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Query: UMLS:C1522102 (Melanoma)
7,698 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Human melanoma represents the principal cause of death in patients with skin cancer in the United States and Europe. Tumour infiltrating lymphocytes recognizing melanoma have been used to identify the tumour antigens recognized by T-cells in the context of MHC class I or class II molecules. Such antigens include MAGE-1, MAGE-3, MART-1/Melan-A, gp100, tyrosinase, the tyrosinase-related antigen gp75, the antigen gp15 and the mutated CDK4 and beta-catenin gene-products. The identification of these T-cell epitopes provides us with novel reagents for the development of state-of-the-art treatments and for the (immuno-)monitoring of patients with melanoma. In order for treatments, including peptide-based vaccines, to be successful, several conceptual criteria must be met: (1) The patient's tumour must present the relevant epitope(s) integrated into the vaccine, (2) the tumour should express the appropriate restricting major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecule(s) required for patient cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) reactivity, and (3) the patient's T-cell repertoire should be able to react productively against the melanoma antigens present in the vaccine. Clinical trials implementing peptide-based vaccines or whole protein therapies have been initiated in the United States and Europe. We suggest that such treatments should include the careful monitoring of anti-tumour T-cell responses. This should include examination of melanoma antigen and MHC class I allele expression in the individual patient's tumour, assessment of the status of the peptide transporter molecules TAP1/TAP2 and evaluation of T-cell mediated immune responses reactive against peptides and autologous melanoma. Evaluation of clinical parameters (such as disease-free survival) in conjunction with an examination of immunological parameters may facilitate our understanding of the immune responses against T-cell antigens that are shared among melanoma and normal melanocytes, and may ultimately help to identify the most effective immunotherapy for patients with melanoma.
Melanoma Res 1996 Feb
PMID:New treatment options for patients with melanoma: review of melanoma-derived T-cell epitope-based peptide vaccines. 864 65

Human melanoma antigens and their epitopes recognized by T cells have been identified using a variety of methods. These antigens are classified as 1) melanocyte specific melanosomal proteins (MART-1, gp100, tyrosinase and TRP-1), 2) proteins expressed in testis and a variety of cancers (MAGE-1, MAGE-3, BAGE and GAGE), 3) tumor specific mutated proteins (beta-catenin, MUM-1 and CDK4), and 4) others (p15). Some of the HLA-A2 binding non-mutated melanoma epitopes contained non-dominant anchor amino acids and have relatively low HLA-A2 binding affinity, suggesting that these epitopes were likely to be subdominant or cryptic self determinants. The significant correlation observed between vitiligo development and IL2 based immunotherapy suggested that autoreactive T cells specific for these self peptides were involved in melanoma regression in vivo. In addition, since adoptive transfer into patients of CTL recognizing these epitopes resulted in tumor regression, these epitopes may be tumor rejection antigens. Melanoma reactive CTL were efficiently induced from PBL of patients by in vitro stimulation with PBMC pulsed with these melanoma epitopes and may be useful in adoptive transfer protocols for the treatment of patients with metastatic melanoma. An immunization trial using the MART-1 and gp100 peptides in conjunction with incomplete Freund's adjuvant is in progress. These identified antigens may be useful for the development of new immunotherapies for the treatment of melanoma patients as well as for understanding the mechanisms of anti-tumor immune responses and autoimmune disorders against melanocytes.
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PMID:Human melanoma antigens recognized by T lymphocytes. 868 99

The retinoblastoma protein (pRb) pathway is critical in regulating the G1 phase of the cell cycle and it is frequently disrupted in human cancers. Components of the pRb pathway which are often altered in tumour progression include the INK4 cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) inhibitors p16INK4a/ CDKN2A and p15INK4b/CDKN2B, CDK4, D-type cyclins and pRb. Several of these components were studied in a series of cultured melanoma cell lines in order to determine the frequency and spectrum of genetic alterations and to define targets for potential gene transfer studies. Also studied were the p16INK4a alternate transcript (p14ARF) and the p21(waf1) CDK inhibitor. The majority of the melanoma cell lines tested (13 out of 17; 76%) carried mutated (two), deleted (nine) or silenced (two) p16(INK4a). CDK4 was mutated or overexpressed in two melanoma cell lines with homozygously deleted CDKN2A and CDKN2B genes. This suggests that the selective growth advantages afforded by CDKN2A inactivation and CDK4 insensitivity are distinct and may involve the mediation of other CDK inhibitors or CDKs.
Melanoma Res 1999 Feb
PMID:Multiple abnormalities of the p16INK4a-pRb regulatory pathway in cultured melanoma cells. 1033 30

We postulate that genes involved in the control of cell proliferation are important determinants of melanoma growth and/or transformation. Using Western blot analysis, we compared the expression of nine key cell cycle regulators in metastatic melanomas with that in benign acquired naevi. Among the cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) examined, CDK2 was consistently and significantly overexpressed (three- to eight-fold) in metastatic melanomas compared with naevi. CDK1 and CDK4 exhibited no significant difference in expression between benign naevi and metastatic melanomas. CDK6 expression was variable, with four out of 10 metastatic melanomas showing higher expression than naevi. All the cyclins examined, especially cyclins A and D, were expressed more in metastatic melanomas than in naevi. Cyclin E was not detected in benign naevi, but was easily detectable in most of the metastatic melanomas. In addition, there was significantly greater expression of CDC25A, a tyrosine phosphatase that activates CDK kinases, in the metastatic melanomas. Over-expression of CDK2, CDK6, CDC25A and cyclin A was confirmed in melanoma cell lines. These cell cycle regulators may play an important role in melanoma growth and/or transformation.
Melanoma Res 1999 Apr
PMID:Expression of cell cycle regulators in human cutaneous malignant melanoma. 1038 Sep 37

Melanoma is the most aggressive of the skin cancers and its prognosis is often poor. The only known environmental risk factor for this tumour is ultraviolet light exposure. This fact together with the existence of melanoma-prone families has prompted investigation of genetic risk factors that may be involved in melanoma development. Inactivation of the INK4a/p16 gene is known to play a role in familial cases. Data on genes or loci involved in sporadic melanoma are less definitive and require more detailed research. In addition to the INK4a locus, other genes involved in melanoma development are discussed here, in particular those genes that participate in the same functional pathway, such as CDK4 and Rb, and p53, which is regulated by the alternative product of INK4a. Evidence showing the possible location of melanoma susceptibility genes on chromosomes 1p, 6, 10q and 11q is analysed along with data showing N-ras, betacatenin, c-myc and MC1R involvement. Melanoma is a well-characterized disease in terms of its progression stages; therefore obtaining precise genetic information is crucial in the development of a stepwise model of melanoma pathogenesis.
Melanoma Res 1999 Oct
PMID:Genes involved in melanoma: an overview of INK4a and other loci. 1059 8

To date, two genes have been implicated in melanoma pathogenesis. The first, CDKN2A, is a tumour suppressor gene with germline mutations detected in 20% of melanoma-prone families. The second, CDK4, is an oncogene with co-segregating germline mutations detected in only three kindreds worldwide. We examined 16 American melanoma-prone families for mutations in all coding exons of CDK4 and screened additional members of two previously reported families with the Arg24Cys germline CDK4 mutation to evaluate the penetrance of the mutation. No new CDK4 mutations were identified. In the two Arg24Cys families, the penetrance was estimated to be 63%. Overall, 12 out of 12 invasive melanoma patients, none out of one in situ melanoma patient, five out of 13 dysplastic naevi patients, two out of 15 unaffected family members, and none out of 10 spouses carried the Arg24Cys mutation. Dysplastic naevi did not strongly co-segregate with the Arg24Cys mutation. Thus the phenotype observed in melanoma-prone CDK4 families appears to be more complex than just the CDK4 mutation. Both genetic and environmental factors are likely to contribute to the occurrence of melanoma and dysplastic naevi in these families. In summary, although CDK4 is a melanoma susceptibility gene, it plays a minor role in hereditary melanoma.
Melanoma Res 2002 Feb
PMID:Rarity of CDK4 germline mutations in familial melanoma. 1182 58

A proportion of melanoma-prone individuals in both familial and non-familial contexts has been shown to carry inactivating mutations in either CDKN2A or, rarely, CDK4. CDKN2A is a complex locus that encodes two unrelated proteins from alternately spliced transcripts that are read in different frames. The alpha transcript (exons 1alpha, 2, and 3) produces the p16INK4A cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor, while the beta transcript (exons 1beta and 2) is translated as p14ARF, a stabilizing factor of p53 levels through binding to MDM2. Mutations in exon 2 can impair both polypeptides and insertions and deletions in exons 1alpha, 1beta, and 2, which can theoretically generate p16INK4A-p14ARF fusion proteins. No online database currently takes into account all the consequences of these genotypes, a situation compounded by some problematic previous annotations of CDKN2A-related sequences and descriptions of their mutations. As an initiative of the international Melanoma Genetics Consortium, we have therefore established a database of germline variants observed in all loci implicated in familial melanoma susceptibility. Such a comprehensive, publicly accessible database is an essential foundation for research on melanoma susceptibility and its clinical application. Our database serves two types of data as defined by HUGO. The core dataset includes the nucleotide variants on the genomic and transcript levels, amino acid variants, and citation. The ancillary dataset includes keyword description of events at the transcription and translation levels and epidemiological data. The application that handles users' queries was designed in the model-view-controller architecture and was implemented in Java. The object-relational database schema was deduced using functional dependency analysis. We hereby present our first functional prototype of eMelanoBase. The service is accessible via the URL www.wmi.usyd.edu.au:8080/melanoma.html.
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PMID:eMelanoBase: an online locus-specific variant database for familial melanoma. 1249 26

Melanoma line LG2-MEL expresses several antigens recognized by autologous CTLs. One of them consists of a peptide derived from tyrosinase and presented by HLA-B*3503. We have identified another antigen of LG2-MEL as a peptide presented by HLA-B*4403 and resulting from a point mutation in gene OS-9. This gene is expressed in various normal tissues. It is located on chromosome 12 in the vicinity of the CDK4 locus and is frequently co-amplified with CDK4 in human sarcomas. The mutation, a C-to-T transition, changes a proline residue into a leucine at position 446 of the OS-9 protein. Mutated transcripts were found in all the melanoma sublines of LG2-MEL. None of the 184 tumor samples collected from other cancer patients expressed the mutated transcript, indicating that this is a rare mutational event. Interestingly, some of the melanoma sublines of LG2-MEL have lost the wild-type allele of gene OS-9. Those sublines appear to grow faster in vitro than the sublines that retained the wild-type allele, suggesting that this loss of heterozygosity may favor tumor progression. The mutation we have identified in gene OS-9 might therefore participate in the oncogenic process by affecting the function of this potential tumor-suppressor gene.
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PMID:Identification of a new peptide recognized by autologous cytolytic T lymphocytes on a human melanoma. 1274 54

Melanoma incidence rates are rising rapidly, particularly in older men. Older men are also more likely to have thick melanomas, which confer high mortality and morbidity. The reasons for the rate of increase are not known; increasing sun and UV exposure, however, is the major hypothesized explanation. In the past several years, two major susceptibility genes for melanoma, CDKN2A and CDK4, have been identified, but the two genes together account for a minority of familial melanoma. Other high-risk susceptibility genes are being sought actively. Genetic epidemiologic studies suggest that penetrance of each of the two identified genes is altered by other factors, either genetic or environmental. Epidemiologic studies have also identified other major host factors important in the development of melanoma. In European, North American, and Australian populations, the presence of clinically identified dysplastic nevi confers greatly increased risk of melanoma. A new measure of sun exposure, based on individual residential history, confers substantially increased risk of melanoma. Recent surveys of sun behavior in the US reveal extensive sunburning and use of tanning beds in adolescents and adults. Sun protective behaviors are not as prevalent as in Australia, where population rates of melanoma are stabilizing.
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PMID:Melanoma etiology: where are we? 1278 79

Melanoma incidence has risen in many Caucasians populations over the last 20 years and research on the potential environmental and genetic risk factors has led to some interesting new findings but also to many more questions. The relationship between melanoma and ultraviolet radiation is complex and this area of research is controversial especially regarding the use of sunbeds and sunscreens. In terms of genetic factors, the discovery of two genes CDKN2A and CDK4 has been a great advance with more understanding of melanocyte biology in relation to defects in senescence. For phenotypic risk factors such as fair skin and high numbers of naevi, the role of genetic factors is clearly evident but these traits are complex and the discovery of genes involved in skin pigmentation and naevi formation is not an easy task. Research on the MC1R gene has not only shown the importance of this gene in hair and skin pigmentation but also in senescence and immunity. Functional studies involving CDKN2A and MC1R are leading to important new findings. There is also some hope regarding the use of micro-arrays in helping to dissect many genetic events in melanoma. The collection of large datasets including family, twin and case-control studies as well as tumour banks with collaborations between countries will hopefully lead to more discoveries. For the primary and secondary prevention of this tumour, efforts need to be sustained in public health campaigns on sun exposure and the recognition of individuals at high risk.
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PMID:Genetic epidemiology of melanoma. 1282 35


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