Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0699790 (colon cancer)
28,837 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The differential expression of hundreds of tightly, transcriptionally controlled genes in isolated human colorectal cancer and respective normal mucosa from two patients was analyzed by the cDNA macroarray technique. mRNA prepared from the colorectal cancer tumors was compared with 588 genes spotted onto the filter. Case A showed down-regulation of the expression of cell-cycle-related genes including cyclins, cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) 2, and CDK-activating kinase, as compared with normal mucosa from the same patient. The tumors showed up-regulation of expression of angiogenesis-related genes such as type II cytoskeletal 8 keratin, metalloproteinase subtypes, VEGF, and bFGF, to over 5-fold the levels in normal mucosa. Thus, colorectal carcinoma tissues are characterized by the upregulation of molecules related with angiogenesis. These results suggest that angiogenesis-related molecules are suitable candidates for target-based therapies for colorectal cancer patients. In case B, the largest difference in expression between the tumor and mucosal tissues was observed in the MMP-1 gene. In contrast to the first case, there was no increase in expression of angiogenesis-related molecules or decrease in expression of cell-cycle-regulatory molecules. The expression profile was quite different between these two patients. This approach may eventually provide a mean of selecting target-based drugs in individual colon cancer patients.
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PMID:Upregulated expression of angiogenesis genes and down regulation of cell cycle genes in human colorectal cancer tissue determined by cDNA macroarray. 1129 27

The extravasation of metastatic cells is regulated by molecular events involving the initial adhesion of tumor cells to the endothelium and subsequently the migration of cells in the host connective tissue. E-selectin on endothelial cells and sialyl Lewis X carbohydrate component on tumor cells are mainly involved in the adhesion of colon carcinoma cells to the endothelium of target organ. Interaction of T84 colon cancer cells to purified E-selectin in vitro caused an increase in the tyrosine phosphorylation of a number of proteins as well as the modulation of cellular properties correlated to the metastatic phenotype. Specifically, E-selectin-stimulated actin reorganization, increased collagenase secretion, and induced cell migration. Treatment of T84 cells with herbimycin A inhibited cell adhesion as well as selectin-induced increase of cell migration, and cytoskeleton assembly. Our data demonstrate that binding of cancer cells to E-selectin starts signal transduction pathways which may affect the tumor metastatic abilities.
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PMID:E-selectin modulates the malignant properties of T84 colon carcinoma cells. 1205 73

Expression of E1AF/PEA3 (ETV4), an ets family transcription factor, has been implicated in the invasive potential of several cancer cell lines through induction of matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) expression. The aim of this study was to examine E1AF mRNA expression and to determine whether it is correlated with progression of, and/or MMP expression in, human colorectal cancer. Using the semi-quantitative reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), 100 colorectal cancer tissues were analysed for E1AF mRNA expression. Expression of ER81 (ETV1) and ERM (ETV5), the other two members of the PEA3 subfamily, and Ets-1 and Ets-2 was also analysed. The results were correlated with clinicopathological characteristics and MMP expression. Immunohistochemical analysis and an in vitro invasion assay were also performed. E1AF mRNA expression was detected in 62% of the 100 colorectal cancer tissues, but was undetectable or only faintly detected in adjacent non-tumour tissues. E1AF mRNA was detected in all of the ten liver metastases from colorectal cancers. E1AF expression correlated significantly with depth of invasion, lymphatic and venous invasion, lymph node and distant metastasis, advance in pathological tumour-node-metastasis stage, and recurrence. Patients with E1AF-positive tumours had significantly shorter overall and disease-free survival periods than did those with E1AF-negative tumours (p < 0.0001 and p < 0.0001, respectively). E1AF expression retained its significant predictive value for overall and disease-free survival in multivariate analysis that included conventional clinicopathological factors (p = 0.0066 and p = 0.0109, respectively). Among the MMPs analysed, expression of MMP-1 and matrilysin correlated significantly with E1AF expression. In contrast, expression of ER81 and ERM did not correlate with clinicopathological characteristics or the expression of these MMPs. Immunohistochemical expression of E1AF was predominantly observed at the invasive front, where the expression of MMP-1 and matrilysin and nuclear beta-catenin expression were often co-localized. Antisense E1AF-transfected HT-29 colon cancer cells expressed reduced levels of MMP-1 and matrilysin and were less invasive in vitro than neo-transfected HT-29 cells. The results of this study suggest that E1AF, the expression of which is closely correlated with the expression of MMP-1 and matrilysin, plays a key role in the progression of colorectal cancer.
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PMID:Association of ets-related transcriptional factor E1AF expression with tumour progression and overexpression of MMP-1 and matrilysin in human colorectal cancer. 1289 92

The effects of glycine-extended gastrin (G-Gly) on the invasion by colon cancer cells through stromal extracellular matrix and the role of metalloproteinases (MMPs) in this invasion were investigated. We found that 10(-9)-10(-6) M G-Gly significantly increased the invasiveness of 2 human colon cancer cell lines, LoVo and HT-29, both expressing the G-Gly-specific binding site but little gastrin/CCK-B receptor (gastrin receptor). LoVo cells expressed MMP-1, -2, -3 and -9. An amount of 10(-7) M G-Gly enhanced collagenase MMP-1 expression. Overexpression of enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP)-fused MMP-1 in LoVo cells, by cDNA transfection, enhanced invasiveness through type I collagen gel. Immunofluorescence study revealed that G-Gly increased the number of cytoplasmic vesicles containing MMP-1, some vesicles being released from the cells. The MMP-1 vesicles contained one of the ubiquitous coat proteins, Golgi-localized, gamma-adaptin ear-containing, ARF-binding proteins-2 (GGA-2). MMP-1 also colocalized with CD147 (EMMPRIN, an extracellular matrix metalloproteinase inducer in adjacent stromal cells). It was suggested that G-Gly increased the number of vesicles containing MMP-1 and that MMP-1 interacted with CD147 to increase invasion. G-Gly significantly enhanced the production of MMP-3, an activator of MMP-1 and -9, as well as gelatinase MMP-9 activity. The G-Gly-mediated MMP-9 increase was inhibited by treatment with anti-MMP-3 IgG and MMP-3 siRNA. Furthermore, G-Gly increased the proMMP-2 level, although no activated MMP-2 was found in conditioned medium in either the presence or the absence of G-Gly. By contrast, gastrin (10(-7) M) had no effect on the levels of these MMPs or the invasiveness of colon cancer cells in type I collagen gel and Matrigel. These effects of G-Gly on the activity and expression of MMPs and the invasiveness of colon cancer cells were inhibited by treating the cells with a broad-spectrum metalloproteinase inhibitor (CGS27023A) and nonselective gastrin/CCK receptor antagonists (proglumide and benzotript). But a gastrin/CCK-B receptor antagonist (YM022) did not inhibit the increased invasion by G-Gly. Together, these results demonstrate that G-Gly renders colon cancer cells more invasive by increasing MMP-1 and MMP-3 expressions via the putative G-Gly receptor and would thus be a good molecular target in a clinical setting.
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PMID:Glycine-extended gastrin induces matrix metalloproteinase-1- and -3-mediated invasion of human colon cancer cells through type I collagen gel and Matrigel. 1518 39

It is now becoming clear that matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) play a key role in tumor development and growth. MMPs are overexpressed in a variety of premalignant tumor tissues, including colorectal adenoma. Little is known about the mechanisms underlying the overexpression of MMPs in adenoma tissues. E1AF, an Ets family transcriptional factor, has been shown to play an important role in the expression of MMPs and cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) in advanced colorectal cancers. The aim of this study was to examine the E1AF expression and determine whether it is correlated with the expression of MMPs, COX-2 and inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) in human colorectal adenoma and submucosal cancer (pT1). Using the semi-quantitative RT-PCR, 90 colorectal tumors, including 63 adenomas and 27 cancers (pT1), were analyzed for the expression of E1AF, MMPs, COX-2 and iNOS. Immunohistochemical analysis and in vitro transfection assays were also performed. E1AF mRNA was detected in 43 (47.8%) of the 90 colorectal tumors. E1AF overexpression was significantly correlated with histopathology. E1AF expression was correlated significantly with the expression of MMP-1 and MMP-7. Overexpression of COX-2 and iNOS mRNA expression was observed in 42.2% and 66.7% of the 90 colorectal tumors, respectively. COX-2 was correlated significantly with size, gender, histopathology and E1AF. iNOS was correlated significantly with size, histopathology, E1AF and COX-2. The correlation of E1AF expression with COX-2 and iNOS expression was also demonstrated by immunohistochemistry. Northern blot analysis of transfectants showed the effect of E1AF on COX-2 expression as well as iNOS on E1AF/COX-2 expression in colon cancer cell lines. The results suggest that E1AF, in conjunction with the expression of MMP-1, MMP-7, COX-2 and iNOS, plays an important role in the early stage of colorectal carcinogenesis.
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PMID:Association of Ets-related transcriptional factor E1AF expression with overexpression of matrix metalloproteinases, COX-2 and iNOS in the early stage of colorectal carcinogenesis. 1569 37

In the vascular system, circulating tumor cells interact with endothelial cells. Tumor-endothelial cross-talk transforms the intravascular milieu to a prothrombotic, proinflammatory, and cell-adhesive state called endothelial cell activation (ECA). In the present study, we analyze the potential of metastatic tumor-derived soluble factors to transform the vascular endothelium into a prothrombotic and proinflammatory activated state. Supernatant from cultured melanoma and colon cancer cells (A375, WM9, A7, and HT-29) induced an acute activation of macrovascular and microvascular endothelial cells (human umbilical vein endothelial cells and human dermal microvascular endothelial cells) as shown by intracellular calcium flux and secretion of von Willebrand factor and interleukin-8, all markers of acute ECA. This process was inhibited using specific proteinase-activated receptor 1 (PAR1) inhibitors (RWJ-58259 and SCH-79797), indicating a mediating role for endothelial thrombin receptors. Immunofluorescence, Western blot analysis, and collagenase activity assay of tumor cells and culture supernatant revealed the presence of matrix metalloproteinase-1 (MMP-1), a recently described activator of PAR1. Inhibition of MMP-1 in supernatant from cultured tumor cells significantly attenuated ECA. Additional studies using isolated human MMP-1 (5 nmol/L) proved the presence of a functional MMP-1/PAR1 axis in tumor-endothelial communication. These findings show a new pathway of tumor-endothelial cross-talk via an intravascular MMP1/PAR1 axis in microvascular and macrovascular endothelium. Inhibition of this cross-talk may be a powerful means to prevent tumor-induced ECA and thus thrombotic and inflammatory cell adhesion.
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PMID:Tumor-derived matrix metalloproteinase-1 targets endothelial proteinase-activated receptor 1 promoting endothelial cell activation. 1688 80

Strong expression of many matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) has been related to poor survival of colorectal cancer (CRC) patients. The expression of tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases (TIMPs) has been associated with both a beneficial and a poor outcome and there is thus a need to further clarify the significance of MMPs and TIMPs in CRC. The prognostic significance of 4 MMPs and TIMPs in CRC was evaluated. Formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue arrayed samples of 351 patients with primary colon or rectal cancer of Dukes' stages A-D were selected for immunohistochemical staining of MMP-1, -2, -7 and -13, and TIMP-1, -2, -3 and -4. High expression of MMP-2 in the malignant epithelium as well as in the surrounding stroma was associated with reduced survival of colon cancer patients. Strong epithelial and stromal cytoplasmic staining of TIMP-3 was associated with a longer survival in rectal cancer patients, and here the interobserver variation for evaluating the degree of staining was lower than for epithelial staining. Strong stromal cytoplasmic staining of TIMP-4 predicted longer survival of rectal cancer patients. Multivariate analysis showed that stromal cytoplasmic TIMP-3 staining was the only marker of independent prognostic value. MMP-2 might be a useful prognostic marker in colon cancer, and TIMP-3 and TIMP-4 in rectal cancer, but the findings associated with stromal staining should be interpreted with some caution. Different biologic behavior or different genetic development may explain the differences between colon and rectal cancers regarding the expression of MMP-2, TIMP-3 and TIMP-4.
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PMID:Prognostic significance of matrix metalloproteinases-1, -2, -7 and -13 and tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases-1, -2, -3 and -4 in colorectal cancer. 1745 56

Retinol inhibits the growth of all-trans-retinoic acid (ATRA)-resistant human colon cancer cell lines through a retinoic acid receptor (RAR)-independent mechanism. The objectives of the current study were to determine if retinol inhibited the invasion of ATRA-resistant colon cancer cells independent of RAR and the effects of retinol on matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs). Retinol inhibited the migration and invasion of two ATRA-resistant colon cancer cell lines, HCT-116 and SW620, in a dose-dependent manner. To determine if transcription, particularly RAR-mediated transcription, or translation of new genes was required for retinol to inhibit cell invasion, cells were treated with retinol and cycloheximide, actinomycin D, or an RAR pan-antagonist. Treatment of cells with retinol and cycloheximide, actinomycin D, or an RAR pan-antagonist did not block the ability of retinol to inhibit cell invasion. In addition, retinol decreased MMP-1 mRNA levels in both cell lines, MMP-2 mRNA levels in the SW620 cell line, and MMP-7 and -9 mRNA levels in the HCT-116 cell line. Retinol also decreased the activity of MMP-2 and -9 and MMP-9 protein levels while increasing tissue inhibitor of MMP-1 media levels. In conclusion, retinol reduces the metastatic potential of ATRA-resistant colon cancer cells via a novel RAR-independent mechanism that may involve decreased MMP mRNA levels and activity.
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PMID:Retinol inhibits the invasion of retinoic acid-resistant colon cancer cells in vitro and decreases matrix metalloproteinase mRNA, protein, and activity levels. 1751 64

N-Acetylglucosaminyltransferase-V (GnT-V) has been reported to be up-regulated in invasive/metastatic cancer cells, but a comprehensive understanding of how the transferase correlates with the invasive/metastatic potential is not currently available. Through a glycomics approach, we identified 30 proteins, including tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase-1 (TIMP-1), as a target protein for GnT-V in human colon cancer cell WiDr. TIMP-1 was aberrantly glycosylated as characterized by the addition of beta1,6-N-acetylglucosamine, polylactosaminylation, and sialylation in GnT-V-overexpressing WiDr cells. Compared with normal TIMP-1, the aberrantly glycosylated TIMP-1 showed the weaker inhibition on both matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-2 and MMP-9, and this aberrancy was closely associated with cancer cell invasion and metastasis in vivo as well as in vitro. Integrated data, both of TIMP-1 expression level and aberrant glycosylation, could provide important information to aid to improve the clinical outcome of colon cancer patients.
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PMID:Functional proteomics study reveals that N-Acetylglucosaminyltransferase V reinforces the invasive/metastatic potential of colon cancer through aberrant glycosylation on tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase-1. 1787 70

Cancer-induced alterations of protein glycosylations are well-known phenomena. Hence, the glycoprofile of certain glycoproteins can potentially be used as biomarkers for early diagnosis. However, there are a substantial number of candidates and the techniques for measuring their biomarker potential are limited, calling for new methods. Here, we have investigated the cancer marker potential of the glycoprofile of tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase-1 (TIMP-1) using a method for comparative glycoprofiling. Glycoprofiles were obtained from plasma TIMP-1 of five healthy donors and five colorectal cancer (CRC) patients showing increased amounts of TIMP-1. Furthermore, the TIMP-1 glycoprofiles of media from two colon cancer cell lines (CCC) and a prostate cancer cell line were determined as disease references. TIMP-1 was purified from IgG-depleted samples using immuno affinity and gel electrophoresis and the glycoprofiling was performed using glycopeptide enrichment and mass spectrometry. The heterogeneous glycoprofiles of TIMP-1 were found to be highly conserved among the healthy donors, proving an ideal candidate marker and showed high reproducibility of the method. Numerous CCC-specific TIMP-1 glycans were observed illustrating cancer-induced changes. Unexpectedly, quantitation revealed that the glycoprofiles of healthy donors and CRC patients varied minimally. Considering the increased CRC TIMP-1 levels and the observed CCC-specific glycans, the lack of variation indicates that the increased amount of CRC TIMP-1 is not a direct product of the cancer cells. Hence, the TIMP-1 glycoprofile holds no biomarker potential for CRC when using plasma as the sample origin. This study clearly illustrates that the technique is capable of performing individualised site-specific glycan analysis and representing a new tool for biomarker investigation of low-abundant glycoproteins.
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PMID:Investigating the biomarker potential of glycoproteins using comparative glycoprofiling - application to tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases-1. 1820 88


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