Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P01350 (gastrin)
9,683 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Pancreatic carcinogenesis is still not well characterized and no specific carcinogen has been isolated in humans. Pancreatic adenocarcinoma acquires genetic abnormalities with successive modification of genes involved in the regulation of cell proliferation and differentiation. The kinetic of genetic alterations in pancreatic cancer is not totally elucidated but experimental pancreatic cancer induced by BOP in Syrian golden hamster attempts to approach this problematic. The activating mutation of the K-ras oncogene on codon 12 seems to occur early in pancreatic carcinogenesis regarding the detection of this mutation in preneoplastic dysplastic lesions and tumors such as intraductal mucinous papillary tumors. Tumor suppressor genes are also inactivated leading commonly to the loss of an inhibitory function on cell proliferation. This inactivation occurs with gene mutation, deletion or methylation on one chromosome arm associated with a loss of heterozygosity: it concerns p53, p16/MTS-1, DPC-4/SMAD4. We recently characterized the somatostatin receptor SST2 gene as a potential suppressor gene for pancreatic carcinoma. The kinetic of these gene alterations is unknown in human. At a late stage of tumor development, an increase of telomerase activity, an over expression of growth factors and/or their receptors (EGF, NGF, gastrin, bombesin), of proangiogenic factors (VEGF, FGF, PDGF), of invasiveness factors (metalloproteinases, E-cadherin, urokinase and tissue plasminogen activators) occur. All these molecular events contribute to the progression and to the metastatic potential of this carcinoma. Recently, the identification of human genome and the large scale analysis of transcriptoma will certainly authorize a better knowledge of pancreatic carcinogenesis as well as the identification of new genetic alterations and new clinical markers.
...
PMID:[Molecular pathways of pancreatic carcinogenesis]. 1248 52

The understanding of the biology of pancreatic carcinoma has greatly benefited from studies of genetic/epigenetic alterations and molecular expression in experimental models as well as precancerous and cancerous tissues by mean of molecular amplification and large-scale transcriptoma analysis. P16, TP53, DPC4/Smad4 tumor suppressor pathways are genetically inactivated in the majority of pancreatic carcinomas, whereas oncogenic k-ras is activated. The activating point mutation of the KRAS oncogene on codon 12 is the major event and occurs early in pancreatic carcinogenesis. At a late stage of tumor development, an increase of telomerase activity, an over expression of growth factors and/or their receptors (EGF, Nerve Growth Factor, gastrin), of pro-angiogenic factors (VEGF, FGF, PDGF), of invasiveness factors (metalloproteinases, tissue plasminogen activators) occurs. The microenvironment plays also a key role in the invasive and metastatic process of pancreatic carcinoma with a strong relationship between cancerous cells and pancreatic stellate cells as well as extracellular matrix. This microenvironment strongly participates to the tumor fibrosis, hypoxia and hypovascularization inducing an inaccessibility of drugs. Nowadays, the targeting of microenvironment takes a special place in the new therapeutic strategies of pancreatic cancer in combination with chemotherapy.
...
PMID:[Advance in the biology of pancreatic of cancer]. 2611 78