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)

A sensitive fluorometric method for the evaluation of erythrocyte levels of zinc-protoporphyrin (ZPP) and free-protoporphyrin (FPP) in diluted whole blood was used to survey patients with carcinomas in different stages o metastatic dissemination. ZPP levels in patients with primary tumor or with no evidence of metastatic disease were not different from those of normal donors. However, significantly higher ZPP levels were found in patients with carcinomas in correlation with evidence of metastatic disease, irrespective of the histological origin of the tumor. FPP levels were elevated in all stages of malignancy but were found 4 times higher than the normal levels in patients with metastatic malignancies. Similar increases in ZPP and FPP were detected in patients with inflammatory processes, suggesting a common effector of erythropoiesis in these pathological conditions and in metastatic diseases. Simultaneous detection of higher than normal ZPP and FPP levels in the blood of cancer patients may serve as an additional marker of metastatic dissemination in patients without clinical evidence of infectious or autoimmune diseases.
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PMID:Elevation of erythrocyte zinc- and free protoporphyrins with metastatic spread in cancer patients. 359 76

Unusual filamentous inclusion bodies in the cytoplasm of metastatic tumor cells are described. Their presence (intermingled with zymogen granules) seems rather restricted to cells of primary or metastatic acinar cell carcinoma of the pancreas, acinic carcinoma of salivary gland (parotid gland) and Paneth cells (neoplastic or in zinc deficiency state). For the time being, the real nature of these inclusions (deranged zymogen granules?) is unclear. This case also emphasizes the value of electron microscopy in solving the problem of the occult primary tumor and avoiding the misdiagnosis of an endocrine tumor (e.g. islet cell tumor or carcinoid), or a duct cell tumor with eosinophilic granular cytoplasm or in recognizing the foci of acinar cells in a mixed variant of carcinoma of the pancreas.
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PMID:Unusual intracytoplasmic inclusions in metastatic carcinoma. Discussion of their possible significance. 747 75

Matrix metalloproteinases are a family of zinc-containing proteases that degrade extracellular matrix and basement membranes. These enzymes are thought to play a role in processes essential for tumor growth, invasion, and metastasis. Here we report pharmacokinetic and anti-tumor efficacy studies with a series of structurally related inhibitors of these enzymes that were synthesized at Agouron Pharmaceuticals using protein structure based drug design. The compounds studied were AG3287, AG3293, AG3294, AG3296, AG3319, and AG3340. Rat oral bioavailability ranged from 15 to 68%. Despite similar profiles of enzyme inhibition across the family of enzymes, and similar pharmacokinetics following i.p. administration to mice, efficacy against the Lewis lung carcinoma murine model varied from tumor growth enhancement, to significant reductions in the size of primary tumors and the number of lung metastases. AG3340 was the most efficacious compound against the Lewis lung carcinoma model, resulting in the complete cessation of primary tumor growth throughout the experiment in 4/6 mice treated with daily i.p. injections at a dose of 50 mg/kg. This treatment inhibited the formation of lung metastases greater than 5 mm in diameter by 90%.
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PMID:Rodent pharmacokinetic and anti-tumor efficacy studies with a series of synthetic inhibitors of matrix metalloproteinases. 924 52

TP53 has been implicated in regulation of the cell cycle, DNA repair, and apoptosis. We studied, in primary breast tumors through direct cDNA sequencing of exons 2-11, whether TP53 gene mutations can predict response in patients with advanced disease to either first-line tamoxifen therapy (202 patients, of whom 55% responded) or up-front (poly)chemotherapy (41 patients, of whom 46% responded). TP53 mutations were detected in 90 of 243 (37%) tumors, and one-fourth of these mutations resulted in a premature termination of the protein. The mutations were observed in 32% (65 of 202) of the primary tumors of tamoxifen-treated patients and in 61% (25 of 41) of the primary tumors of the chemotherapy patients. TP53 mutation was significantly associated with a poor response to tamoxifen [31% versus 66%; odds ratio (OR), 0.22; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.12-0.42; P < 0.0001]. Patients with TP53 gene mutations in codons that directly contact DNA or with mutations in the zinc-binding domain loop L3 showed the lowest response to tamoxifen (18% and 15% response rates, respectively). TP53 mutations were related, although not significantly, to a poor response to up-front chemotherapy (36% versus 63%; OR, 0.34; 95% CI, 0.09-1.24). In multivariate analysis for response including the classical parameters age and menopausal status, disease-free interval, dominant site of relapse, and levels of estrogen receptor and progesterone receptor, TP53 mutation was a significant predictor of poor response in the tamoxifen-treated group (OR, 0.29; 95% CI, 0.13-0.63; P = 0.0014). TP53-mutated and estrogen receptor-negative (<10 fmol/mg protein) tumors appeared to be the most resistant phenotype. Interestingly, the response of patients with TP53 mutations to chemotherapy after tamoxifen was not worse than that of patients without these mutations (50% versus 42%; OR, 1.35, nonsignificant). The median progression-free survival after systemic treatment was shorter for patients with a TP53 mutation than for patients with wild-type TP53 (6.6 and 0.6 months less for tamoxifen and up-front chemotherapy, respectively). In conclusion, TP53 gene mutation of the primary tumor is helpful in predicting the response of patients with metastatic breast disease to tamoxifen therapy. The type of mutation and its biological function should be considered in the analyses of the predictive value of TP53.
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PMID:Complete sequencing of TP53 predicts poor response to systemic therapy of advanced breast cancer. 1078 79

The Snail zinc-finger transcription factors trigger epithelial-mesenchymal transitions (EMTs), endowing epithelial cells with migratory and invasive properties during both embryonic development and tumor progression. During EMT, Snail provokes the loss of epithelial markers, as well as changes in cell shape and the expression of mesenchymal markers. Here, we show that in addition to inducing dramatic phenotypic alterations, Snail attenuates the cell cycle and confers resistance to cell death induced by the withdrawal of survival factors and by pro-apoptotic signals. Hence, Snail favors changes in cell shape versus cell division, indicating that with respect to oncogenesis, although a deregulation/increase in proliferation is crucial for tumor formation and growth, this may not be so for tumor malignization. Finally, the resistance to cell death conferred by Snail provides a selective advantage to embryonic cells to migrate and colonize distant territories, and to malignant cells to separate from the primary tumor, invade, and form metastasis.
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PMID:Snail blocks the cell cycle and confers resistance to cell death. 1515 80

Insulin is a hormone crucial to metabolism and an essential growth factor for normal and neoplastic tissues. We have now determined insulin in extracts of 23 primary breast cancer specimens and of non-neoplastic breast tissues by a chemiluminescent immunoassay. Remarkably, insulin was measured only in grade 3 tumors, whereas grade 2 carcinomas and the normal mammary gland were each insulin-negative. We also performed immunohistochemistry for insulin-degrading enzyme (IDE), a cytoplasmic zinc metalloprotease belonging to the inverzincin family and participating in insulin cleavage. IDE was detected in most insulin-positive grade 3 carcinomas, indicating that it might be dysfunctional in these anaplastic tumors. IDE was equally present in the insulin-negative grade 2 carcinomas. Moreover, five grade 3 carcinomas and one grade 2 carcinoma displayed a loss of heterozygosity in the 10q chromosomal region harboring the IDE gene, but, despite these alterations, IDE was detected immunohistochemically, indicating a retention of the second allele. Compared to the expression of IDE in 92% of the tumors examined, only 57% of 21 normal breast specimens stained positively for IDE. In contrast to this increase in IDE-positive epithelial cells in breast cancer vs. normal breast, additional immunohistochemical analysis of 17 node-positive breast carcinomas and corresponding tumor-bearing lymph nodes showed that IDE expression decreases from primary tumor to lymph node metastasis. Altogether, this study represents the first demonstration of IDE in normal and neoplastic human mammary tissues. Our present report should also provide an experimental starting point towards exploring a potential role of IDE in the control of tumor progression.
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PMID:Immunohistochemical demonstration of the zinc metalloprotease insulin-degrading enzyme in normal and malignant human breast: correlation with tissue insulin levels. 1714 14

Zinc is an essential trace element and catalytic/structural component used by many metalloenzymes and transcription factors. Recent studies indicate a possible correlation of zinc levels with the cancer risk; however, the exact role of zinc and zinc transporters in cancer progression is unknown. We have observed that a zinc transporter, ZIP4 (SLC39A4), was substantially overexpressed in 16 of 17 (94%) clinical pancreatic adenocarcinoma specimens compared with the surrounding normal tissues, and ZIP4 mRNA expression was significantly higher in human pancreatic cancer cells than human pancreatic ductal epithelium (HPDE) cells. This indicates that aberrant ZIP4 up-regulation may contribute to the pancreatic cancer pathogenesis and progression. We studied the effects of ZIP4 overexpression in pancreatic cancer cell proliferation in vitro and pancreatic cancer progression in vivo. We found that forced expression of ZIP4 increased intracellular zinc levels, increased cell proliferation by 2-fold in vitro, and significantly increased tumor volume by 13-fold in the nude mice model with s.c. xenograft compared with the control cells. In the orthotopic nude mice model, overexpression of ZIP4 not only increased the primary tumor weight (7.2-fold), it also increased the peritoneal dissemination and ascites incidence. Moreover, increased cell proliferation and higher zinc content were also observed in the tumor tissues that overexpressed ZIP4. These data reveal an important outcome of aberrant ZIP4 expression in contributing to pancreatic cancer pathogenesis and progression. It may suggest a therapeutic strategy whereby ZIP4 is targeted to control pancreatic cancer growth.
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PMID:Aberrant expression of zinc transporter ZIP4 (SLC39A4) significantly contributes to human pancreatic cancer pathogenesis and progression. 1800 99

The aim of this study was to investigate whether lymph node involvement in breast cancer is influenced by gene or miRNA expression of the primary tumor. For this purpose, we selected a very homogeneous patient population to minimize heterogeneity in other tumor and patient characteristics. First, we compared gene expression profiles of primary tumor tissue from a group of 96 breast cancer patients balanced for lymph node involvement using Affymetrix Human U133 Plus 2.0 microarray chip. A model was built by weighted Least-Squares Support Vector Machines and validated on an internal and external dataset. Next, miRNA profiling was performed on a subset of 82 tumors using Human MiRNA-microarray chips (Illumina). Finally, for each miRNA the number of significant inverse correlated targets was determined and compared with 1000 sets of randomly chosen targets. A model based on 241 genes was built (AUC 0.66). The AUC for the internal dataset was 0.646 and 0. 651 for the external datasets. The model includes multiple kinases, apoptosis-related, and zinc ion-binding genes. Integration of the microarray and miRNA data reveals ten miRNAs suppressing lymph node invasion and one miRNA promoting lymph node invasion. Our results provide evidence that measurable differences in gene and miRNA expression exist between node negative and node positive patients and thus that lymph node involvement is not a genetically random process. Moreover, our data suggest a general deregulation of the miRNA machinery that is potentially responsible for lymph node invasion.
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PMID:Prediction of lymph node involvement in breast cancer from primary tumor tissue using gene expression profiling and miRNAs. 2111 9

Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) form a family of zinc-dependent endoproteases participating in cancer pathogenesis by promoting invasion and regulating growth signaling, apoptosis, angiogenesis and immune responses. MMP-8 is an intriguing MMP with recently discovered antitumor activity and immunoregulatory properties, but its role in colorectal cancer (CRC) has not been studied extensively. Preoperative serum MMP-8 levels (S-MMP-8) of 148 CRC patients and 83 healthy controls were measured using an immunofluorometric assay and related to clinical and pathological parameters. The patients had higher S-MMP-8 than the controls (median 63.0 vs. 17.2 ng/ml, p = 1.5E - 9), and a receiver operating characteristics analysis yielded an area under the curve of 0.751 in differentiating the groups. In univariate analyses, S-MMP-8 correlated positively with disease stage (p = 4.5E - 4), the degree of primary tumor necrosis (p = 0.0024) and blood neutrophil count (Pearson r = 0.523, p = 2.5E - 9). Particular interest was also addressed to the inflammatory properties of the tumors, and both variables studied, peritumoral tumor-destructing inflammatory infiltrate and Crohn's-like lymphoid reaction (CLR), showed a negative correlation with S-MMP-8 (p = 0.041 and p = 0.0057, respectively). In a multiple linear regression analysis, high S-MMP-8 associated with elevated blood neutrophil count, distant metastases, low-grade CLR and low body mass index. Overall, our results indicate that MMP-8 is involved in the course and progression of CRC influencing the immune response against the tumor and contributing to the resolution of necrosis. Serum or plasma MMP-8 may prove to be a worthy biomarker for CRC.
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PMID:Serum MMP-8 levels increase in colorectal cancer and correlate with disease course and inflammatory properties of primary tumors. 2191 79

The family of human matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) consists of 24 zinc- and calcium-dependent proteolytic enzymes. MMPs are divided into six subgroups, in terms of differences in the substrate specificity with structural domain architecture. These enzymes are involved in many physiological processes, such as skeletal development, wound healing, scar formation, as well as carcinogenesis. MMPs, fulfilling its function of degradation of extracellular matrix components, are involved in one of the stages of angiogenesis enabling the development, growth and spread of the primary tumor. Therefore, the search for the common polymorphic variants of MMPs, new genetic markers as prognostic factors in breast cancer progress seems to be understandable.The minireview presents the results of 19 case-control or prospective studies concerning the association of SNPs of genes encoding nine MMPs: MMP-1, -2, -3, -7, -8, -9, -12, -13, -21 with the breast cancer risk, progression and survival.
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PMID:Genetic polymorphism of matrix metalloproteinases in breast cancer. 2229 95


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