Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0684249 (lung carcinoma)
23,830 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Tumour basement membrane (BM) is an extracellular matrix produced by tumour cells of epithelial origin. We examined the structure and function of the tumour BM of tumour tissues formed by Lewis lung carcinoma-derived cloned cell lines (P29, LM12-3 and LM60-D6 cells) with low, medium and high metastatic potentials, respectively. Immunohistochemical staining of major BM constituents laminin and type IV collagen demonstrated that all the cell lines produced and deposited these materials extracellularly in vivo. However, the continuity of the tumour BM composed of these materials was much greater in the higher metastatic LM12-3 and LM60-D6 tumours than in those with the low metastatic P29 tumour. Electron microscopic examination revealed that in the higher metastatic tumours, especially the LM60-D6 tumour, the tumour BM had a highly organized structure consisting of lamina densa and lamina rara. Parallel bilayers of BM and their fusion were often observed and tumour cells were in direct contact with the BM. In the vicinity of tumour blood vessels, similar interactions between the tumour BM and the vascular BM were observed, and the tumour cells rested on their own BM, the fused BM or the vascular BM. In contrast, in the low metastatic tumour in which the tumour BM was not clearly defined, this close contact between tumour cells and the vascular BM was not observed. In vitro studies showed that the higher metastatic cells adhered more firmly than the LMP cells to a subendothelial matrix. These results suggest that the adhesiveness of tumour cells to the vascular BM in vivo is correlated with their ability to form an integrated BM in vivo, and that this adhesiveness of the tumour cells may be mediated in part by the tumour BM via BM fusion.
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PMID:Morphological characteristics of tumours formed by Lewis lung carcinoma-derived cloned cell lines with different metastatic potentials: structural differences in their basement membranes formed in vivo. 154 5

Two-dimensional electrophoretograms of newly synthesized polypeptides from low-metastatic (P29) and high-metastatic (D6) Lewis lung carcinoma cells were compared. The results showed that the synthesis of tropomyosin 2 (TM2) was significantly less in D6 cells than in P29 cells. Furthermore, suppression of TM2 synthesis was induced in P29 cells during incubation in medium containing dimethyl sulfoxide or butyric acid, which induced the metastatic phenotype of P29 cells. These results suggest that the suppression of TM2 synthesis is linked to the metastatic potential of Lewis lung carcinoma cells.
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PMID:Differential expression of a tropomyosin isoform in low- and high-metastatic Lewis lung carcinoma cells. 322 70

We isolated and characterized a cDNA clone encoding tropomyosin isoform 2 (TM2) from a mouse fibroblast cDNA library. TM2 was found to contain 284 amino acids and was closely related to the rat smooth and skeletal muscle alpha-TMs and the human fibroblast TM3. The amino acid sequence of TM2 showed a nearly complete match with that of human fibroblast TM3 except for the region from amino acids 189 to 213, the sequence of which was identical to those of rat smooth and skeletal muscle alpha-TMs. These results suggest that TM2 is expressed from the same gene that encodes the smooth muscle alpha-TM, the skeletal muscle alpha-TM, and TM3 via an alternative RNA-splicing mechanism. Comparison of the expression of TM2 mRNA in low-metastatic Lewis lung carcinoma P29 cells and high-metastatic D6 cells revealed that it was significantly less in D6 cells than in P29 cells, supporting our previous observations (K. Takenaga, Y. Nakamura, and S. Sakiyama, Mol. Cell. Biol. 8:3934-3937, 1988) at the protein level.
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PMID:Isolation and characterization of a cDNA that encodes mouse fibroblast tropomyosin isoform 2. 324 65

A Lewis lung carcinoma-derived low metastatic clone, P29, with a capacity to induce a fibrotic stromal response of host tissue, exhibits tumorigenesis depending on an interstitial matrix formed by the induced stromal cells. Using this clone, in the present study we isolated and characterized a membrane-intercalated proteoglycan that mediates interaction between the tumor cells and interstitial matrix. The tumor cells were cultured in the presence of [3H]glucosamine and [35S]sulfate or [35S]methionine, and hydrophobic proteoglycans were isolated by chromatography on DEAE-Sephacel and then Octyl-Sepharose CL-4B. Proteoglycans with high affinity to the octylresidue were obtained from the cell layer but not to any significant extent from the medium. By CsCl density gradient centrifugation, they were separated into bottom, middle, and top subfractions, which were shown to consist of homogeneous species with estimated M(r) values of 270,000 (named CPGIIIB), 200,000 (CPGIIIM), and 195,000 (CPGIIIT), respectively, by gel filtration on Sepharose CL-4B. These proteoglycans were intercalated into phosphatidylcholine liposomes, suggesting that they are all membrane-intercalated proteoglycans. Analyses of their glycosaminoglycans with chondroitinase ABC and heparitinase I plus II demonstrated that they all contain heparan sulfate as a major glycosaminoglycan (58-85%) and chondroitin 4-sulfate as a minor one (15-42%). Of these three proteoglycans, only CPGIIIB proteoglycan bound specifically to fibronectin-Sepharose 4B under physiological conditions. Molecular analyses of this proteoglycan by Sepharose CL-4B or SDS-PAGE before and after treatments with glycosaminoglycan degradation enzymes or trifluoromethanesulfonic acid demonstrated that CPGIIIB proteoglycan is a hybrid proteoglycan having heparan sulfate and chondroitin 4-sulfate chains on the same core protein with an M(r) of 40,000. Affinity chromatographies of the CPGIIIB proteoglycan on fibronectin-Sepharose 4B after treatments with these enzymes demonstrated that it bound to fibronectin via its heparan sulfate chains. On the basis of the above results, we propose that the CPGIIIB proteoglycan mediates the interaction between the tumor cells and interstitial matrix.
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PMID:Membrane-intercalated proteoglycan of a stroma-inducing clone from Lewis lung carcinoma binds to fibronectin via its heparan sulfate chains. 813 44

We previously reported that a mouse Lewis lung carcinoma-derived stroma-inducing clone, P29, highly expresses a syndecan-like proteoglycan exhibiting specific binding to fibronectin, a major constituent of the interstitial matrix formed by the induced stromal cells, via its heparan sulphate chains [Itano, Oguri, Nakanishi and Okayama (1993) J. Biochem. (Tokyo) 114, 862-873]. On metabolic labelling of the proteoglycan with [32P]Pi, followed by identification of the radiolabelled material using glycanases, almost all the isotope was found to have been incorporated into a core portion of molecular mass 48 kDa, which was generated by digestion with heparan sulphate lyase I plus chondroitin ABC lyase. Immunoblotting of the core protein with a monoclonal antibody, F58-6G12, demonstrated that the proteoglycan was mouse syndecan-2. CsCl-density-gradient centrifugation after mild treatment of liposome-intercalated 32P-labelled syndecan-2 with trypsin resulted in clear separation of the radioactivity into a bottom fraction containing all the glycosaminoglycans (accounting for 40% of the total radioactivity) and a top fraction containing liposome-associated peptides (60%). The former isotope was shown to be linked covalently to both heparan sulphate and chondroitin sulphate chains, probably at their bridge regions. The latter was mostly attributed to phosphoserine, the one and only phosphorylated amino acid released on acid hydrolysis of this proteoglycan, strongly suggesting that the phosphorylation occurs at a specific serine residue(s) in the cytoplasmic domain of the core protein.
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PMID:Phosphorylation of a membrane-intercalated proteoglycan, syndecan-2, expressed in a stroma-inducing clone from a mouse Lewis lung carcinoma. 864 78

The apoptosis-resistant phenotype of cloned high-metastatic A11 and low-metastatic P29 cells isolated from Lewis lung carcinoma was compared. The results showed that A11 cells were more resistant to apoptosis induced by microenvironmental stresses such as serum starvation, glucose deprivation and hypoxia than P29 cells as judged by viability, DNA laddering, and chromatin condensation and fragmentation. Both cell lines were insensitive to tumor necrosis factor-alpha-mediated apoptosis. P29 cells expressed a much higher level of Fas antigen on the cell surface than A11 cells. However, both cell lines were also insensitive to Fas-mediated apoptosis. The apoptosis resistant phenotype of A11 cells was associated with the expression level of caspase-3, but not with those of Bcl-2, Bcl-X(L) Bax, p27Kip1 and DAP kinase. There was no difference between A11 and P29 cells in the expression of E-cadherin, the adhesiveness to the extracellular matrix components or the expression levels of metastasis-associated genes such as c-Ha-ras, c-jun, p53 and nm23. Furthermore, A11 cells exhibited lower motile and invasive abilities than P29 cells. These results suggest that the apoptosis-resistant phenotype is an important factor for determining the metastatic ability of A11 cells. Supporting this, P29 cells became more apoptosis-resistant after treatment of the cells with dimethylsulfoxide which is reported to enhance the experimental metastatic potential of the cells.
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PMID:Resistance to apoptosis induced by microenvironmental stresses is correlated with metastatic potential in Lewis lung carcinoma. 1065 7

The present study provides direct evidence that syndecan 2 participates selectively in the induction of stress fiber formation in cooperation with integrin alpha5beta1 through specific binding of its heparan sulfate side chains to the fibronectin substrate. Our previous study with Lewis lung carcinoma-derived P29 cells demonstrated that the cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycan, which binds to fibronectin, is syndecan 2 (N. Itano et al., 1996, Biochem. J. 315, 925-930). We here report that in vitro treatment of the cells by antisense oligonucleotide for syndecan 2 resulted in a failure to form stress fibers on fibronectin substrate in association with specific suppression of its cell surface expression. Instead, localization of actin filaments in the cytoplasmic cortex occurred. A similar response of the cells was observed when the cells were treated to eliminate functions of cell surface heparan sulfates, including exogenous addition of heparin and pretreatment with anti-heparan sulfate antibody, F58-10E4, and with proteinase-free heparitinase I. Size- and structure-defined oligosaccharides prepared from heparin and chemically modified heparins were utilized as competitive inhibitors to examine the structural characteristics of the cell surface heparan sulfates involved in organization of the actin cytoskeleton. Their affinity chromatography on a column linked with a recombinant H-271 peptide containing a C-terminal heparin-binding domain of fibronectin demonstrated that 2-O-sulfated iduronates were essential for the binding. Inhibition studies revealed that a heparin-derived dodecasaccharide sample enriched with an IdoA(2OS)-GlcNS(6OS) disaccharide completely blocked binding of the syndecan 2 ectodomain to immobilized H-271 peptide. Finally, the dodecasaccharide sample was shown to inhibit stress fiber formation, triggered by adhesion of P29 cells to a CH-271 polypeptide consisting of both the RGD cell-binding and the C-terminal heparin-binding domains of fibronectin in a fused form. All these results consistently suggest that syndecan 2 proteoglycan interacts with the C-terminal heparin-binding domain of fibronectin at the highly sulfated cluster(s), such as [IdoA(2OS)-GlcNS(6OS)](6) present in its heparan sulfate chains, to result in the induction of stress fiber formation in cooperation with integrin alpha5beta1.
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PMID:Participation of syndecan 2 in the induction of stress fiber formation in cooperation with integrin alpha5beta1: structural characteristics of heparan sulfate chains with avidity to COOH-terminal heparin-binding domain of fibronectin. 1077 16

Syndecans, a family of transmembrane heparan sulphate proteoglycans, contribute to various biological processes, including adhesion, motility, proliferation, differentiation and morphogenesis. We document here the involvement of syndecan-2 acting alone or co-operatively with integrin alpha5beta1, for regulation of actin-cytoskeletal organization on cell adhesion to fibronectin, using fibronectin-recombinant polypeptides containing the ligands for either or both of these receptors as substrata. Lewis lung carcinoma-derived low-metastatic P29 cells binding to the substrata by both receptors formed actin stress fibres, whereas those binding by syndecan-2 or integrin alpha5beta1 alone formed filopodia or cortex actin. In contrast, higher metastatic LM66-H11 cells formed cortex actin even on substrata containing both ligands. Northern-blot and flow-cytometric analyses revealed that syndecan-2 expression in LM66-H11 cells was significantly lower (1/4.5 in mRNA and 1/8 in cell-surface expression) than in P29 cells, whereas expression levels of integrin alpha5beta1 and other syndecans were similar in both cell types. These results suggest that the failure of LM66-H11 to form stress fibres is due to a lower expression of syndecan-2 than that due to a threshold for its function. This was confirmed by the finding that overexpression of syndecan-2 by transfection of its cDNA into LM66-H11 cells caused the formation of stress fibres on the fibronectin substratum. These in vitro cellular responses of the two clones might reflect their in vivo situation in primary tumours in which P29 cells with a stroma-inducing capacity were immediately surrounded by fibronectin-rich matrix formed by the induced stromal cells, whereas LM66-H11 cells without such capacity were not surrounded by a similar matrix.
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PMID:The role of syndecan-2 in regulation of actin-cytoskeletal organization of Lewis lung carcinoma-derived metastatic clones. 1193 47

Neoangiogenesis is crucial for tumor growth and metastasis and is regulated by various angiogenic factors including vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). However, little is known whether highly metastatic cells express higher level of VEGF in response to various stimuli, thereby increasing neoangiogenesis compared to low-metastatic cells. Here we report that hypoxia markedly induced the expression of VEGF mRNA in the cell lines with high-metastatic potential (A11 and D6 cells) compared to the cell lines with low-metastatic potential (P29 and P34 cells) established from Lewis lung carcinoma. A11 cells exhibited higher VEGF gene-promoter activity, produced a larger amount of VEGF and showed higher activity to induce neoangiogenesis than P29 cells. Although the degradation rate of VEGF mRNA under hypoxic conditions was similar in both cell lines, hypoxia-inducible factor-1alpha (HIF-1alpha) mRNA, but not HIF-1beta mRNA, was found to be constitutively upregulated in A11 cells compared to P29 cells. Accordingly, the level of HIF-1alpha protein in response to hypoxia was higher in A11 cells than in P29 cells. Upregulation of HIF-1alpha mRNA was also observed in D6 cells but not in P34 cells. Thus, the high-metastatic cells produced a larger amount of VEGF under hypoxic conditions through constitutive HIF-1alpha mRNA upregulation compared to the low-metastatic cells, thereby leading to extensive neoangiogenesis.
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PMID:Constitutive upregulation of hypoxia-inducible factor-1alpha mRNA occurring in highly metastatic lung carcinoma cells leads to vascular endothelial growth factor overexpression upon hypoxic exposure. 1455 85

Syndecan-2 cooperates with integrin alpha 5 beta 1 in cell adhesion to a fibronectin substratum and regulates actin cytoskeletal organization in an expression level-dependent manner; Lewis lung carcinoma-derived P29 cells with high expression form stress fibers, whereas the same tumor-derived low expressers, LM66-H11 cells, form cortex actin [Munesue, S., Kusano, Y., Oguri, K., Itano, N., Yoshitomi, Y., Nakanishi, H., Yamashina, I., and Okayama, M. (2002) BIOCHEM: J. 363, 201-209]. In this study we examined the participation of other cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans in this signaling. The two clones expressed syndecan-1, -2 and -4, and glypican-1 at similar levels except for syndecan-2. Treatment of cells with phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C or immobilized anti-syndecan-1 antibodies demonstrated that neither glypican-1 nor syndecan-1 was involved in this signaling, indicating that individual cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans have functional specificity. Stimulation with immobilized anti-syndecan-2 or -4 antibodies induced stress fiber formation in P29 cells but not in LM66-H11 cells, despite the similar levels of syndecan-4 expression, suggesting that stress fiber formation required a threshold expression level of syndecan-2 acting downstream of syndecan-4. This was confirmed by cells in which syndecan-2 expression was artificially suppressed by antisense mRNA oligonucleotide treatment or elevated by cDNA transfection. This is the first report demonstrating that syndecan-2 and -4 cooperate in situ in actin cytoskeletal organization.
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PMID:Cooperation of syndecan-2 and syndecan-4 among cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans in the actin cytoskeletal organization of Lewis lung carcinoma cells. 1499 18


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