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Query: UMLS:C0699790 (
colon cancer
)
28,837
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Maspin, mammary serine protease inhibitor, is a recently identified tumour suppressor and has a profound effect on cell motility. This study examined the effect of gamma linolenic acid (GLA), an essential fatty acid (EFA) with anticancer properties, on the expression of
maspin
and motility of cancer cells. Six human cell lines including
colon cancer
, mammary cancer, and melanoma were used. Expression of
maspin
protein was determined by immunocytochemistry & Western blotting. Maspin mRNA was detected with reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR). Four of the six cell types expressed
maspin
with MDA MB 231 and ECV304 (endothelial cell) being negative. Treatment of these
maspin
positive cells with gamma linolenic acid (GLA) resulted in a concentration dependent stimulation of the expression of
maspin
protein with the effects seen as early as 4 hours. Linoleic acid had an inhibitory effects. Alpha linolenic acid and arachidonic acid had no significant effect. The mRNA levels from cells treated with GLA was seen to increase as shown by RT-PCR. Cell motility, monitored with time-lapse video recording and Hoffmann microscopy, showed a marked reduction in terms of spreading and migration on extracellular matrix coated surface. This reduction was reversed with anti-
maspin
antibody. It is concluded that GLA, a member of then-6 series of EFAs, up-regulates the expression of
maspin
which is associated with a reduction in the motility of cancer cells.
...
PMID:Gamma linolenic acid regulates expression of maspin and the motility of cancer cells. 929 18
In humans, decreased intestinal motility, compromised nutritional status and increased risk of
colon cancer
are commonly associated with aging. Here, we used the cDNA microarray analysis to detect age-associated changes in duodenal and colonic gene expression in male Fischer 344 rats. The primary finding of this study is that the magnitude and direction of age-associated changes in gene expression differs in the colon and duodenum. In the colon, 56 genes showed altered expression, whereas expression of only 25 genes was altered in the duodenum. The magnitude of change was greater in the colon than in the duodenum. The direction of change also differed; in the aged colon, expression of 51 genes increased and only five genes decreased. In contrast, in the aged duodenum, only seven genes increased, whereas 18 genes decreased in expression. In the duodenum of aged rats, expression of genes involved in ATP-generating pathways is decreased. In contrast, in the colon of aged rats, expression of genes involved in energy generating pathways and in lipid oxidation is increased. In addition, in the aging colon, an increased expression of genes that show an aberrant regulation in
colon cancer
, including CD44, ras, and
maspin
is observed. Collectively, these findings provide clues to molecular events that may be related to compromised intestinal function and the high incidence of
colon cancer
in the aged population.
...
PMID:Age-associated changes in gene expression patterns in the duodenum and colon of rats. 1124 Jan 59
We studied the expression of
maspin
in colonic adenocarcinoma compared with adenoma and metastatic adenocarcinoma as well as the relationship with its possible regulator, p53. The colonic specimens consisted of 24 adenomas, 49 adenocarcinomas, and 17 metastatic adenocarcinomas. Immunohistochemical staining of paraffin sections was done with microwave-based antigen retrieval methods. The Ki-67 index and the microvessel density were counted using an image analysis system. Maspin expression was positive in 75.5% of adenocarcinomas and 91.7% of adenomas. Only 47.1% of the nodal metastasis showed positive
maspin
expression. In colonic adenocarcinomas, p53 expression was positive in 44.7% of the
maspin
-positive groups compared with 100% of the
maspin
-negative groups (P < 0.005). Colonic adenocarcinomas with the positive
maspin
expression groups showed less intense microvessel density (181.1 +/- 54.2) than those of the negative
maspin
expression groups (256.1 +/- 75.4,P < 0.001). In conclusion, we demonstrated
maspin
expression in
colon cancer
with a sequential decreased expression rate from adenoma to metastatic carcinomas, which signifies the tumor suppressive function of
maspin
, and an inverse correlation with p53 and microvessel density, which indicates the regulatory effect of p53 on
maspin
and anti-angiogenesis effect of
maspin
.
...
PMID:Expression of maspin in colon cancers: its relationship with p53 expression and microvessel density. 1218 37
Evidence from live cell bioassays shows that the flat mucosa from patients with
colon cancer
exhibits resistance to bile salt-induced apoptosis. Three independent cell lines derived from the colonic epithelial cell line HCT-116 were selected for resistance to bile salt-induced apoptosis. These cell lines were developed as tissue culture models of apoptosis resistance. Selection was carried out for resistance to apoptosis induced by sodium deoxycholate (NaDOC), the bile salt found in highest concentrations in human fecal water. Cultures of HCT-116 cells were serially passaged in the presence of increasing concentrations of NaDOC. The resulting apoptosis resistant cells were able to grow at concentrations of NaDOC (0.5 mM) that cause apoptosis in a few hours in unselected HCT-116 cells. These cells were then analyzed for changes in gene expression. Observations from cDNA microarray, 2-D gel electrophoresis/MALDI-mass spectroscopy, and confocal microscopy of immunofluorescently stained preparations indicated underexpression or overexpression of numerous genes at either the protein or mRNA level. Genes that may play a role in apoptosis and early stage carcinogenesis have been identified as upregulated in these cell lines, including Grp78, Bcl-2, NF-kappaB(p50), NF-kappaB(p65), thioredoxin peroxidase (peroxiredoxin) 2, peroxiredoxin 4,
maspin
, guanylate cyclase activating protein-1, PKCzeta, EGFR, Ras family members, PKA, PI(4,5)K, TRAF2 and BIRC1 (IAP protein). Under-expressed mRNAs included BNIP3, caspase-6, caspase-3 and serine protease 11. NF-kappaB was constitutively activated in all three resistant cell lines, and was responsible, in part, for the observed apoptosis resistance, determined using antisense oligonucleotide strategies. Molecular and cellular analyses of these resistant cell lines has suggested potential mechanisms by which apoptosis resistance may develop in the colonic epithelium in response to high concentrations of hydrophobic bile acids that are associated with a Western-style diet. These analyses provide the rationale for the development of hypothesis-driven intermediate biomarkers to assess
colon cancer
risk on an individual basis.
...
PMID:Development and molecular characterization of HCT-116 cell lines resistant to the tumor promoter and multiple stress-inducer, deoxycholate. 1250 30
Maspin, a member of the serpin family, has been reported to suppress metastasis and angiogenesis in breast and prostate cancers. Overexpression of
maspin
was associated with adverse prognostic features in several other tumours. In this study, expression of
maspin
was analysed in 41 colorectal carcinomas with high-frequency microsatellite instability (MSI-H) and 159 microsatellite stable colorectal cancers (MSS/MSI-L) by immunohistochemistry (IHC) and partly by relative quantitative real-time RT-PCR and western blot analyses. Significant upregulation of
maspin
expression was found in MSI-H tumours compared to both MSS/MSI-L tumours and matched benign colonic mucosa. Increased
maspin
expression was also found in three MSI-H
colon cancer
cell lines, but not in three MSS
colon cancer
cell lines by RT-PCR and western blot analyses. Regulation of
maspin
expression depended on promoter methylation as tissue specimens and cell lines expressing
maspin
showed unmethylated
maspin
promoters, whereas promoter hypermethylation was found in specimens with loss of
maspin
expression. Intense nuclear
maspin
immunostaining was seen specifically in MSI-H tumours (p = 0.013), de-differentiated tumours (p = 0.006), and at the invasion front. These findings provide new insights into the role of
maspin
in colorectal cancer progression and may be useful for diagnosis and treatment strategies.
...
PMID:Elevated nuclear maspin expression is associated with microsatellite instability and high tumour grade in colorectal cancer. 1571 92
In the present article, we describe a mechanistic study of a novel derivative of N-amidino-substituted benzimidazo[1,2-alpha]quinoline in two human colorectal cancer cell lines differing in p53 gene status. We used a proteomic approach based on two-dimensional gel electrophoresis coupled with mass spectrometry to complement the results obtained by common molecular biology methods for analyzing cell proliferation, cell cycle, and apoptosis. Tested quinoline derivative inhibited
colon cancer
cell growth, whereby p53 gene status seemed to be critical for its differential response patterns. DNA damage and oxidative stress are likely to be the common triggers of molecular events underlying its antiproliferative effects. In HCT 116 (wild-type p53), this compound induced a p53-dependent response resulting in accumulation of the G(1)- and S-phase cells and induction of apoptosis via both caspase-3-dependent and caspase-independent pathways. Quinoline derivative triggered transient, p53-independent G(2)-M arrest in mutant p53 cells (SW620) and succeeding mitotic transition, whereby these cells underwent cell death probably due to aberrant mitosis (mitotic catastrophe). Proteomic approach used in this study proved to be a valuable tool for investigating cancer cell response to newly synthesized compound, as it specifically unraveled some molecular changes that would not have been otherwise detected (e.g., up-regulation of the p53-dependent chemotherapeutic response marker
maspin
in HCT 116 and impairment in ribosome biogenesis in SW620). Finally, antiproliferative effects of tested quinoline derivative on SW620 cells strongly support its possible role as an antimetastatic agent and encourage further in vivo studies on the chemotherapeutic potential of this compound against colorectal carcinoma.
...
PMID:Differential antiproliferative mechanisms of novel derivative of benzimidazo[1,2-alpha]quinoline in colon cancer cells depending on their p53 status. 1864 22
Increased
maspin
expression in the colon is related to
colon cancer
risk and patient survival. Maspin is induced by the hydrophobic bile acid, deoxycholate (DOC), which is an endogenous carcinogen and inducer of oxidative stress and DNA damage in the colon. Persistent exposure of colon epithelial cells, in vitro, to high physiologic levels of DOC results in increased constitutive levels of
maspin
protein expression associated with the development of apoptosis resistance. When an apoptosis-resistant colon epithelial cell line (HCT-116RC) developed in the authors' laboratory was treated with a
maspin
-specific siRNA probe, there was a statistically significant increase in apoptosis compared to treatment with an siRNA control probe. These results indicate, for the first time, that
maspin
is an anti-apoptotic protein in the colon. Immunohistochemical evaluation of
maspin
expression in human colonic epithelial cells during sporadic colon carcinogenesis (131 human tissues evaluated) indicated a statistically significant increase in
maspin
protein expression beginning at the polyp stage of carcinogenesis. There was no statistically significant difference in
maspin
expression between hyperplastic/adenomatous polyps and colonic adenocarcinomas. The absence of "field defects" in the non-neoplastic colonic mucosa of patients with colonic neoplasia indicates that
maspin
may drive the growth of tumors, in part, through its anti-apoptotic function.
...
PMID:Maspin is a deoxycholate-inducible, anti-apoptotic stress-response protein differentially expressed during colon carcinogenesis. 2216 27
We hypothesized that cancer tissue immunogens - antigens capable of inducing specific antibody production in patients - are promising targets for development of precision diagnostics and humoral immunotherapies. We developed an innovative immuno-proteomic strategy and identified new immunogenic markers of
colon cancer
. Proteins from cancers and matched normal tissues were separated by 2D gel electrophoresis and blotted with serum antibodies from the same patients. Antibody-reactive proteins were sequenced by mass spectrometry and validated by Western blotting and immunohistochemistry. 170 serum antibody-reactive proteins were identified only in cancerous but not matched normal. Among these, proteasome subunit alpha type 1 (PSA1), leucine aminopeptidase 3 (LAP3), annexin A3 (ANXA3), and
maspin
(serpin B5) were reproducibly found in tissues from three patients. Differential expression patterns were confirmed in samples from eight patients with various stages of colon adenocarcinoma and liver metastases. These tumor-resident proteins and/or their associated serum antibodies may be promising markers for
colon cancer
screening and early diagnosis. Furthermore, tumor tissue-specific antibodies could potentially be exploited as immunotherapeutic targets against cancer. More generally, proteomic profiling of antibody-inducing cancer-associated immunogens represents a powerful generic method for uncovering the tumor antigen-ome, i.e., the totality of immunogenic tumor-associated proteins.
...
PMID:Proteomic profiling of antibody-inducing immunogens in tumor tissue identifies PSMA1, LAP3, ANXA3, and maspin as colon cancer markers. 2942