of carcinogenesis may have a long latent period of 20-30 years. It is possible that progression to a malignant state could be blocked or reversed during this time. This study focuses on the ability of the synthetic retinoid, N-(4-hydroxyphenyl)-retinamide (4-HPR), to reverse changes associated with malignant transformation and tumor progression, towards a normal phenotype. To examine the responsiveness of cells at different steps of prostate carcinogenesis, three immortalized, but non-tumorigenic (RWPE-1, WPE1-7 and WPE1-10), and one human prostate carcinoma cell line (DU-145), were used. The effects of 4-HPR on cell proliferation, expression of intermediate filament proteins cytokeratin 18 and vimentin, and tumor suppressor proteins p53 and pRb were examined by immunostaining and compared. Results show that 4-HPR caused inhibition of growth in all cell lines in a dose-dependent manner. 4-HPR induced an increase in staining for cytokeratin 18, a marker of differentiation for prostate epithelial cells. While all cell lines showed strong immunostaining for vimentin, treatment with 4-HPR for 8 days caused a marked decrease in staining for vimentin in all cell lines. In an in vitro assay, 4-HPR also caused inhibition of invasion by DU-145 cells in a dose-dependent manner. Furthermore, 4-HPR treatment was effective in significantly decreasing the abnormal nuclear staining for the tumor suppressor proteins p53 and pRb. Because 4-HPR decreased invasion-associated vimentin expression, inhibited invasion, and normalized p53 and pRb immunostaining, we propose that 4-HPR may be an effective agent for secondary and tertiary prevention, i.e. promotion and progression stages, respectively, of prostate cancer.
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PMID:N-(4-hydroxyphenyl)retinamide (4-HPR) decreases neoplastic properties of human prostate cells: an agent for prevention. 1155 92

In the present study, we examined the effects of over-expression of the potential tumor suppressor gene IGFBP-rP1/mac25 on cell-cycle kinetics in prostate cancer cells. The majority of the high expressing IGFBP-rP1/mac25 cell population was located in the G1 and sub-G0/G1 peaks; synchronizing cells in G2/M with nocodazole demonstrated the high expressing IGFBP-rP1/mac25 clones were delayed in the G1 phase of the cell cycle. Unscheduled expression of cyclin A in the sub-G0/G1 peak occurred in the IGFBP-rP1/mac25 clones. Immunoblots showed decreased cyclin D1 and p21 and increased cyclin E, p16, and p27 in the high expressing IGFBP-rP1/mac25 clones compared to the control cells. Cyclin D1/cdk-4,6 and cyclin E/cdk-2 kinase activities decreased but cyclin A/cdk-2 kinase activity increased for the high expressing IGFBP-rP1/mac25 clones compared to control cells. A pRb immunoprecipitation demonstrated more binding of E2F-1 to pRb in the high expressing IGFBP-rP1/mac25 clones than in control cells. Finally, cell senescence, as assessed by senescence-associated beta-galactosidase, demonstrated significantly more staining in the IGFBP-rP1/mac25 cells than control cells. These results suggest that IGFBP-rP1/mac25 alters the cell cycle kinetics of the M12 prostate cell line by delaying the cells in the G1 phase of the cell cycle. In addition, the appearance of cyclin A in the sub-G0/G1 phase of the cell cycle and the increased kinase activity of cyclin A/cdk-2 in the IGFBP-rP1/mac25 clones suggests that cyclin A is associated with the apoptotic cells.
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PMID:Over-expression of insulin-like growth factor binding protein-related protein-1(IGFBP-rP1/mac25) in the M12 prostate cancer cell line alters tumor growth by a delay in G1 and cyclin A associated apoptosis. 1179 Nov 84

CDC6 plays a critical role in regulation of the onset of DNA replication in eukaryotic cells. We have found that Cdc6 expression is down-regulated in prostate cancer as detected by semiquantitative reverse transcriptase-PCR of prostate cell lines and laser-captured microdissected prostate tissues. This result was substantiated by immunohistochemical analysis of paraffin-embedded tissue sections and immunoblot analysis of benign (BPH-1) and adenocarcinomatous prostatic cells. Furthermore, a 100-fold reduction in the transcription efficiency of the Cdc6 promoter-luciferase construct was noted in the metastatic PC3 cells compared with that in BPH-1 cells. Concentration of the E2F and Oct1 transcription factors that have putative binding sites in the Cdc6 promoter was substantially low in PC3 cells compared with BPH cells. Mutagenesis of the two E2F binding sites on the Cdc6 promoter resulted in increased promoter activity in PC3 cells owing to elimination of the negative regulation by pRb.E2F complex but not to the level of that obtained in BPH cells. We conclude that an altered interaction of transcription factors may be responsible for the down-regulation of Cdc6 transcription in PC3 cells. Our study suggests a potential use of the lack of CDC6 expression as an index of prostate cancer development.
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PMID:Down-regulation of Cdc6, a cell cycle regulatory gene, in prostate cancer. 1200 85


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