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)

Oligosaccharides with Lex determinant (Gal beta 1----4[Fuc alpha 1----3]GlcNAc) are accumulated in large quantities in various adenocarcinomas. Monoclonal antibodies recognizing mono-, di-, or trimeric Lex showed a preferential staining of specific stages of human fetal tissues and various human adenocarcinomas. Thus, these carbohydrate epitopes are typical of oncodevelopmental antigens. The present study investigated the presence of Lex epitope in sera of normal individuals and cancer patients, utilizing two high-affinity monoclonal antibodies, SH1 and SH2, directed to mono- and dimeric Lex structures, respectively. The Lex antigen in serum was eluted in the void volume fraction of a gel filtration column, determined by using monoclonal antibody SH1, and found to be carried on a glycoprotein with a molecular weight of approximately 200,000. The Lex antigen was present in the void volume fraction of the majority (85%) of sera from adenocarcinoma patients. Although the Lex epitope was also detected in a smaller proportion (33%) of normal sera, its levels were significantly lower than in cancer sera. Lex antigen was also detected in serum glycolipid fraction; however, no significant differences were observed in normal and cancer sera. A double determinant solid phase immunoassay utilizing SH2 as the capture antibody and SH1 as the detecting antibody allowed direct determination of Lex levels in sera. By the use of this direct assay, the levels of serum Lex were found to increase in association with the progression of colorectal cancer (Dukes A to D). The percentage of detectability in sera from colon cancer patients was as follows: Dukes A, 20%; Dukes B, 45%; Dukes C, 67%; and Dukes D, 74%. The levels of serum Lex were also of prognostic value in Dukes C cancer patients after surgery and during postoperative follow-up.
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PMID:Profiles of Lewisx-containing glycoproteins and glycolipids in sera of patients with adenocarcinoma. 230 2

Mucins synthesized in colonic cancer are known to be different from those in the normal colon; however, the biochemical differences between these mucins have not been defined. We have purified mucins from samples of nonneoplastic (normal) human colon and colon cancer and found that the carbohydrate content of the cancer-associated mucins is 48% of that in the normal colon, including significant reductions in galactose, N-acetylglucosamine, N-acetylgalactosamine, and fucose. By subjecting the mucins to alkaline degradation, we determined that there are 19% fewer oligosaccharide chains per milligram of cancer-associated colonic mucin than there are in mucins from normal colons. We also found a reduction in mean oligosaccharide chain length in cancer-associated mucin (5.83 carbohydrate residues per chain) compared with those derived from normal colons (10.2 residues). Total and individual amino acid contents were greater in cancer-associated mucins, with the exception of three amino acids (threonine, serine, and proline), two of which represent the O-linked glycosylation sites for glycoproteins. Thus, mucins are aberrantly glycosylated in colon cancer, both in terms of the number and mean chain length of the oligosaccharide moiety. Because of their relative abundance in colonic tissue, mucins appear to be useful molecular species in the study of the derangements in protein glycosylation that occur during neoplasia.
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PMID:The carbohydrate composition of mucin in colonic cancer. 232 10

Colon cancer cells in culture synthesize and secrete mucin glycoproteins, which carry a number of cancer-associated antigens. However, the structures and mechanisms of biosynthetic processing are not well understood. Mucins synthesized and secreted by LS174T human colon cancer cells were compared to those in LS174T xenografts in athymic mice. Mucins radiolabeled with glucosamine or sulfate were purified by gel filtration and cesium chloride density gradient centrifugation. The mucins were of high molecular weight and were resistant to chondroitinase ABC, hyaluronidase and HNO2 treatment. They were, however, susceptible to pronase digestion and mild alkaline treatment. Using radiochemical precursors, the cellular mucin was shown to contain fucose, galactose, N-acetylgalactosamine, N-acetylglucosamine, N-acetylneuraminic acid, and sulfate. Oligosaccharides released by beta-elimination had N-acetylgalactosaminitol as the reduced amino sugar and also unreduced galactosamine, indicating that there is N-acetyl-galactosamine O-glycosidically attached to protein core and also peripheral N-acetyl-galactosamine not directly linked to protein. DEAE-cellulose chromatography of mucins showed two major peaks with both intracellular and secreted mucins, but xenograft mucins also had more acidic components. Sulfate-labeled mucins were shifted to less acidic peaks by neuraminidase digestion, which indicates that the same mucin molecules are both sialylated and sulfated. We conclude that the intracellular mucins of cultured colon cancer cells, those secreted into the medium, and those in nude mouse xenografts are chemically similar, but differ in sialic acid and sulfate content. This experimental model system, LS174T cells maintained in culture and as nude mouse xenografts, may be useful for further biosynthetic and structural studies of colon cancer mucin.
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PMID:Comparison of metabolically labeled mucins of LS174T human colon cancer cells in tissue culture and xenograft. 273 49

The LewisX (LeX) antigen [characterized by trisaccharide Gal beta 1----4 (Fuc alpha 1----3)N-acetylglucosamine] is an oncodevelopmental antigen in the human colon. Monoclonal antibodies (MoAbs), anti-SSEA-1 and AH8-183, which recognize LeX antigen either on short oligosaccharide side chains or as a terminal immunodeterminant on longer carbohydrate side chains of glycoconjugates, bind to most colon cancer tissues but also to some normal colon mucosae. However, the monoclonal antibodies FH1, FH4, FH6, and IB9, which recognize extended difucosylated and trifucosylated LeX structures or their sialylated derivatives, are more cancer-associated because they rarely bind to normal colon mucosa. In the present study, these MoAbs were used to compare the expression of various LeX-related antigens in premalignant (adenomatous) and nonpremalignant (hyperplastic) colorectal polyps. Antigen expression in polyps was also compared to antigen expressions of normal colon mucosa and colon cancer tissues. The four MoAbs recognizing extended LeX antigens bound to adenomatous polyps (APs) significantly more than to hyperplastic polyps (HPs). In contrast, anti-SSEA-1 and AH8-183 recognizing monofucosyl LeX were less able to distinguish between APs and HPs. In APs, staining with the four MoAbs recognizing extended LeX antigens correlated with the premalignant parameters of larger polyp size, more severe dysplasia, and increased villose component. However, staining with AH8-183 correlated only with polyp size, and anti-SSEA-1 correlated only with polyp size and degree of dysplasia. In general, the staining frequency of HPs was similar to that of normal colon mucosa, although FH6, which did not stain any specimens of normal mucosa, stained a few HPs. The staining frequency of APs was less than that of colon cancer tissues, but these differences were generally not statistically significant. In conclusion, extended LeX antigens and their sialylated derivatives are cancer-associated antigens that are expressed preferentially in premalignant colon polyps, that tend to correlate with malignant potential in these polyps, and that may eventually help to define mechanisms involved in the polyp-to-cancer sequence.
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PMID:Expression of LewisX and sialylated LewisX antigens in human colorectal polyps. 346 62

Biochemical studies have revealed that some normal cells express the LeX trisaccharide Gal beta 1----4(Fuc alpha 1----3)GlcNAc either on short-chain fucolipids or as a single immunodeterminant on glycolipid oligosaccharide side chains. Cancer cells, including those from colonic adenocarcinomas, express this antigen on longer type 2 blood group side chains as difucosylated or trifucosylated fucolipids. Moreover, sialylated forms of difucosylated LeX also accumulate in colon cancer but not in normal colonic mucosa. In the present study, six monoclonal antibodies which selectively recognize the various LeX-related antigens were used for immunohistochemical examination of these antigens in serial sections of human colonic tissue. All of these antigens were oncodevelopmental in human colon. Monoclonal antibodies anti-SSEA-1 and AH8-183, directed against short-chain, monofucosylated LeX, were unable to discriminate well between normal and malignant colonic tissue. However, the other four antibodies were much better at distinguishing cancer from normal tissue. FH6 was the most specific in that no normal tissues bound this antibody. However, FH6 failed to stain poorly differentiated cancers and some colloid-type carcinomas. FH4, which was also highly specific, stained almost all cancers, regardless of the degree of differentiation. FH4 primarily stained cancer cell cytoplasm, whereas the sialylated antigen defined by FH6 predominantly stained cell membranes. Differences were noted between the expression of LeX-related antigens in autopsied normal mucosa compared to mucosa of benign colonic diseases. Monoclonal antibodies recognizing long-chain polyfucosylated and sialylated LeX-related antigens appear to be useful tools for detection of colon cancer.
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PMID:Lewisx- and sialylated Lewisx-related antigen expression in human malignant and nonmalignant colonic tissues. 351 83

Three samples of carcinoembryonic antigens were purified from liver metastases of primary colon cancer. The asparagine-linked sugar chains of carcinoembryonic antigens (CEA) were released as oligosaccharides by hydrazinolysis and the structures of oligosaccharides, thus obtained, was studied in combination with methylation analysis and several limited exoglycosidase digestions. All three CEAs contain approximately 25 asparagine-linked sugar chains in one molecule and about 10% of them was high mannose type. However, structural features of the outer chain moieties of the remaining complex-type sugar chains were different by CEA samples. The complex-type sugar chains were mono-, bi-, tri-, and tetraantennary with Man alpha 1----6(+/- GlcNAc beta 1----4)(Man alpha 1----3)Man beta 1----4GlcNAc beta 1----4(+/- Fuc alpha 1----6)GlcNAc as their cores, half of which were bisected; 86% of their proximal N-acetylglucosamine was fucosylated. The major outer chains in two samples were N-acetyllactosamine and Gal beta 1----4(Fuc alpha 1----3)GlcNAc (X-antigenic determinant) and the remaining one sample contained Fuc alpha 1----2Gal beta 1----4(Fuc alpha 1----3)GlcNAc (Y-antigenic determinant) as an additional major outer chain. Furthermore, small amounts of type 1 chain and Lea antigenic determinant were found in some samples. Acidic oligosaccharides consisted of sialic acid containing fractions and sialidase-resistant fractions, and their contents seemed to be in a reciprocal relationship. Sialic acid was linked at the C-3 and C-6 positions of the nonreducing terminal galactose residues of the outer chains.
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PMID:Structural studies of the carbohydrate moieties of carcinoembryonic antigens. 358 Oct 81

The lectin GS I-A4 binds to terminal alpha-N-acetylgalactosaminyl (GalNAc) groups (which include the Tn antigen), but not to the closely related tumor-associated epitope, sialylated Tn antigen. The lectin also precipitates asialo OSM, but not its native sialylated form. Lectin histochemistry with human colonic tissues showed that GS I-A4 specifically stained specimens of colon cancer and colonic tissues from individuals with FAP; however, normal colonic tissues from patients without colonic disease were rarely stained with this lectin. Glycoconjugates bound by GS I-A4 were observed on the surface membranes of 2 human colon cancer cell lines, LS174t and SW1116, when fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-conjugated GS I-A4 was used. GS I-A4 was toxic to these 2 human colon cancer cell lines in monolayer culture. A dose-response study conducted using 10-160 micrograms/ml, of GS I-A4 demonstrated significant dose-related toxicity against LS174t and SW1116 cells. At concentrations > 80 micrograms/ml, > 99% of LS174t and > 90% of SW1116 cells were killed. Four mM GalNAc specifically inhibited the cytotoxic effect of GS I-A4 (p < 0.001), whereas 4mM N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) had no effect. Two other lectins that recognize terminal alpha-GalNAc residues, DBA and LBL, were significantly less cytotoxic to the colon cancer cells than GS I-A4. In the light of these findings, we speculate that GS I-A4 may have potential use as a diagnostic agent against colorectal cancer.
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PMID:The lectin Griffonia simplicifolia I-A4 (GS I-A4) specifically recognizes terminal alpha-linked N-acetylgalactosaminyl groups and is cytotoxic to the human colon cancer cell lines LS174t and SW1116. 751 54

E-, P-, and L-selectin support the adhesion of leukocytes to the vessel wall through the recognition of specific carbohydrate ligands, which often contain sialylated, fucosylated lactosamines such as sialyl Lewis x [sLex; Neu5Ac alpha 2-3Gal beta 1-4(Fuc alpha 1-3)GlcNAc-]. E-selectin expressed by activated endothelium has been shown to support the adhesion of sLex-bearing colon cancer cells. In the present study, we examine the interactions of multiple colon cancer cell lines with all three selectins. Three colon cancer cell lines (LS 180, T84, and COLO 205) bound to recombinant purified E-, P-, and L-selectin. The colon cancer line COLO 320 bound to P- and L-selectin but not E-selectin; conversely, HT-29 cells bound E-selectin but not P- and L-selectin. Caco-2 showed little or no interaction with any of the three selectins. Treatment of the cells with O-sialoglycoprotease from Pasteurella haemolytica, an enzyme that selectively cleaves mucin-type O-linked glycoproteins, reduced binding to purified P- and L-selectin in all cases. In addition, recombinant soluble P- and L-selectin bound to affinity-purified mucins from all adherent tumor cell lines. Of the four tumor cell lines that interacted with E-selectin, O-glycoprotease treatment substantially diminished adhesion of LS 180 and T84, had little effect on COLO 205, and failed to inhibit the binding of HT-29. As predicted by these data, E-selectin showed substantial binding only to mucins purified from LS 180 and T84. These findings suggest that L- and P-selectin interact primarily with mucin-type ligands on colon cancers, whereas E-selectin can recognize both mucin and nonmucin ligands. Binding of the colon cancer lines to purified selectins correlates with their adhesion to activated endothelial cells (E-selectin-dependent), platelets (P-selectin-dependent), and neutrophils (L-selectin-dependent). These differential tumor cell-selectin interactions may influence metastatic spread and may also contribute to the observed variability in host response to tumor progression.
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PMID:Differential colon cancer cell adhesion to E-, P-, and L-selectin: role of mucin-type glycoproteins. 754 41

UDP-GlcNAc: GalNAc-R beta 3-GlcNAc-transferase (core 3 beta 3-GlcNAc-T, where GlcNAc is N-acetyl-D-glucosamine, GalNAc is N-acetyl-D-galactosamine and T is transferase) is expressed in a tissue-specific fashion and is high in normal colonic tissue, but downregulated in colon cancer. To further study the control of this enzyme, we examined the activity in pig, rat and human colonic tissues, and several human cancer cell lines. The enzyme was difficult to solubilize by detergents and was extremely unstable in the solubilized form. Using synthetic derivatives of the GalNAc-R substrate, we showed that the specificity of the enzyme in normal rat and human colonic mucosa requires all the substituents of the GalNAc-sugar ring of substrates for maximal activity. Core 3 beta 3-GlcNAc-T was significantly influenced by the structure of the aglycon group. None of the inactive substrate derivatives could inhibit the activity. N-Iodoacetamido-galactosamine alpha-benzyl was a weak substrate and significantly inhibited the incorporation of GLcNAc into GalNAc alpha-benzyl by human colonic homogenates. Surprisingly, none of the colonic cancer cell lines or any other cancer and leukaemia cells examined exhibited detectable activity of the enzyme, although a number of other glycosyltransferase activities involved in O-glycan biosynthesis were active. Mixing experiments did not reveal an endogenous inhibitor in HL60 cells or an activator of core 3 beta 3-GlcNAc-T in human colonic mucosa. Thus, the lack of core 3 beta 3-GlcNAc-T in human colonic mucosa. Thus, the lack of core 3 beta 3-GlcNAc-T activity in cancer cell lines may be due to cell transformation or cell culturing.
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PMID:Synthesis of O-glycan core 3: characterization of UDP-GlcNAc: GalNAc-R beta 3-N-acetyl-glucosaminyltransferase activity from colonic mucosal tissues and lack of the activity in human cancer cell lines. 765 72

Initial attachment of leukocytes to the vessel wall at sites of inflammation is supported by a family of carbohydrate-binding adhesion molecules called the selectins. Selectin ligands include sialyl-Lewis x (sLex, Neu5Ac alpha 2-3Gal beta 1-4[Fuc alpha 1-3]GlcNAc--) and related structures. We report here that defined heparin oligosaccharides interact with the selectins. Heparin chains containing four or more monosaccharide residues inhibited the function of L- and P-selectin, but not E-selectin, in vitro. In a competition enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay measuring inhibition of solution-phase selectin-Ig fusion proteins (selectin-Ig) binding to immobilized bovine serum albumin-sLex neoglycoprotein, a heparin-derived tetrasaccharide mixture inhibited 50% of L- and P-selectin-Ig binding (IC50) at 200 +/- 40 mumol/L and 850 +/- 110 mumol/L, respectively. A single hexasulfated tetrasaccharide (delta UA2S alpha 1-4GlcNS6S alpha 1-4IdoA2S alpha 1-4GlcNS6S) was particularly active against L- and P-selectin-Ig (IC50 = 46 +/- 5 mumol/L and 341 +/- 24 mumol/L). By comparison, the tetrasaccharide sLex was not inhibitory at concentrations up to 1 mmol/L. In cell adhesion assays, heparin tetrasaccharides reduced binding of neutrophils to COS cells expressing P-selectin but not to COS cells expressing E-selectin. They also blocked colon cancer cell adhesion to L- and P-selectin but not E-selectin. In a model of acute inflammation, intravenously administered heparin tetrasaccharides diminished influx of neutrophils into the peritoneal cavities of thioglycollate-treated mice. We conclude that heparin oligosaccharides, including non-anticoagulant tetrasaccharides, are effective L- and P-selectin inhibitors in vitro and have anti-inflammatory activity in vivo.
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PMID:Heparin oligosaccharides bind L- and P-selectin and inhibit acute inflammation. 769 75


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