Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0677930 (primary tumor)
20,210 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Four potent, synthetic inhibitors of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) were assessed as inhibitors of tumor growth and spontaneous metastasis to the lung. Mat Ly Lu rat prostate tumor, LOX human melanoma and M27 murine Lewis lung tumor were implanted subcutaneously (s.c.) in mice and allowed to grow for 3-12 days. The lungs of the tumor-bearing mice were then removed and implanted s.c. into untreated mice, and the outgrowth of secondary tumors from the implanted lungs measured. The incidence and rate of outgrowth of secondary tumors increased with the length of primary tumor growth, validating these measurements as indices of spontaneous metastasis to the lung. Compounds were tested by s.c. implantation of minipumps which delivered compound throughout the period of primary tumor growth and spontaneous metastasis to the lung at steady-state drug concentrations orders of magnitude greater than the concentrations needed to either inhibit collagenase, gelatinase or stromelysin in vitro. Inhibitor treatment slowed the growth of primary s.c. Mat Ly Lu and LOX tumors by 40-60% but had no significant effect on the growth of primary M27 tumors. Surprisingly, inhibitor treatment had no significant effect on the ability of the lung to generate secondary tumors when reimplanted s.c. in untreated mice. Because of the possible importance of cathepsins B, H and L in tumor growth and metastasis, the irreversible inhibitor E-64 was also infused by s.c. minipump. E-64 had no effect on the growth or spontaneous metastasis of Mat Ly Lu or M27 tumors.
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PMID:Effect of matrix metalloproteinase inhibitors on tumor growth and spontaneous metastasis. 860 25

Tumor progression to the stage of metastasis may result in part from the selection of certain primary tumor cell clones which are phenotypically competent for survival, invasion, and growth at secondary sites. Selection for traits such as loss of growth inhibitory responses, acquisition of increased adhesiveness, increased local immunosuppression, and enhanced motility and collagenase activities likely contribute to cancer progression and may be regulated through the action of growth factors. The transforming growth factors (TGF-beta) family of growth factors has often been associated with these traits and tumor progression; therefore, elimination or subversion of TGF-beta-responsive pathways should be considered as a mechanistic framework for metastatic events. In this report, we have compared growth and extracellular matrix responses to TGF-beta in six metastatic and six primary tumor-derived cell lines in a mouse model of prostate cancer. We have found that tumor cell lines derived from focal pulmonary metastasis secreted relatively greater quantities of total TGF-betas, lost most or all TGF-beta1 growth inhibition, but responded to TGF-beta1 through induction of the type IV collagenase matrix metalloproteinase-9, whereas cell lines derived from tumors which proliferated at the primary site retained the growth inhibition but lacked collagenase activity. Synthesis of another extracellular matrix protein, plasminogen activator inhibitor 1, was stimulated by TGF-beta1 in both primary as well as metastatic tumors. These results suggest that acquisition of differential responses to the TGF-beta family could result in phenotypic traits which facilitate tumor metastasis from certain primary site clones.
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PMID:Transforming growth factor beta1 stimulates contrasting responses in metastatic versus primary mouse prostate cancer-derived cell lines in vitro. 876 34

A new cell line MGM-1 was established from a primary tumor of the left temporal lobe with histological diagnosis of glioblastoma multiforme, removed from a 64-year-old Japanese male. The patient died of recurrence and unusual extracranial metastases of the tumor 7 months after the surgery. The cultured MGM-1 cells are spindle or polygonal in shape. After serial passages, glial fibrillary acidic protein became negative immunocytochemically in vitro. The modal chromosome number was 61-64. Doubling time and soft agar colony forming efficiency were 42.9h and 0.4%, respectively (at 25th passage). MGM-1 is a highly motile cell line in vitro and its serum-free conditioned medium is chemotactic and chemokinetic for other glioma cells. Secretion of gelatinases (probably MMP-2/72-kDa type i.v. collagenase) and MMP-9/92-kDa type i.v. collagenase) and urokinase-type plasminogen activator were also investigated. MGM-1 would therefore be useful for studying the mechanisms regulating glioma-cell motility and invasion. The MGM-1 cell line has been propagated continuously by serial passages (more than 100 passages) during the past 4 years.
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PMID:Establishment and characterization of a new human glioblastoma cell line (MGM-1) with highly motile phenotype. 923 71

The antiangiogenic activity and antitumor efficacy of a newly developed matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) inhibitor were examined. N-biphenyl sulfonyl-phenylalanine hydroxiamic acid (BPHA) potently inhibits MMP-2, -9, and -14, but not MMP-1, -3, or -7. In contrast, (-)BPHA, an enantiomer of BPHA, was inactive against all MMPs tested. Daily oral administration of 200 mg/kg BPHA, but not (-)BPHA in mice resulted in potent inhibition of tumor-induced angiogenesis, primary tumor growth, and liver metastasis. The growth inhibition activity of BPHA was 48% and 45% in a B16-BL6 melanoma and F2 hemangio-endothelioma model, respectively. BPHA also showed 42% inhibition of the liver metastasis of C-1H human colon carcinoma cells. These results indicate that selective MMP inhibition is correlated with antiangiogenic and antitumor efficacy and that the selective MMP inhibitor BPHA has therapeutic potential.
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PMID:Correlation of antiangiogenic and antitumor efficacy of N-biphenyl sulfonyl-phenylalanine hydroxiamic acid (BPHA), an orally-active, selective matrix metalloproteinase inhibitor. 1009 53

We examined the antiangiogenic and antitumor efficacy of a newly-developed matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) inhibitor, BPHA (N-biphenyl sulfonyl-phenylalanine hydroxiamic acid). BPHA potently inhibits MMP-2, 9 and 14 but not MMP-1, 3 or 7. In contrast, (-)BPHA, an enantiomer of BPHA, was inactive against all MMP tested. Daily oral administration of BPHA in mice resulted in potent inhibition of tumor-induced angiogenesis, primary tumor growth and liver metastasis, whereas (-)BPHA did not. These results demonstrate that selective MMP inhibition is correlated with antiangiogenic and antitumor efficacy and that the selective MMP inhibitor BPHA has therapeutic potential without hematotoxic effect or loss of body weight.
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PMID:[Antiangiogenic and antitumor effect of BPHA, an orally-active matrix metalloproteinase inhibitor, in in vivo murine and human tumor model]. 1055 17

Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) are essential in several stages of the metastatic process, and in normal bone development and remodeling. We explored whether the interaction between tumor cells and bone leads to changes in MMP and tissue inhibitor of MMP (TIMP) expression thus affecting osteolysis in metastatic bone disease. Using immunohistochemistry we have investigated the MMP/TIMP expression in tumor cells, fibroblasts, osteoblasts and osteoclasts. Thirty one specimens of bone metastasis from breast carcinoma were stained for MMP-1, -2, -9, MT1-MMP and TIMP-1, and -2 and compared with staining in normal breast tissue, primary breast carcinoma and normal bone. Specimens came from patients in three clinical scenarios: from open biopsies without or with pathological fracture, or bone marrow biopsies containing tumor from patients with pancytopenia but without clinical evidence of osteolysis. By bone histomorphometry the latter group showed a heavy tumor load not different from the open biopsy groups but displayed little active bone resorption and low numbers of osteoclasts. Cell type-specific MMP/TIMP expression was observed and the staining patterns were comparable between the three groups of patients. Though no major differences in the MMP/TIMP staining of tumor cells and fibroblasts were observed between bone metastasis and primary tumor, we showed that tumor cells do express MMPs capable of degrading bone matrix collagen. The number and activity of osteoclasts and osteoblasts was increased dramatically in bone metastases, their MMP/TIMP profiles, however, were not different from normal bone, suggesting that the mechanism of bone degradation by osteoclasts is not different from normal bone remodelling.
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PMID:Immunolocalization of matrix metalloproteinases and their inhibitors in clinical specimens of bone metastasis from breast carcinoma. 1159 3

Tumor metastasis is a complex process involving several distinct steps such as escape from a primary tumor, dissemination through the circulation, lodgment in small vessels at distinct sites, penetration of the vessel wall and growth in the new site as a secondary tumor. To compare the expression profile of metastasis-associated genes between circulating cancer cells in peripheral blood and cells in the primary lesion of oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC), we employed a combination analysis of laser captured microdissection (LCM) and immunomagnetic separation (IMS) techniques for capturing primary and circulating cancer cells, respectively. Total RNAs were then extracted from each cell and mRNA expression of CK19, matrix metalloproteinases (MMP-1, -2, -7, -9) and CD44, including its variant forms (CD44s, v6, v9), were analyzed by RT-PCR. Although CD44 including its variant forms were expressed in 20%(CD44s) to 30%(v6, v9) of the primary lesion, 40%(v6) to 90%(CD44s) of blood samples were CD44-positive. Furthermore, MMPs were expressed in 30%(MMP-1, -2) to 60%(MMP-7) of primary samples, whereas most blood samples were negative for the expression of MMPs. These results suggested that circulating cancer cells might express different characteristics after being released from the primary lesion.
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PMID:Comparison of the expression profile of metastasis-associated genes between primary and circulating cancer cells in oral squamous cell carcinoma. 1282 Apr 5

Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) play a crucial role in tumor cell invasion and metastasis. Expression of MMP-1 has been reported as a prognostic predictor of recurrence in human chondrosarcoma, and studies using human chondrosarcoma cell lines indicate that MMP-1 expression levels correlate with in vitro invasiveness. These observations suggest that MMP-1 activity has a central role in cell egress from the primary tumor at an early step in the metastatic cascade. In this study, siRNA was used to investigate whether knock down of the MMP-1 gene could be used to inhibit invasiveness in a human chondrosarcoma cell line. The inhibitory effect of siRNA on endogenous MMP-1 gene expression and protein synthesis was demonstrated via RT-PCR, Northern blotting, Western blotting, collagenase activity assay, and an in vitro cell migration assay. The siRNA inhibited MMP-1 expression specifically, since it did not affect the expression of endogenous glyceraldehyde phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) nor other collagenases. Most importantly, the siRNA mediated reduction in MMP-1 expression correlated with a decreased ability of chondrosarcoma cells to invade a Type I collagen matrix. The reduction of invasive behavior demonstrated by human chondrosarcoma cells transfected with MMP-1 siRNA and the specificity of this inhibition supports the hypothesis that this metalloproteinase molecule is involved in initiation of chondrosarcoma metastasis.
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PMID:siRNA mediated inhibition of MMP-1 reduces invasive potential of a human chondrosarcoma cell line. 1549 69

Thrombospondin-1 (TSP-1) is a multidomain extracellular macromolecule that was first identified as natural modulator of angiogenesis and tumor growth. In the present study, we found that epidermal growth factor (EGF) up-regulated TSP-1 expression in FTC-133 (primary tumor) but not in FTC-238 (lung metastasis) thyroid cancer cells. Both EGF and TSP-1 induced expression of tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase-1 (TIMP-1) in a mitogen-activated protein kinase/extracellular signal-regulated kinase (MAPK/ERK) and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3-kinase)-dependent manner. In FTC-133 cells, EGF induced proliferation in a TSP-1- and TIMP-1-dependent manner. In addition, we determined that re-expression of the tumor suppressor protein PTEN induced cell death, an effect that correlated with a block of Akt kinase phosphorylation. EGF-induced TSP-1 and TIMP-1 promoter activity and protein expression were inhibited in FTC-133 cells stably expressing wtPTEN but not in cells expressing mutant PTEN. Furthermore, we found that wtPTEN inhibited EGF--but not TSP-1--stimulated FTC-133 cell migration and also inhibited invasion induced by EGF and by TSP-1. Finally, an antibody against TSP-1 reversed EGF-stimulated FTC-133 cell invasion as well as the constitutive invasive potential of FTC-238 cells. Overall, our results suggest that PTEN can function as an important modulator of extracellular matrix proteins in thyroid cancer. Therefore, analyzing differential regulation of TSP-1 by growth factors such as EGF can be helpful in understanding thyroid cancer development.
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PMID:The tumor suppressor PTEN inhibits EGF-induced TSP-1 and TIMP-1 expression in FTC-133 thyroid carcinoma cells. 1570 85

A key feature in the malignant behavior of glioblastoma is the tendency to invade host brain tissue surrounding the primary tumor site. Several members of the matrix metalloproteinase family are thought to contribute to this invasive capacity. A single nucleotide polymorphism has been described in the matrix metalloproteinase-1 (MMP-1) promoter that consists of either the presence or absence of a guanine nucleotide at position -1607. The presence of the guanine base creates a functional binding site for members of the ETS family of transcription factors and has been shown to increase MMP-1 transcription. The purpose of our study was to characterize this polymorphism in human glioblastoma. Promoter genotyping was performed on brain tumor tissue obtained from 81 patients and compared to 57 healthy individuals. The 2G/2G genotype is more prevalent in glioblastoma tissue compared to healthy individuals (p = 0.01). mRNA and protein expression were measured in a subset of brain tumor and normal brain tissue samples. MMP-1 protein levels are significantly higher in glioblastoma tissue compared to normal brain (p = 0.001). Electromobility shift assays and promoter assays were performed to assess binding capability and transcriptional activity, respectively. Proteins present in glioma cell lines can specifically bind the 2G promoter probe. MMP-1 transcription is significantly higher in cells transfected with the 2G promoter when compared to cells transfected with the 1G promoter (p<0.02). This polymorphism may provide a mechanism for increased expression of MMP-1 in malignant gliomas via elevation of MMP-1 mRNA transcription and may underlie the invasive phenotype.
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PMID:Association of a single nucleotide polymorphism in the matrix metalloproteinase-1 promoter with glioblastoma. 1595 63


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