Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C1864663 (HCC)
2,985 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Angiogenic factors such as vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) may be involved in neovascularization of malignant tumors. Our aim was to determine whether there is an increased VEGF mRNA expression in liver from patients with HCC and premalignant hepatitis C virus (HCV) with differing severity of inflammation. VEGF mRNA (VEGF165, VEGF189) was detected by reverse transcription and semi-quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) amplification in all liver samples. There was no difference in VEGF mRNA expression ratios (corrected for glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase) among three groups: steatohepatitis, as a non-malignant non-viral control, 1. 05+/-0.35, n=8; chronic hepatitis C, 0.86+/-0.27, n=18; hepatocellular carcinoma, 1.06+/-0.43, n=10. VEGF mRNA expression was independent of the severity of HCV inflammation estimated by the histological activity index: low HAI (</=4, n=8) vs. high HAI (>/=10, n=10), 0.93+/-0.31 vs. 0.81+/-0.24, p=ns. There was no significant difference in mean VEGF expression between HCC tumor (1.06+/- 0.43) and adjacent tissue (0. 85+/-0.42) although the tumors tended to have higher expression than adjacent non-malignant tissues. In conclusion, all liver samples of steatohepatitis, chronic HCV infection and HCC expressed VEGF mRNA, VEGF mRNA may be uniformly expressed in liver tissue, the level of expression is probably not related to virus infection or the severity of inflammation. Other angiogenic or angiostatic factors might be more involved in angiogenesis in HCC.
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PMID:Vascular endothelial growth factor/vascular permeability factor mRNA expression in patients with chronic hepatitis C and hepatocellular carcinoma. 991 13

Angiotensin-I converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor is used widely as an antihypertensive agent, and it has been suggested recently that it decreases the risk of cancer (A. F. Lever et al., Lancet, 352: 179-184, 1998). In this study, we examined the effect of several ACE inhibitors and angiotensin-II type 1 receptor (AT(1)-R) antagonists on tumor development and angiogenesis in a murine hepatocellular carcinoma model. Among ACE inhibitors, perindopril appeared to be a potent inhibitor of tumor development and angiogenesis, whereas AT(1)-R antagonists did not exert such an inhibitory effect. The inhibitory effect of perindopril was achieved even on established tumors. The level of the potent angiogenic factor, vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), in the tumor was significantly suppressed by perindopril. In vitro studies showed that perindopril-derived active form, perindoprilat, suppressed the endothelial cell tubule formation. Perindoprilat treatment also significantly inhibited VEGF mRNA expression in BNL-HCC cells in vitro. These results showed that the ACE inhibitor perindopril inhibited tumor development and angiogenesis independent from AT(1)-R blockage, and that VEGF alternation may be involved in the mechanism of this inhibitory effect. Because perindopril is widely used in clinical practice, it may represent an effective new strategy for anticancer therapy.
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PMID:The angiotensin-I-converting enzyme inhibitor perindopril suppresses tumor growth and angiogenesis: possible role of the vascular endothelial growth factor. 1130 59

VEGF, a potent angiogenic growth factor, is up-regulated in many tumors including human breast tumors and stimulates growth of vascular networks that support tumor growth and metastasis. We previously reported that natural and synthetic progestins (P) increased VEGF mRNA and protein levels in progesterone receptor (PR) containing T47-D human breast cancer cells in a PR dependent manner, but not in PR positive ZR-75 and MCF-7, or in PR negative MDA-MB-231 cells. This indicated that factors beside PR are involved in progesterone-dependent VEGF regulation. We, therefore, tested additional tumor cell lines reported to contain PR for progestin-dependent VEGF induction. Out of nine PR-positive breast tumor cell lines, progestins induced VEGF in three cell lines that lack wild-type p53 (T47-D, BT-474, and HCC-1428) but not in cell lines that contained the wild-type p53 protein. The T47-D and BT-474 cells express mutant p53, while the p53 protein is absent HCC-1428 cells. The anti-progestin RU-486 blocked progestin-dependent induction of VEGF in T47-D and BT-474 cells but not in HCC-1428 cells. However, RU-486 partially blocked medroxyprogesterone acetate-dependent induction of VEGF in HCC-1428 cells. Estrogen receptor (ER) and PR agonists and antagonists also induce VEGF in HCC-1428 cells and this effect was partially blocked by anti-estrogen ICI-182, 780. Progestin-dependent VEGF induction was completely inhibited by PRIMA-1-activated p53 in all cell-types, but progestin-dependent transcription of a progesterone-regulated minimal promoter was only partially inhibited. PRIMA-1 induced activation of p53 in tumor cell lines was confirmed with a p53-responsive p21 reporter plasmid and by detecting increased levels of p21 proteins in cell lysates. PRIMA-1 induced p53 protein in the HCC-1428 cells while levels of mutant p53 protein in T47-D and BT-474 remained unaltered. Progestin-dependent induction of VEGF was also inhibited by stable transfection of wild-type p53 in T47-D cells. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that wild-type p53 blocks progestin-dependent induction of VEGF in breast cancer cells and this may be a novel anti-angiogenic mechanism for controlling the growth of progestin-dependent tumors.
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PMID:p53-dependent inhibition of progestin-induced VEGF expression in human breast cancer cells. 1586 Feb 60

The study aimed to clarify whether vascular endothelial growth factor mRNA (VEGF mRNA) and TNFa mRNA in the HCC tissues on top of HCV with and without cirrhosis obtained from specimens after curative hepatic resection has a prognostic value and recurrence predictive value compared to other tumor criteria. A total of 160 patients were studied. The preoperative laboratory, radiological and staging to patients was done. Using in situ hybridization technique, VEGF mRNA and TNFa mRNA were determined in liver tissues of, 10 controls, 50 with HCC, 50 with HCV without cirrhosis and 50 HCV with cirrhosis. The results showed that in HCC cases there was positive correlation between increasing age, loss of weight, INR and AFP but not in other cases of CHC with or without cirrhosis. AFP, vascular invasion, encapsulation, tumor size and grade and platelet count were related to patients outcome and recurrence of tumor after follow up of most cases for 3 years. The expression of VEGF in liver tissues was proportional to progress of viral hepatitis to cirrhosis with more expression in cases progressed to malignant changes. More expression of VEGF in HCC was more evident with intense expression in cases with Vascular and capsular invasion and higher level of AFP. Expression of TNF alpha mRNA and VEGF mRNA shows increasing expression with positive correlation to progression of viral hepatitis to cirrhosis with more positive with cases developed HCC.
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PMID:Prognostic value of TNF a mRNA and VEGF mRNA expression in patients with chronic hepatitis C genotype-4, with and without cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma to predict disease outcome. 2124 58

Simultaneous silencing of multiple up-regulated genes is an attractive and viable strategy to treat many incurable diseases including cancer. Herein we used dual gene targeted siRNA (DGT siRNA) conjugate composed of NET-1 and VEGF siRNA sequences in the same backbone could inhibit growth and angiogenesis HCC. DGT siRNA showed a further down regulation on VEGF mRNA and protein levels compared with NET-1 siRNA or VEGF siRNA, but not on NET-1 expression. It also exhibited greater suppression on proliferation and trigger of apoptosis in HepG2 cells than NET-1 siRNA or VEGF siRNA; this could be explained by the significant down regulation of cyclin D1 and Bcl-2. A lower level of ANG2 mRNA and protein was detected in HUVEC cultured with supernatant of HepG2 cells treated with DGT siRNA than that of VEGF siRNA or NET-1 siRNA, resulting in much more inhibited angiogenesis of HUVEC. Tumor growth was inhibited and microvessel density dropped in the xenograft tumor models compared to the untreated controls. NET-1 and VEGF silencing play a key role in inhibiting hepatocellular cell proliferation, promoting apoptosis, and reducing angiogenesis. Simultaneous silencing of NET-1 and VEGF using DGT siRNA construct may provide an advantageous alternative in development of therapeutics for Hepatocellular carcinoma.
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PMID:Inhibition of hepatocellular carcinoma growth and angiogenesis by dual silencing of NET-1 and VEGF. 2363 6