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

Seven human glioblastoma cell lines established in vitro from primary tumor explants were studied. A marked heterogeneity of glial fibrillary acidic protein was observed whereas vimentin was uniformly expressed by all cell lines. Indirect immunofluorescence and flow cytofluorometry revealed a heterogeneous distribution of surface GE 2 and CG 12 tumor-associated antigens (TAA's): three cell lines were positive (greater than 69% TAA-positive cells) and three cell lines were negative (less than 9% TAA-positive cells). One cell line (Hu 228) was moderately positive at early culture passages and subsequently acquired a TAA-negative phenotype. The difference in the relative amounts of surface TAA's of the three positive cell lines was less than twofold. In spite of the heterogeneous distribution of surface TAA's, all cell lines exhibited considerable amounts of intracellular TAA. Treatment with phorbol esters and density-dependent growth arrest decreased the percentage of the TAA-positive cells and the amount of cell-surface TAA's in one cell line (Hu 195). Interferon-gamma treatment in vitro increased the percentage of CG 12-positive cells by 12% and the amount of cell-surface CG 12 antigens by 38% as compared to untreated cells. The percentage of TAA-positive cells among phorbol ester-treated cells of the Hu 195 cell line was lowest 48 hours after treatment, but returned to normal values within the next 48 hours. Reduction of 3H-thymidine incorporation preceded the decrease in number of TAA-positive cells by about 18 hours. Two-color fluorescence analysis performed in positive cell lines for simultaneous determination of surface TAA's and deoxyribonucleic acid content or reactivity with the proliferation-associated Ki67 intracellular marker indicated that GE 2 and CG 12 antigens are expressed preferentially by actively proliferating glioma cells. The results of this study indicate the existence of two different phenotypes in cultured human glioblastoma cells: surface TAA-positive/cytosol TAA-positive and surface TAA-negative/cytosol TAA-positive cell populations. In addition, modulation of TAA expression was dependent on the cell-cycle differentiation stage, culture conditions, and proliferative state of the cells.
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PMID:Heterogeneity and modulation of tumor-associated antigens in human glioblastoma cell lines. 276 91

DPC4, a candidate tumor suppressor gene, was identified recently at chromosome 18q21.1. Frequent homozygous deletion or mutations of the gene were observed in pancreatic carcinomas. To investigate the role of this gene in head and neck squamous cell carcinomas (HNSCCs), we examined 16 HNSCC cell lines from 11 patients and 20 primary HNSCCs for alterations of the gene by sequencing all 11 exons of the gene. Fourteen cell lines from 10 patients showed monomers at marker D18s46 (l8q21.1). Full-length cDNA was detectable in all cell lines by reverse transcription-PCR. A nonsense mutation was identified at codon 526 (GAA to TAA, glutamine to termination) in two cell lines (UMSCC22A and UMSCC22B) derived from the primary tumor and lymph node metastasis of the same patient. Loss of heterozygosity was found in 7 of 15 (47%) informative primary tumors at D18s46, whereas only one polymorphism was observed in both tumor and normal tissues from the same patient (at codon 525; ATT to GTT, isoleucine to valine). Our data indicate that although DPC4 is altered infrequently in HNSCC, it may play some role in the tumorigenesis of a small subset of HNSCCs.
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PMID:DPC4, a candidate tumor suppressor gene, is altered infrequently in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma. 865 89

Tumor specimens obtained from 136 patients with primary carcinoma of the uterine cervix were analyzed for the presence of human papillomavirus (HPV) sequences and for mutation of the TP53 gene. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) showed that 130 of 136 (96%) tumors contained an oncogenic HPV 16 or 18 sequence. HPV 16 was the predominant type in cervical squamous cell carcinomas and HPV 18 was significantly associated with cervical adenocarcinomas (p < 0.05). The more dedifferentiated the primary tumor, the more frequent the HPV 16 infection and the more differentiated, the more frequent the HPV 18 infection (p < 0.05). Two out of 136 (1.5%) tumors demonstrated single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) band shifts. One (positive for HPV 18) had a nonsense mutation of codon 101 in exon 4 from AAA to TAA transversion. Another (positive for L1 consensus primer set) showed a point mutation involving codon 179 in exon 5 changing CAT to CGT transition. The three specimens negative for HPV did not contain TP53 gene mutations. Our data show that mutation of TP53 is infrequent in primary cervical carcinoma and there is no inverse correlation between HPV infection and TP53 gene mutation. Other mechanisms independent of TP53 inactivation may also be implicated in tumorigenesis of the uterine cervix.
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PMID:Human papillomavirus infection and TP53 gene mutation in primary cervical carcinoma. 920

CTLs specific for tumor antigens play a major role in immunity against cancer. Improved binding affinity of putative TAA peptides could enhance the in vivo immunogenicity of these self-altered self- tumor antigens. We examined here the efficacy of tumor vaccines composed of an altered peptide ligand of MUT-1, designated MUT-D, which exhibited significantly higher class-I allele K(b) binding affinity than its native counterpart MUT-1. The peptide was loaded on antigen presenting cells composed of the C57BL/6-syngeneic fibroblast cell line BLK.CL4. These cells were treated with proteasome inhibitor in order to shut off the degradation of proteins and the subsequent loading of endogenous peptides onto MHC class-I molecules, thus allowing for the pulsing of these cells with the modified peptide MUT-D. Proteasome-inhibited and modified peptide-loaded fibroblasts induced a peptide-specific CTL that significantly delayed primary tumor progression and protected the pre-immunized mice against the development of lung metastasis following the surgical removal of the primary tumor. Genetic modification of the fibroblasts to express the immunostimulatory cytokine IL-2 did not improve the APC function of the modified cells, nor did it result in augmentation of the potency of the vaccine. Our results suggest that the proteasome-inhibited fibroblasts pulsed with modified, high binder tumor-associated antigen peptide are good antigen-presenting cells and represent an effective form of tumor vaccine.
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PMID:Induction of antitumor immunity by proteasome-inhibited syngeneic fibroblasts pulsed with a modified TAA peptide. 1062 83

A 25-year-old female with familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) presented with an abdominal tumor just below the scar due to a colectomy performed 15 months previously. This tumor (tumor A) measured 7 cm in diameter, was diagnosed as a desmoid tumor of the abdominal wall, and was excised. Despite the subsequent administration of sulindac (300 mg daily for 1 year), a desmoid tumor recurred at the same site. Excision was performed again when the tumor was 8 cm in diameter, and examination revealed it to consist of a large tumor (B) and a small tumor (C) that bulged out from tumor B. Germ-line APC analysis showed a C deletion at codon 1460 resulting in a stop codon. Two somatic mutations were observed in tumor A: a TCAA deletion at codon 1068 and a deletion of a codon at bp 1192-2097. In tumor B, a somatic mutation was found at codon 1041 changing CAA to TAA. We could not detect any somatic mutations in tumor C. We conclude that somatic mutation analysis of the APC gene can be used to identify whether a recurrent desmoid tumor in a patient with FAP is a new primary tumor or a recurrence from microscopic remnants of the original tumor.
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PMID:Identification of somatic APC mutations in recurrent desmoid tumors in a patient with familial adenomatous polyposis to determine actual recurrence of the original tumor or de novo occurrence. 1870 58

In order to select a suitable combination of cancer cell lines as an appropriate source of antigens for dendritic cell-based immunotherapy of ovarian cancer, we analyzed the expression level of 21 tumor associated antigens (BIRC5, CA125, CEA, DDX43, EPCAM, FOLR1, Her-2/neu, MAGE-A1, MAGE-A2, MAGE-A3, MAGE-A4, MAGE-A6, MAGE-A10, MAGE-A12, MUC-1, NY-ESO-1, PRAME, p53, TPBG, TRT, WT1) in 4 established ovarian cancer cell lines and in primary tumor cells isolated from the high-grade serous epithelial ovarian cancer tissue. More than 90% of tumor samples expressed very high levels of CA125, FOLR1, EPCAM and MUC-1 and elevated levels of Her-2/neu, similarly to OVCAR-3 cell line. The combination of OV-90 and OVCAR-3 cell lines showed the highest overlap with patients' samples in the TAA expression profile.
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PMID:Expression of tumor antigens on primary ovarian cancer cells compared to established ovarian cancer cell lines. 2732 61