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)

A series of heptapeptide somatostatin (SRIF) analogs containing mercaptopropionic acid (Mpa) and based on the parent structure Mpa-Tyr-[D]Trp-Lys-Val-Cys-Thr-NH2 were synthesized by solid-phase methodologies and assayed for their effects on rat growth hormone (GH) secretion and their ability to displace [125I]Tyr11-SRIF bound to various tissues in vitro. Structural modifications consisted primarily of aromatic substitutions for Thr. All analogs were less potent than SRIF in inhibiting GH secretion in vitro from 4-day primary cultures of rat pituitary cells (0.04-21% that of SRIF). Higher GH inhibitory potencies were observed in an acute 15 min in vivo potency assay probably reflecting increases in plasma half-life of the analogs as compared to native SRIF. All analogs had extremely low binding affinity for rat cerebral cortex (0.05-4% that of SRIF), while binding potency for rat pancreas ranged from 3-130% of SRIF. Several analogs exhibited enhanced binding to human small cell lung carcinoma cells (SCLC; NCI-H69) as compared to SRIF. One of these, containing Phe at the C-terminus, exhibited an affinity 3.5 X greater than SRIF itself and was further tested for possible effects on the proliferation of SCLC and rat pancreatic tumor cells (AR42J) in vitro. The proliferation of both tumor types was inhibited 32 and 60%, respectively (p less than 0.01). The data suggest that SRIF and certain analogs may have a direct action on proliferating tumors independent of endocrine effects and that the anti-tumor activity of SRIF analogs can be further dissociated from the other actions of native SRIF, thereby providing for potentially more selective therapeutic analogs.
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PMID:Novel heptapeptide somatostatin analog displays anti-tumor activity independent of effects on growth hormone secretion. 257 97

A murine monoclonal antibody (mAb A23-16) was produced that recognizes a glycoprotein antigen preferentially expressed on the surface of human small cell lung carcinoma cells. This antibody is of IgG 1 isotype, has an association constant of 5 x 10(7) M-1, and reacts preferentially with human small cell lung carcinoma cell lines and fresh frozen sections in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays and immunoperoxidase assays, respectively. The antigen recognized by A23-16 is a sulfated glycoprotein with phosphorylated threonine residues. The mature 90-kDa molecule has intrachain disulfide bonds and appears to be derived from a 76-kDa precursor, that is neither sulfated nor phosphorylated, but contains N-linked oligosaccharides. Conversion of the 76-kDa precursor to the mature form is accompanied by processing of these oligosaccharides from the high mannose to the complex type, although the increase in molecular mass from 76 to 90 kDa cannot be accounted for by this modification alone. MAb A23-16 reacts with its target antigen independent of the N-linked oligosaccharides, but requires intact intrachain disulfide bond(s) for reactivity. These studies on the molecular characterization of a monoclonal antibody-defined glycoprotein, preferentially expressed by small cell lung cancer, provide a basis for further structural and functional studies that may eventually lead to a delineation of its biological relevance for neoplastic transformation.
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PMID:Biochemical characterization of a sulfated phosphoglycoprotein antigen expressed on human small cell lung carcinoma. 282 63

An endocrinologically-potent octapeptide analogue of somatostatin (SRIF), 3-(2-naphthyl)-D-Ala-Cys-Tyr-D-Trp-Lys-Val-Cys-Thr-NH2 (BIM-23014 C), was examined for its ability to inhibit the in vitro and in vivo growth of the human small cell lung carcinoma (SCLC) line, NCI-H69. When cultured cells were implanted into athymic nude mice, treatment (500 micrograms/injection, twice daily) resulted in a prolongation of lag time for the appearance of measurable tumors, and there was a marked inhibition of the growth rate. Indeed, peptide injection in the region of the tumor resulted in a complete regression of the NCI-H69 tumors. Withdrawal of BIM-23014 C treatment resulted in an acceleration of tumor growth indicating an antiproliferative rather the oncolytic action. A similar inhibition of tumor growth was also observed when solid tumors obtained from the first implantation were used as the donor tissues. In cell culture, the proliferation in the presence of a low concentration (10nM) of BIM-23104 C was also significantly retarded suggesting a direct mechanism of action.
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PMID:In vitro and in vivo inhibition of human small cell lung carcinoma (NCI-H69) growth by a somatostatin analogue. 289 54

The carboxyl-terminal region of tubulin alpha and beta subunits plays a major role in regulating its assembly into microtubules and constitutes an essential domain for the selective interaction of microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs). With the goal of understanding the structural basis of the regulatory function of the carboxyl-terminal domains of tubulin subunits, we have produced rabbit antisera against two MAP-interacting peptides Lys-Asp-Tyr-Glu-Glu-Val-Gly-Val-Asp-Ser-Val-Glu of alpha-tubulin and Tyr-Gln-Gln-Tyr-Gln-Asp-Ala-Thr-Ala-Asp-Glu-Gln-Gly of beta subunit. The affinity-purified alpha and beta anti-peptide antibodies interacted specifically with tubulin and with the respective peptide antigens but did not interact with MAPs. Substoichiometric amounts of both antibodies showed the capacity to inhibit in vitro MAP-induced tubulin assembly and to promote a fast depolymerization of preassembled microtubules. Taxol-promoted assembly of pure tubulin was not inhibited by the antibodies. In the presence of MAP-2 and taxol, the antibodies decreased the MAP-2 content of taxol-promoted microtubules. The interaction with microtubules was corroborated by immunofluorescence experiments in HeLa and NE-18 lung carcinoma cells. The epitopes recognized by the alpha and beta anti-peptide antibodies appear to be located in the outer surface of the microtubular structure.
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PMID:Antibodies to synthetic peptides from the tubulin regulatory domain interact with tubulin and microtubules. 290 Nov 4

A pentapeptide with analgesic activity has been isolated from human lung squamous cell carcinoma and from three other types of propagated tumors of human lung small-cell carcinoma (SCC), adenoma (AD) and large-cell carcinoma (LCC) in nude mice. The amino acid sequence of the peptide has been revealed to be H-Thr-Ser-Lys-Tyr-Arg-OH, which is exactly the same as that of neo-kyotorphin, an analgesic peptide originally isolated from bovine brain [(1982) Life Sci. 31, 1733]. No neo-kyotorphin could be isolated from normal lung tissue using the same procedures as those used for carcinomas. The results suggest that the presence of neo-kyotorphin in the lung carcinoma may represent the ectopic expression of peptide hormone. Our findings constitute the first example of a human lung carcinoma producing analgesic peptide.
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PMID:Neo-kyotorphin, an analgesic peptide isolated from human lung carcinoma. 378 Sep 65

The two major glycoforms of full-length human thrombomodulin (TM), one with (TM(CS+)) and one without (TM(CS-)) chondroitin sulfate (CS) were analyzed on Western blots of primary and transformed cells and in cells expressing recombinant TM. TM on the surface of Chinese hamster ovary and COS-7 cells is solely TM(CS-). Primary arterial endothelial cells (HAEC and HPAEC) express a greater fraction of TM with CS attached than venous cells (HUVEC). Human lung carcinoma cells (A549) express more TM(CS+) than primary cells and recombinant TM on human melanoma cells (CHL-1) occurs in two very high molecular weight forms of TM(CS+). We explored this variation in TM(CS+) with soluble recombinant TM in several cell lines and analyzed the ambiguous CS addition site in human TM by site-directed mutagenesis. Mutation of Ser474 to Ala blocks CS addition in Chinese hamster ovary and COS-7 cells but not CHL-1 cells which add CS to Ser472 and Ser474. Structure of the O-link domain affects partitioning into TM(CS+) since substituting with the decorin CS addition sequence, substituting all Ser and Thr except Ser474 with Ala, and deleting around the potential beta-turn all increase the ratio of TM(CS+) to TM(CS-). A combination of the decorin substitution and deletion of the remaining O-link domain yields the most TM(CS+).
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PMID:Modulation of glycosaminoglycan addition in naturally expressed and recombinant human thrombomodulin. 792 88

Cyclin D1, which is suggested to have a role in G1 control during the cell cycle, is genetically linked to BCL-1 and is widely overexpressed in parathyroid, breast, and squamous cancer cells. We postulated that cyclin D1 regulation may also be important in lung cancer. Therefore, we characterized the cell cycle-dependent expression of cyclin D1 at both mRNA and protein levels in synchronized human A549 lung carcinoma cells. Monospecific anti-cyclin D1 C-terminal peptide antibodies recognized both p36cyclinD1 and an as-yet uncharacterized 45 kD protein (p45). A549 cells were synchronized with well-studied drugs. Cyclin D1 mRNA expression remained relatively constant, with less than a twofold fluctuation during the cell cycle and with a minor peak at M phase. However, the p36cyclinD1 protein fluctuated during the A549 cell cycle and was expressed at very low levels in late G1 and at the G1/S boundary, but then increased in S phase and peaked at M phase. In contrast, p45 protein was expressed at relatively high levels in late G1 and reached maximal levels at the G1/S boundary, was expressed at decreased levels in S phase, and then had disappeared by M phase. Moreover, p45 was highly expressed only in transformed alveolar epithelial cells, but not in normal rat alveolar epithelial cells or fetal rat lung fibroblasts in primary cultures. In mink Mv1Lu cells, the expression of p45 was totally blocked by transforming growth factor-beta 1 treatment or contact inhibition. p45 protein was phosphorylated on serine, threonine, and tyrosine residues in A549 cells in culture. The phosphorylation of the p45 protein was cell cycle-regulated and reached its maximal levels at G2/M phase. The p45 protein had a different peptide map from p36cyclinD1 after cleavage with N-chlorosuccinimide. Immunoprecipitation studies showed that p45 was also anti-ubiquitin immunoreactive during the cell cycle. We conclude that p36cyclinD1 and the p45 protein are differentially regulated in a cell cycle-dependent manner in A549 cells. Although p45 is antigenically related to p36cyclinD1, it is probably not a closely cyclin-related protein. We speculate that p45 may be associated with malignant transformation and may play a distinct role from p36cyclinD1 in regulation of the cell cycle in A549 cells.
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PMID:Cell cycle-dependent expression of cyclin D1 and a 45 kD protein in human A549 lung carcinoma cells. 813 59

A cDNA coding for the beta 4 subunit of murine integrin (m beta 4) has been cloned and sequenced using mRNA from a murine lung carcinoma as the template. The 5' sequence contains two AUG codons, the second of which initiates synthesis of the mature protein. The cDNA sequence has an open reading frame coding for 1748 amino acids (aa), including a signal peptide, cysteine-rich region, serine- and threonine-rich region, transmembrane domain, and a cytoplasmic domain of over 1000 aa. Overall, the deduced m beta 4 aa sequence has 88% identity with the human beta 4 subunit (h beta 4) sequence deduced from the sequence of placental mRNA. Reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction using primers flanking splice sites for two variant forms of h beta 4 transcripts provided evidence for alternate splicing of RNA in the murine spleen and to a lesser extent in the skin, uterus, and thymus but was found at only one of the two alternative sites. Five potential glycosylation sites present in the extracellular domain of h beta 4 are conserved in m beta 4. One tyrosine in the terminal region of the cytoplasmic domain (position 1600) is conserved between m beta 4 and h beta 4 and has the consensus sequence for tyrosine phosphorylation. Finally, a genomic restriction map of m beta 4 shows that the gene is about 40 kb in length. No restriction-fragment length polymorphisms were detected between BALB/c liver and BALB/c lung carcinoma DNA.
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PMID:Sequence of a cDNA encoding the beta 4 subunit of murine integrin. 835 87

Elevators of cAMP, such as prostaglandin E2 (PGE2), activate protein kinase A (PKA) and induce PKA-stimulated motility and metastasis by metastatic Lewis lung carcinoma cells (LLC-LN7). Non-metastatic LLC (LLC-C8) are unresponsive to cAMP elevation even though they are not deficient in the PKA enzymes. To determine whether this PKA unresponsiveness might be due to increased dephosphorylation by serine/threonine protein phosphatases (PP-1/2A) within non-metastatic LLC-C8, the effects of the PP-1/2A inhibitor okadaic acid on the migration and invasion by non-metastatic LLC-C8 cells was measured. Okadaic acid stimulated motility of non-metastatic LLC-C8 cells to a level that was comparable to that of metastatic LLC-LN7 cells. PGE2 further increased the motility of the non-metastatic LLC-C8 cells when okadaic acid was present, although not in the absence of okadaic acid. The stimulation of motility by okadaic acid was diminished when PKA activity was inhibited. Dose-response studies with concentrations of okadaic acid that selectively inhibited PP-2A or both PP-2A and PP-1 showed a progressive increase in migration of non-metastatic LLC-C8 cells, suggesting that both PP-1 and PP-2A limit their motility. By contrast, metastatic LLC-LN7 cells were more motile than were non-metastatic LLC-C8 cells, but this motility was only marginally affected by okadaic acid. Comparisons of the levels of PP-1/2A enzyme activities in the LLC variants showed more activity in non-metastatic LLC-C8 than in metastatic LLC-LN7 cells. The identity of the PP whose activity was increased in the non-metastatic LLC-C8 was assessed by using okadaic acid, which selectively inhibits PP-2A activity at low concentrations and PP-1 and PP-2A at high concentrations, and calyculin A, which inhibits PP-2A at a similar concentration to that affected by okadaic acid but is more potent at inhibiting PP-1. The inhibition of PP activities by okadaic acid and by calyculin A showed a pattern which suggested the presence both of PP-1 and of PP-2A in non-metastatic LLC-C8 cells, but the presence of PP-1 and a reduction in PP-2A in metastatic LLC-LN7 cells. The sum of these data suggests that PKA-stimulated motility is restricted both by PP-1 and by PP-2A in non-metastatic LLC, and that a deficiency in this restriction results in increased migration and invasion.
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PMID:Protein phosphatases limit tumor motility. 839 79

Re-188-RC-160, a radiolabeled somatostatin analogue, is being explored for its potential as a local/regionally administered radiotherapeutic agent targeting somatostatin receptor-positive tumors. In studies in vitro and in vivo, Re-188-RC-160 was found to bind to somatostatin receptor-positive cells (NCI-H69, human small cell lung carcinoma), but not to binding-negative cells (Raji, Burkitt's lymphoma). The comparative binding of Re-188-labeled RC-160 [cyclic NH2-(D)-Phe-Cys-Try-(D)-Trp-Lys-Val-Cys-Trp-NH2] or CTOP [cyclic NH2-(D)-Phe-Cys-Try-(D)-Trp-Orn-Thr-Pen-Thr-ol], a mu-opioid receptor antagonist used a negative control compound, was also determined in vitro and in vivo using NCI-H69 cells as targets. Re-188-RC-160 demonstrated higher net binding in vitro and in vivo compared to Re-188-RC-CTOP, and in vitro its binding could be reduced by excess unlabeled RC-160 whereas binding of Re-188-CTOP could not be reduced. Using another somatostatin receptor-positive human tumor line, ZR-75-1, a substantial amount of the cell-bound Re-188-RC-160 was found to be internalized. Does estimates for Re-188-RC-160 in animals containing NCI-H69 tumors indicated that with three serial injections therapeutic doses greater than 60 Gy can be achieved.
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PMID:Targeting peptides for pleural cavity tumor radiotherapy: specificity and dosimetry of Re-188-RC-160. 908 34


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