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)

Altered expression of ABH blood group substances is a common feature of human colorectal carcinoma, yet it remains unclear how these structural changes influence the biological properties of tumor cells. Azoxymethane-induced rat colon tumors display many features of the human disease, thereby providing a potentially useful model to study the role of blood group substances in colon cancer progression. We have prepared monoclonal antibodies to a microsomal fraction isolated from an azoxymethane-induced rat colon tumor and selected an antibody that detects cancer-associated changes. Monoclonal antibody (mAb) 3A7 recognizes a determinant on type 2 chain blood group A (GalNAc alpha 1-3[Fuc alpha 1-2]Gal beta 1-4GlcNAc-R) and B (Gal alpha 1-3[Fuc alpha 1-2]Gal beta 1-4GlcNAc-R) oligosaccharides. Expression of the epitope detected by this antibody was developmentally regulated in rat colon, with maximal expression from day 4-21 after birth. Immunohistochemical staining and Western blotting analyses of azoxymethane-induced colon tumors revealed increased expression of the epitope in all of the 21 colonic tumors examined, including preneoplastic glands within transitional mucosa. Conventional and signet-ring adenocarcinomas that had invaded through the muscularis propria (Duke's B2) consistently showed the most intense staining with mAb 3A7, including regions depicting angioinvasion. Some of the lymph node metastases (Duke's C2) stained poorly with the antibody. The epitope was also expressed in blood group A positive human colon carcinoma cell lines, including HT29 and SW480 but not by SW620, a cell line derived from a lymph node metastasis isolated in vivo from the SW480 primary tumor, or in the blood group B cell line SW1417. The glycoproteins detected by mAb 3A7 in rat colon tumors and HT29 cells ranged in size between 50 and 200 kd, including a major species of 140 kd. Affinity chromatography of detergent lysates of normal rat colon on the blood group A specific lectin Dolichos biflorus (DBA)-agarose resulted in nearly quantitative binding of glycoprotein species detected by the antibody. By contrast, immunoreactive glycoproteins from rat colon tumors or HT29 cells bound poorly to DBA-agarose but were retained by another blood group A-binding lectin, Helix-pomatia (HPA)-agarose. These results indicate that colon carcinogenesis results in quantitative as well as qualitative changes in oligosaccharides detected by mAb 3A7 and suggest that the combined use of mAb 3A7 and blood group A-specific lectins may provide a useful tool for early detection of colon cancer.
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PMID:Monoclonal antibody recognizing a determinant on type 2 chain blood group A and B oligosaccharides detects oncodevelopmental changes in azoxymethane-induced rat colon tumors and human colon cancer cell lines. 753 50

Immunohistochemical studies have indicated that sialylated carbohydrate antigens such as sialyl-Tn, sialyl-Le(a), and sialyl-Le(x) are expressed in a tumor-associated fashion in human colon. Since sialic acid residues are O-acetylated more extensively in normal colonic epithelium than in colon cancer cells, we examined whether deacetylation of colonic tissues might enable monoclonal antibodies to recognize these tumor-associated sialylated antigens. In normal colon, deacetylation turned most cases (82%) positive with anti-sialyl-Tn mAb TKH2; and in colon cancers, it increased the number of TKH2-positive cells. Sialyl-Le(a) and sialyl-Le(x) detection was also increased after deacetylation of normal and malignant colonic tissues so that the frequency of positive cases in normal tissues was similar to that in the cancers. However, in the stomach and pancreas, the same treatment rarely increased the detection of the sialylated epitopes in normal or cancerous tissues. Thus, the same sialylated epitopes can be expressed in a tumor-associated fashion by different mechanisms in different gastrointestinal organs; in the colon, these antigens are constitutively expressed and O-acetylated, whereas in the upper gastrointestinal tract, they are rarely O-acetylated, suggesting that other mechanisms such as differences in glycosylation account for the cancer-associated expression.
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PMID:Tumor-associated sialylated antigens are constitutively expressed in normal human colonic mucosa. 753 75

Mucins of colorectal carcinomas overexpress the cancer-associated disaccharides Thomsen-Friedenreich antigen (TF) and sialyl-Tn antigen (sTn), making these antigens suitable for active specific immunotherapy. Patients at high risk for recurrent colon cancer, but free from disease after surgical resection, were immunized with synthetic TF and sTn covalently attached by a two-carbon crotyl linker to keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH). Four groups of patients were treated with TF-KLH without adjuvant, TF-KLH plus the immunological adjuvant Detox, sTn-KLH plus Detox, or sTn-KLH plus the immunological adjuvant QS-21, and the serological response was monitored. Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), dot-blot immunostains, and inhibition assays were used to identify antibody responses against synthetic TF and sTn epitopes and against natural antigens, including asialoglycophorin expressing TF antigen, and ovine submaxillary mucin and the human colon cancer line LS-C expressing sTn antigen. Our results demonstrate that vaccines containing TF or sTn-KLH conjugates plus immunological adjuvants Detox and especially QS-21 induced high IgM and IgG antibody titers against the respective synthetic disaccharide epitopes. However, when tested against natural antigens expressing these disaccharide epitopes, IgM antibodies showed weak to moderate reactivity, while IgG antibodies were almost totally unreactive. On the basis of these results we are continuing to test modifications of synthetic TF and sTn epitopes to identify those that induce IgM and IgG antibodies that are more reactive with these antigens as they are expressed on tumor mucins.
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PMID:Immunogenicity of synthetic TF-KLH (keyhole limpet hemocyanin) and sTn-KLH conjugates in colorectal carcinoma patients. 755 88

During the last 2 decades, substantial progress has been made in understanding the relationship between dietary constituents and the development of colon cancer in man. Unlike studies of cancer among smokers and nonsmokers, nutritional epidemiologic studies are confronted with the inherent difficulty of assessing reasonably precise exposures. The lack of consistency between international correlation studies and case-control studies does not necessarily negate a dietary etiology of colon cancer because these inconsistencies may have arisen, at least in part, from methodological limitations. Some of these deficiencies in epidemiological studies of diet and cancer have been corrected; recent case-control studies demonstrated that high dietary fat is a risk factor for colon cancer development and that an overall increase in intake of foods high in fiber might decrease the risk for colon cancer. The results of epidemiologic studies may be assumed to present conservative estimates of the true risk for cancer associated with diet. The populations with high incidences of colon cancer are characterized by high consumption of dietary fat, which may be a risk factor in the absence of factors that are protective, such as whole-grain cereals and of other high fiber. Laboratory-animal model studies have shown that certain dietary lipids and fibers influence tumorigenesis in the colon. The data of metabolic epidemiological and laboratory-animal model studies are sufficiently convincing with respect to the enhancement of colon cancer by type of fat and protection by certain dietary fibers.
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PMID:Nutritional factors and colon cancer. 763 53

During the last two decades, substantial progress has been made in the understanding of the relationship between the dietary constituents and development of colon cancer in man. Unlike studies of cancer among smokers and nonsmokers, nutritional epidemiologic studies are confronted with the inherent difficulty of assessing reasonably precise exposures. The lack of consistency between international correlation studies and case-control studies does not necessarily negate a dietary etiology of colon cancer because these inconsistencies may have arisen, at least in part, from methodological limitations. Some of these deficiencies in epidemiological studies of diet and cancer have been corrected; recent case-control studies demonstrated that high dietary fat is a risk factor for colon cancer development and that an overall increase in intake of foods high in fiber might decrease the risk for colon cancer. The results of epidemiologic studies may be assumed to present conservative estimates of the true risk for cancer associated with diet. The populations with high incidence of colon cancer are characterized by high consumption of dietary fat, which may be a risk factor in the absence of factors that are protective, such as whole-grain cereals and of other high-fiber. Laboratory animal model studies have shown that certain dietary lipids and fibers influence tumorigenesis in the colon. The data of metabolic epidemiological and laboratory animal model studies are sufficiently convincing with respect to enhancement of colon cancer by type of fat and protection by certain dietary fibers.
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PMID:Chemoprevention of colon cancer by dietary fatty acids. 771 91

A comparative immunohistochemical study was performed to analyse the expression of cancer-associated carbohydrate antigens by primary and metastatic lesions of colon cancer. We used monoclonal antibodies which reacted with Lea, Lex and Tn as well as their sialylated derivatives. Twenty-one primary lesions in patients without metastasis and 26 primary and metastatic lesions in patients with liver metastasis were studied. Sialyl Lea was expressed by 57% of the primary lesions of patients without metastasis, 65% of the primary lesions of patients with metastasis and 73% of their liver metastases. Sialyl Lex was expressed by 60% of the primary lesions of patients with and without metastasis as well as by approximately 80% of the liver metastases. Sialyl Lea and sialyl Lex showed strong expressions in the liver metastases, significantly greater than in the primary lesions. The findings indicate the increased expressions of sialyl Lea and sialyl Lex to be correlated with liver metastasis of colorectal cancer.
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PMID:Carbohydrate antigens and liver metastasis in colorectal cancer. 790 24

The effect of green tea drinking in reducing human cancer risk is unclear, though a protective effect has been reported in numerous animal studies and several epidemiologic investigations. Herein the hypothesis that green tea consumption may reduce the risk of cancers of the colon, rectum and pancreas is examined in a large population-based case-control study conducted in Shanghai, China. Newly diagnosed cancer cases (931 colon, 884 rectum and 451 pancreas) during 1990-1993 among residents 30-74 years of age were included. Controls (n = 1,552) were selected among Shanghai residents and frequency-matched to cases by gender and age. Multivariate odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) of each cancer associated with green tea consumption were derived after adjustment for age, income, education and cigarette smoking. Additional adjustment for dietary items and body size was found to have minimal impact. An inverse association with each cancer was observed with increasing amount of green tea consumption, with the strongest trends for rectal and pancreatic cancers. For men, compared with non-regular tea drinkers, ORs among those in the highest tea consumption category (> or = 300 g/month) were 0.82 for colon cancer, 0.72 for rectal cancer and 0.63 for pancreatic cancer, with p values for trend being 0.38, 0.04 and 0.04, respectively. For women, the respective ORs for the highest consumption category (> or = 200 g/month) were 0.67, 0.57 and 0.53, with the respective p values for trend being 0.07, 0.001 and 0.008. Our findings provide further evidence that green tea drinking may lower the risk of colorectal and pancreatic cancers.
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PMID:Green tea consumption and the risk of pancreatic and colorectal cancers. 903 23

Human colorectal cancers express various cancer-associated carbohydrate determinants such as Lewis Y or sialyl Lewis A, suggesting a considerable alteration in glycosyltransferase activities occurring upon malignant transformation. We investigated the mRNA amounts of fucosyltransferase (Fuc-T) and sialyltransferase (ST) isoenzymes, including Fuc-T III, IV, V, VI and VII and ST-3N, ST-30 and ST-4, in human colorectal cancer tissues by Northern blotting and RT-PCR. Regarding fucosyltransferases, mRNA of Fuc-T III and VI was not significantly altered, and only Fuc-T IV mRNA showed a moderate increase in cancer tissues when compared with adjacent non-malignant colonic epithelia taken from the same patient (273 +/- 96%; p < 0.001). The moderate increase of Fuc-T IV message may be related to an enhanced expression of Lewis Y in colon cancer tissues. In the ST isoenzymes, mRNA for ST-3N remained unchanged, whereas that for ST-4 decreased significantly in cancer tissues, to 32 +/- 29%, (p < 0.005). The most remarkable finding was that the message of ST-30 was prominently increased in cancer tissues compared with non-malignant colorectal mucosa. When further investigated by quantitative RT-PCR assays on a larger series of patients with colorectal cancers, the average increase in mRNA for ST-30 was 459 +/- 200% compared with that in adjacent non-malignant epithelium (significant at p < 0.0001). The increase of ST-30 message was more prominent in the cancer tissues strongly expressing sialyl Lewis A than in the cancer tissues expressing sialyl Lewis A only weakly or moderately (significant at p < 0.05). The marked increase in the message of ST-30 is suggested to be related to an enhanced expression of sialylated carbohydrate determinants in colon cancer tissues including sialyl Lewis A, since the enzyme exhibited a significant activity against the type 1 chain carbohydrate substrate and produced the precursors for sialyl Lewis A synthesis, when its cDNA was expressed in Cos-7 cells.
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PMID:Altered mRNA expression of specific molecular species of fucosyl- and sialyl-transferases in human colorectal cancer tissues. 917 8

A recombinant humanized antibody-interleukin 2 fusion protein (huKS1/4-IL-2) was used to direct IL-2 to the tumor microenvironment and elicit a T cell-mediated eradication of established pulmonary and hepatic CT26-KSA colon carcinoma metastases in syngeneic BALB/c mice. This antitumor effect was specific because a fusion protein, which was nonreactive with these tumor cells, failed to exert any such effect. The efficacy of the huKS1/4-IL-2 fusion protein in eliminating metastases was documented because mixtures of monoclonal antibody huKS1/4 with recombinant human IL-2 were ineffective and, at best, only partially reduced tumor load. Two lines of evidence indicated the eradication of metastases and the absence of minimal residual disease in animals treated with the fusion protein: first, the lack of detection of CT26-KSA cells by reverse transcription-PCR, which can detect one tumor cell in 10(6) liver cells; and second, the tripling of life span. The effector mechanism involved in this tumor eradication is dependent on T cells because the IL-2-directed therapy is ineffective in T cell-deficient SCID mice. The essential effector cells were further characterized as CD8+ T cells by in vivo depletion studies. Such T cells, isolated from tumor-bearing mice after fusion protein therapy, elicited MHC class I-restricted cytotoxicity in vitro against colon carcinoma target cells. Taken together, these data indicate that fusion protein-directed IL-2 therapy induces a T cell-dependent host immune response capable of eradicating established colon cancer metastases in an animal tumor model.
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PMID:Elimination of established murine colon carcinoma metastases by antibody-interleukin 2 fusion protein therapy. 935 62

The specific aim of this study was to examine the prophylactic as well as the therapeutic efficacies of irradiated mouse CT26 colon cancer cells, infected with recombinant adenoviruses harboring cDNAs specific for granulocyte macrophage-colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF), interferon (IFN-gamma) and monocyte chemotactic protein1 (MCP-1). Results showed that tumor cells secrete the respective cytokines for several days after infection and subsequent irradiation. Vaccination with irradiated GM-CSF-secreting CT26 cells protected 90% of syngeneic mice challenged with live parental cells. On the other hand, vaccination with irradiated IFNgamma or MCP-1-secreting CT26 cells totally failed to protect mice from tumor development after challenge with parental cells. None of the tumor-free mice initially vaccinated with irradiated GM-CSF-producing CT26 cells developed tumor upon repeated challenge with parental cells during the entire observation period. The establishment of specific and long-lasting antitumor immunity following vaccination with GM-CSF-producing tumor cells requires the simultaneous presence of GM-CSF and tumor antigen at the vaccine site. Depletion of CD8+ cells, but not CD4+ cells, blocked the vaccine efficacy of GM-CSF-producing tumor cells. Subcutaneous injection of irradiated GM-CSF-producing CT26 cells also effectively prevented the growth of a small load of parental tumor that was implanted 3 days earlier or the development of metastatic foci in the lung from intravenously injected parental cells either 7 days before or 3 days after vaccination. Our data thus show that, in these experimental tumor models, subcutaneous injection of irradiated tumor cells adenovirally, transduced with the GM-CSF gene leads not only to prevention of growth of subsequently implanted tumor but also to elimination of pre-existing and metastatic tumors.
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PMID:Irradiated tumor cells adenovirally engineered to secrete granulocyte/macrophage-colony-stimulating factor establish antitumor immunity and eliminate pre-existing tumors in syngeneic mice. 976 15


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