Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:O76050 (neu)
3,969 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The development of effective screening tests for colorectal tumors is essential given the high frequency of these cancers in the general population, and more especially in various groups at risk. Sporadic and hereditary colorectal cancers result from the accumulation of mutations in oncogenes, such as ras, myc, neu/HER2, and in tumor suppressor genes such as apc, dcc, p53. The detection of ras or p53 mutations in DNA extracted from stool has been shown to be feasible and might be useful for the development of new screening tests. Many mutations in these genes can also be used as new prognostic factors. Identification of mutation in the apc gene responsible for familial polyposis, or its indirect detection through the study of polymorphism in such families, is completely changing the previously recommended medical attitude for the screening of this disease, and therefore may decrease or even avoid major medical follow-up. These changes are also true for the nonpolyposis hereditary colorectal tumors, also called Lynch syndrome, since the responsible hMSH2, hMLH1, hPMS1 and hPMS2 genes have recently been cloned. Mutations in these genes do not seem to be limited to families with Lynch syndrome, and could account for a predisposition of some patients to develop colorectal or other tumors.
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PMID:Contribution of molecular oncology in the detection of colorectal carcinomas. 749 39

Chemotherapeutic drug resistance is a major clinical problem and cause for failure in the therapy of human cancer. One of the goals of molecular oncology is to identify the underlying mechanisms, with the hope that more effective therapies can be developed. Several mechanisms have been suggested to contribute to chemoresistance: 1) amplification or overexpression of the P-glycoprotein family of membrane transporters (eg, MDR1, MRP, LRP) which decrease the intracellular accumulation of chemotherapy; 2) changes in cellular proteins involved in detoxification (eg, glutathione S-transferase pi, metallothioneins, human MutT homologue, bleomycin hydrolase, dihydrofolate reductase) or activation of the chemotherapeutic drugs (DT-diaphorase, nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate:cytochrome P-450 reductase); 3) changes in molecules involved in DNA repair (eg, O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase, DNA topoisomerase II, hMLH1, p21WAF1/CIP1; 4) activation of oncogenes such as Her-2/neu, bcl-2, bcl-XL, c-myc, ras, c-jun, c-fos, MDM2, p210 BCR-abl, or mutant p53. An overview of these resistance mechanisms is presented, with a particular focus on the role of oncogenes. Some current strategies attempting to reverse their effects are discussed.
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PMID:Role of oncogenes in resistance and killing by cancer therapeutic agents. 909 Apr 98

Recent studies have identified some of the genetic alterations involved in endometrial carcinoma development. Transforming genes, including K-ras and c-erbB2/neu oncogenes and the p53, PTEN and hMLH1 tumor suppressor genes, are the most frequently altered. In addition, endometrial carcinomas express high levels of chemoresistance markers, including the MDR-1 or the MRP genes. The genetic background of an endometrial cancer patient may include high-penetrance genes such as the DNA mismatch repair genes causing microsatellite instability, and low-penetrance genes such as those involved in estrogen-metabolism. The spectrum of several molecular lesions suggest a model for endometrial tumorigenesis through two divergent pathways, and which may improve the design of more rational therapeutic agents.
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PMID:Advances in the molecular genetics of endometrial cancer (Review). 1052 15

Osteoclast-like giant cell tumors (OLGT) are rare neoplasms of the pancreas and mostly associated with ductal adenocarcinomas. In this report, we present the rare case of OLGT associated with mucinous cystadenocarcinoma (MCC). We investigated the expression profile of both tumors by methods of molecular biology and immunohistochemistry. The panel of markers included osteopontin, her2/neu, mismatch repair genes, K-ras, p53, E-cadherin, VEGF-C, and podoplanin. Osteopontin was expressed by the osteoclast-like giant cells but not by the mononuclear tumor cells of the OLGT. We detected an amplification and overexpression of her2/neu in the MCC but not in the OLGT. Although we observed an immunohistochemical expression of hMSH2 and hMLH1 in the OLGT, we were not able to confirm this result by western blot analysis. We also did not find any microsatellite instability (D2S123, BAT26). While mutation of K-ras codon 12 was found in both tumor components, there was wild-type DNA of p53. E-cadherin was expressed in MCC but not in OLGT. VEGF-C was only positive in osteoclast-like giant cells and some of the mononuclear cells of OLGT. The vessel-rich stroma of OLGT did not present any podoplanin-positive lymphatic vessel. The observation of our case and others in the published literature may indicate separating OLGT with undifferentiated carcinoma from OLGT with MCC for the better clinical outcome of the latter.
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PMID:Osteoclast-like giant cell tumor in mucinous cystadenocarcinoma of the pancreas: an immunohistochemical and molecular analysis. 1573 12

Breast carcinoma is a rare disease in men. The incidence is 1 per cent of the incidence in women. Relative hyperestrogenemia and environmental factors seem to be important for the development of the disease. In recent years, germline mutations have been observed in male breast carcinoma patients in several genes, BRCA2, the androgene receptor gene and PTEN. Suspected genetic factors include the cell-cycle checkpoint kinase (CHEK)2 protein truncating mutation 1100delC that has been shown to confer a 10-fold increase of breast cancer risk in men. The c.1-34T > C 5' promoter region polymorphism in cytochrome P450c17 (CYP17), a key enzyme in the biosynthesis of estrogen, has been associated with male breast cancer risk, hemochromatosis gene (HFE) mutations, the mismatch repair genes (hMSH2, hMLH1,hPMS1,hPMS2) and PTEN mutations (Cowden syndrome) are associated with male breast cancer. The majority of tumors is seen retromamillarly. Ductal carcinoma in situ comprises 5-10 % of all cancers. In case of invasive growth, 85-90 % are invasive ductal carcinomas (NOS), 2.5 % are papillary tumors; lobular cancers are exceptionally rare. About 3/4 of all cancers express estrogen and progesterone receptor with increasing positivity with increasing patient age. HER-2 / neu overexpression is seen in the same frequency as in female breast cancer. Poor prognostic factors are tumor size > 2 cm, poorly differentiated tumors, receptor negativity, axillary lymph node involvement and more than four affected nodes.
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PMID:[Male breast cancer: history, epidemiology, genetic and histopathology]. 1790 78