Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0684249 (
lung carcinoma
)
23,830
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The present study was undertaken to analyse the extent of apoptosis in operated small cell
lung carcinoma
(SCLC) by using in situ labelling of the oligonucleosomal DNA fragments by terminal transferase. The extent of apoptosis was compared with the cell proliferation activity, as determined by Ki-67 immunohistochemistry; with the volume density of necrosis (per cent), as determined by the morphometric point counting method; and with the occurrence of immunohistochemically detectable
p53
and bcl-2 proteins. By in situ labelling, remarkably high apoptotic indices (from 0.08 to 8.10 per cent) were seen in SCLC. A high percentage of SCLSs also showed an exceptionally high proliferation activity. Aberrant accumulation of
p53 protein
was seen in 37.5 per cent and bel-2 overexpression in 50 per cent of SCLCs. Necrosis was seen in 82.5 per cent of SCLCs. The extent of apoptosis was inversely related to the extent of tumour necrosis (P = 0.05) and to
p53 protein
accumulation (P = 0.008). A positive association was found between the extent of apoptosis and bel-2 immunoreactivity (P = 0.02). The apoptotic indices (per cent) correlated with the age (P < 0.05) and total smoking time of the patients (P = 0.06).
...
PMID:Apoptosis in operated small cell lung carcinoma is inversely related to tumour necrosis and p53 immunoreactivity. 912 Jul 21
Serum
p53 protein
levels were measured in 36 patients with small cell lung cancer (SCLC) and 35 patients with benign lung diseases in order to evaluate the relationship of these levels to clinicopathological features of SCLC. Serum levels of
p53 protein
were measured by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay,
p53 protein
level was 23.92 +/- 6.78 pg/ml in patients with SCLC, and similar to that (17.47 +/- 2.86 pg/ml) in patients with benign lung diseases. By the clinical stage of SCLC, the mean level of
p53 protein
was 16.68 +/- 4.62 pg/ml in 21 patients with limited disease, and lower than that in 15 patients with extensive disease (34.05 +/- 14.84 pg/ml) (P = 0.23). The levels of
p53 protein
were not correlated with age, smoking index, or presence of cancer history for patients with SCLC. However, immunohistochemical examination disclosed a mild correlation between the expression of
p53 protein
by SCLC tumor and
p53 protein
serum level (r = 0.45, P = 0.02). Two patients with SCLC had an elevated serum level of
p53 protein
(> 2 S.D. above the mean for benign lung diseases). However, measurement of
p53 protein
serum level was not found to be clinically useful for detection of SCLC.
Lung Cancer
1997 Mar
PMID:Measurement of serum p53 protein in patients with small cell lung cancer and results of its clinicopathological evaluation. 915 54
Following up-regulation of an angiogenesis inhibitor by the wild-type
p53 protein
proven recently, we have analysed on the one hand the prognostic impact of microvessel count (MC) and
p53 protein
overexpression in non-small-cell
lung carcinoma
(NSCLC) progression and, on the other hand, the inter-relation between the microvascular pattern and the
p53 protein
expression. Moreover, we assessed the expression of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), one of the pivotal mediators of tumour angiogenesis, in order to investigate its relation to
p53 protein
expression and MC. Tumours from 73 patients resected for NSCLC between March 1991 and April 1992 (median follow-up 47 months, range 32-51 months) were analysed using an immunohistochemical method. In univariate analysis, MC and
p53
accumulation were shown to affect metastatic nodal involvement, recurrence and death significantly. Multiple logistic regression analysis showed an important prognostic influence of MC and nodal status on overall (P = 0.0009; P = 0.01) and disease-free survival (P = 0.0001; P = 0.03). Interestingly, a strong statistical association was observed between
p53
nuclear accumulation and MC (P = 0.0003). The same inter-relationship was found in non-squamous histotype (P = 0.002). When we analysed the concomitant influence of MC and
p53
expression on overall survival, we were able to confirm a real predominant role of MC in comparison with
p53
. With regard to VEGF expression,
p53
-negative and lowly vascularized tumours showed a mean VEGF expression significantly lower than
p53
-positive and highly vascularized cancers (P = 0.02). These results underline the prognostic impact of MC and
p53 protein
accumulation in NSCLC and their reciprocal inter-relationship, supporting the hypothesis of a wild-type
p53
regulation on the angiogenetic process through a VEGF up-regulation.
...
PMID:Neoangiogenesis and p53 protein in lung cancer: their prognostic role and their relation with vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) expression. 951 69
Several polymorphic genes have been reported to be possibly involved in modifying lung cancer risk in smokers. The gene GSTM1 is frequently deleted in human populations, and the null genotype has been reported to be a risk factor for developing
lung carcinoma
. A germline polymorphism of
p53
with a single-base change at codon 72 that causes an amino acid replacement of arginine (Arg; CGC) by proline (PRO; CCC) has also been reported to be associated with cancer susceptibility in a Japanese population. Both polymorphisms were genotyped by PCR in a northwestern Mediterranean healthy population (n = 147) and in a group of lung cancer patients (n = 139). The results showed that the frequency of the GSTM1 null genotype was higher in the lung cancer patients compared to the controls [odds ratio (OR), 1.57; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.99-2.51]. The histological subtypes most clearly modified were small cell carcinoma (OR, 1.89; CI, 0.97-3.65) and adenocarcinoma (OR, 1.93; CI, 0.90-4.14). The null GSTM1 genotype was more frequent among those cancer patients who were medium/ light smokers (< or = 50 pack-years) and in those who showed an onset of the disease at a more advanced age. The study of the
p53
polymorphism in the healthy population showed allele frequencies of 0.79 (Arg) and 0.21 (Pro). The frequencies found in the lung cancer patients were statistically similar. Both polymorphisms were studied together, and the relative risk of the combination null GSTM1 and Pro/Pro or Arg/Pro genotypes was calculated taking the combination of GTSM1 + together with Arq/Arg as a baseline. The OR found (1.97; CI, 1.03-3.73) suggests that the Pro allele of the
p53
germline polymorphism may slightly increase the risk fo the GSTM1 null genotype among smokers.
...
PMID:Glutathione-S-Transferase M1 and codon 72 p53 polymorphisms in a northwestern Mediterranean population and their relation to lung cancer susceptibility. 916 98
Immunohistochemistry and in situ hybridization techniques were used to investigate the correlation between
p53
gene mutation and the clinico-pathological status as well as prognosis of large cell
carcinoma of the lung
.
p53
expression was found in 40% of the cases by immunohistochemistry and
p53
gene mutation was found in 53.3% by in situ hybridization. The concordance ratio was 73.3% between gene mutation and protein expression. No statistically significant correlation was found between
p53
gene mutation, its protein expression and sex, age, smoking, histological type, tumor size or lymph node involvement. A significant correlation was found between
p53
gene mutation (or its protein expression) and mitotic index. The result of in situ hybridization demonstrated that there was a statistically significant correlation between
p53
gene mutation and a poor prognosis. It was found that
p53
gene mutation was associated with fast growth of the tumor. Therefore
p53
gene mutation is probably an indicator of poor prognosis for large cell
carcinoma of the lung
.
...
PMID:[A study on p53 gene mutation, protein expression and relationship with clinico-pathological status in large cell carcinoma of the lung]. 927 54
Human solid tumors develop multiple genetic evolutionary abnormalities as they evolve. Studies that have focused primarily on early colorectal cancer have suggested that genetic instability is a prominent feature of preinvasive disease. At least two separate mechanisms for the generation of genetic instability have been identified. The first, which involves widespread microsatellite instability in near-diploid cells, affects less than one-fifth of colon cancers. The second form of genetic instability is characterized by the development of
p53
gene abnormalities that result in gross aneuploidy and multiple structural chromosomal changes.
p53
/aneuploidy affects most colon cancers, breast cancers, and many other solid tumors. This genetic evolutionary change commonly occurs at the interface between severe dysplasia and invasive disease. Specific post-aneuploid sequences of genetic changes that are relevant to tumor progression often involve the accumulation of multiple gain-of-function abnormalities in individual cells. The co-occurrence of Her-2/neu overexpression and EGF receptor overexpression in the same aneuploid cells defines an adeno/squamous genetic evolutionary sequence that is common to ductal breast cancers, non-small cell lung cancers, and other solid tumors. Later steps in this sequence include ras and c-myc overexpression. The neuroendocrine genetic evolutionary sequence is a separate branch of the
p53
/aneuploidy sequence with distinctive features that include loss of Rb and raf1 overexpression. Her-2/neu overexpression is not characteristic of this sequence; c-myc amplification/overexpression is common to both
p53
-associated sequences. The neuroendocrine sequence is found in small cell
carcinoma of the lung
and in minor proportions of other solid tumors, including breast cancer. Multiparameter cell-based methods are especially well suited for elucidation in human solid tumors of the genetic evolutionary sequences that could provide a rational scientific basis for determining prognosis and for optimizing therapy in individual cancer patients.
...
PMID:Common patterns of genetic evolution in human solid tumors. 929 7
Mitogen-activated protein kinases function in signal transduction pathways that are involved in controlling key cellular processes in many organisms. A mammalian member of this kinase family, MKK4/JNKK1/SEK1, has been reported to link upstream MEKK1 to downstream stress-activated protein kinase/JNK1 and p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase. This mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway has been implicated in the signal transduction of cytokine- and stress-induced apoptosis in a variety of cell types. Here, we report that two human tumor cell lines, derived from pancreatic carcinoma and
lung carcinoma
, harbor homozygous deletions that eliminate coding portions of the MKK4 locus at 17p, located approximately 10 cM centromeric of
p53
. In addition, in a set of 88 human cancer cell lines prescreened for loss of heterozygosity, we detected two nonsense and three missense sequence variants of MKK4 in cancer cell lines derived from human pancreatic, breast, colon, and testis cells. In vitro biochemical assays revealed that, when stimulated by MEKK1, four of the five altered MKK4 proteins lacked the ability to phosphorylate stress-activated protein kinase. Thus, the incidence of coding mutations of MKK4 in the set of cell lines is 6 of 213 (approximately 3%). These findings suggest that MKK4 may function as a suppressor of tumorigenesis or metastasis in certain types of cells.
...
PMID:Human mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase 4 as a candidate tumor suppressor. 933 Oct 70
Inactivation of the
p53
gene plays a key role in tumour biology, probably through a disturbed cell cycle control and an increased genetic instability in
p53
-inactivated tumours. To learn more about the relationship between
p53
alterations, proliferation and genetic instability (DNA aneuploidy) in lung cancer patients, specimens of 220 surgically resected lung carcinomas with clinical follow-up information were examined by immunohistochemistry (
p53
; CM1) and flow cytometry. Nuclear
p53
positivity--found in 49.5% of the tumours--was associated with both high S-phase fraction (SPF) and DNA ploidy aberrations. SPF was higher in
p53
-positive tumours (15.9 +/- 10.2) than in
p53
-negative tumours (10.3 +/- 8.7; P = 0.03). The rate of
p53
positivity was higher in 101 DNA-aneuploid and DNA-multiploid tumours (55%) than in 27 diploid and peridiploid carcinomas (33%; P = 0.0512). These results are consistent with an in vivo role of
p53
inactivation for increased proliferative activity and development of genomic instability in lung cancer. There was no association between SPF and prognosis. Although prognosis was worse in DNA-aneuploid and multiploid tumours than in diploid, peridiploid and tetraploid carcinomas (P = 0.029), DNA ploidy was not an independent predictor of poor prognosis in multivariate analysis. These data show that DNA-flow cytometry has little prognostic value for patients with resected non-small-cell
lung carcinoma
.
...
PMID:DNA aneuploidy, S-phase fraction, nuclear p53 positivity, and survival in non-small-cell lung carcinoma. 933 38
Recently we have shown that in fibroblasts (NIH 3T3 and Rat-1 cells) inhibition of protein geranylgeranylation leads to a G0/G1 arrest, whereas inhibition of protein farnesylation does not affect cell cycle distribution. Here we demonstrate that in human tumor cells the geranylgeranyltransferase-I (GGTase-I) inhibitor GGTI-298 blocked cells in G0/G1, whereas the farnesyltransferase (FTase) inhibitor FTI-277 showed a differential effect depending on the cell line. FTI-277 accumulated Calu-1 and A-549
lung carcinoma
and Colo 357 pancreatic carcinoma cells in G2/M, T-24 bladder carcinoma, and HT-1080 fibrosarcoma cells in G0/G1, but had no effect on cell cycle distribution of pancreatic (Panc-1), breast (SKBr 3 and MDAMB-231), and head and neck (A-253) carcinoma cells. Furthermore, treatment of Calu-1, Panc-1, Colo 357, T-24, A-253, SKBr 3, and MDAMB-231 cells with GGTI-298, but not FTI-277, induced the protein expression levels of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21WAF. HT-1080 and A-549 cells had a high basal level of p21WAF, and GGTI-298 did not further increase these levels. Furthermore, GGTI-298 also induces the accumulation of large amounts of p21WAF mRNA in Calu-1 cells, a cell line that lacks the tumor suppressor gene
p53
. There was little effect of GGTI-298 on the cellular levels of another cyclin- dependent kinase inhibitor p27KIP as well as cyclin E and cyclin D1. These results demonstrate that GGTase-I inhibitors arrest cells in G0/G1 and induce accumulation of p21WAF in a
p53
-independent manner and that FTase inhibitors can interfere with cell cycle events by a mechanism that involves neither p21WAF nor p27KIP. The results also point to the potential of GGTase-I inhibitors as agents capable of restoring growth arrest in cells lacking functional
p53
.
...
PMID:The geranylgeranyltransferase-I inhibitor GGTI-298 arrests human tumor cells in G0/G1 and induces p21(WAF1/CIP1/SDI1) in a p53-independent manner. 934 Nov 67
Detection of gene mutations by sensitive polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based methods can allow to identify occult neoplastic cells in a great excess of nonmalignant cells. These molecular approaches have an enormous potential in terms of early diagnosis, detection of occult micrometastases of solid tumors, and minimal residual disease in patients with hematopoietic malignancies. Currently, the applications of such methods are limited, mainly because the high sensitivity required for the identification of rare mutated alleles can be achieved only in cases in which mutations occur in few specific codons of a gene or when the mutation is already known. No methods are available by which few alleles with unknown mutations in tumor genes can be recognized in a great excess of wild-type alleles. We have developed an extremely sensitive method, termed enriched single-strand conformational polymorphism (E-SSCP), which permits detection of a rare alleles with unknown mutations. The method is based on the observation that after a conventional SSCP analysis the vast majority of mutated bands migrate close to the wild-type bands. The area of the gel having the highest chance to hold mutated alleles is physically isolated and is used as substrate for a second round of SSCP. Serially diluted DNA samples containing gene mutations demonstrated detection of 1 mutant/10(6) normal alleles. The E-SSCP assay was first applied to six sputum samples of patients affected by lung cancers with known
p53
mutations showing in sputa the same mutations observed in tumors. The technique was then applied to eight cytologically negative sputum samples obtained from patients who later developed a clinically manifested
lung carcinoma
. In three cases, harboring a
p53
mutation in tumor tissue, the E-SSCP analysis allowed the detection of the mutations in sputa months before clinical diagnosis. In conclusion, we have presented a general, highly sensitive technique for the detection of unknown mutations that may have several potential applications and may hold considerable promise for the early detection and study of cancer.
...
PMID:Enriched SSCP: a highly sensitive method for the detection of unknown mutations. Application to the molecular diagnosis of lung cancer in sputum samples. 936 Aug 39
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>