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Disease
Symptom
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Enzyme
Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P04626 (
erbB-2
)
5,251
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Gene amplification (overexpression) of c-erb B-2 was tested in a variety of cystic renal diseases, renal cell neoplasms (adenomas and carcinomas) and end stage kidneys without cysts. C-erb B-2 encodes a receptor-like protein that shares homology with, but is distinct from the
epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor
. A monoclonal antibody that immunoprecipitates a protein of approximately 185 kD from a lysate of NIH/3T3 cells transfected with the c-erb B-2 gene was utilized for testing. Simple renal cysts, cystic renal dysplasia, autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease (ARPKD), and non-cystic, essentially normal kidneys failed to show c-erb B-2 overexpression. In contrast, autosomal-dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD), acquired (dialysis-associated) cystic disease (ACD), non-cystic end stage kidneys and renal cell neoplasms revealed overexpression of c-erb B-2 with some frequency (40% or more of cases tested). Three cystic disorders revealing c-erb B-2 overexpression also showed
platelet-derived
growth factors (PDGFs) expression in similar locations (cyst lining and adjacent tubules). Other growth factors [insulin-like growth factor (IGF-I), fibroblast growth factor (FGF) and beta transforming growth factor (TGF beta)] were not noted to be overexpressed in either c-erb B-2 positive or negative cystic diseases. C-erb B-2 may be a marker related to the proliferative/growth capabilities of selected cystic diseases, including potential for associated genesis of benign and malignant renal cell tumors.
...
PMID:C-erb B-2 amplification in cystic renal disease. 168 89
Angiogenesis is a major new prognostic factor in breast cancer. Small vessels quantitatively assessed by staining with anti-CD31 antibodies correlate with lymph node involvement and are a better independent predictor of survival. There are many vascular growth factors, but predominant in primary tumors assessed by nuclease protection assays are vascular endothelial growth factor and
platelet-derived
endothelial cell growth factor
. Acidic and basic fibroblast growth factor are also detectable. A common feature of these angiogenic factors is heparin binding, so novel analogues of suramin that can compete for heparin binding have been developed. These are more potent in vitro against endothelial cells and are less toxic in vivo, thereby giving a much better therapeutic ratio. Protein kinase C is also important in endothelial growth, as it is in carcinoma growth. Thus, a novel agent inhibiting this pathway, and inducing transforming growth factor-beta production has been assessed in a Phase I trial; this agent is bryostatin. It does not cause marrow suppression and has stimulatory effects of tumor necrosis factor-alpha and interleukin (IL)-6 production. High expression of epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptors and
erbB-2
has been related to poor prognosis. EGF receptors are mainly regulated by transcription, as are some cases of high
erbB-2
expression. Thus, a novel approach to gene therapy is being developed using direct tumor injection of cDNA, with a tumor specific promoter ligated to the IL-2 gene. This avoids many problems associated with targeting. Because IL-2 stimulation of cytotoxic T-cells will depend on appropriate antigen presentation, human lymphocyte antigen Class I expression was studied, as was the peptide transporter system RING4 (TAP1). Losses were found in 50% of cases, and in some cases only in lymph nodes but not primary cancers, thereby providing evidence for a role in suppressing metastasis. Thus, many new approaches to therapy are possible as a result of understanding growth factors and intracellular signaling pathways.
...
PMID:Gene therapy through signal transduction pathways and angiogenic growth factors as therapeutic targets in breast cancer. 803 35
It is not clear which growth factors are crucial for the survival, proliferation, and differentiation of pancreatic beta-cells. We used the relatively differentiated rat insulinoma cell line INS-1 to elucidate this issue. Responsiveness of the DNA synthesis of serum-starved cells was studied to a wide variety of growth factors. The most potent stimulators were PRL, GH, and betacellulin, a member of the epidermal growth factor (EGF) family that has not previously been shown to be mitogenic for beta-cells. In addition to these, only vascular endothelial growth factor, insulin-like growth factor-1 and -2, had significant mitogenic activity, whereas hepatocyte growth factor, nerve growth factor-beta,
platelet-derived
growth factors, basic fibroblast growth factor, EGF, transforming growth factor-alpha (TGF-alpha), neu differentiation factor, and TGF-beta were inactive. None of these factors affected the insulin content of INS-1 cells. In contrast, certain differentiation factors, including nicotinamide, sodium butyrate, activin A, and 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 inhibited the DNA synthesis and increased the insulin content. Also all-trans-retinoic acid had an inhibitory effect on cell DNA synthesis but no effect on insulin content. From these findings betacellulin emerges as a novel growth factor for the beta-cell. Half-maximal stimulation of INS-1 DNA synthesis was obtained with 25 pM betacellulin. Interestingly, betacellulin had no effect on RINm5F cells, whereas both EGF and TGF-alpha were slightly mitogenic. These effects may possibly be explained by differential expression of the erbB receptor tyrosine kinases. In RINm5F cells a spectrum of erbB gene expression was detected (EGF receptor/erbB-1,
erbB-2
/neu, and erbB-3), whereas INS-1 cells showed only expression of EGF receptor. Expression of the erbB-4 gene was undetectable in these cell lines. In summary, our results suggest that the INS-1 cell line is a suitable model for the study of beta-cell growth and differentiation because the responses to previously identified beta-cell mitogens were essentially similar to those reported in primary cells. In addition, we have identified betacellulin as a possible modulator of beta-cell growth.
...
PMID:Growth factor-mediated proliferation and differentiation of insulin-producing INS-1 and RINm5F cells: identification of betacellulin as a novel beta-cell mitogen. 952 26
The expression of
platelet-derived
endothelial cell growth factor
(PD-ECGF) was determined immunohistochemically in 143 non-small cell lung carcinomas. Staining was observed in 48% of the cases. A relationship between histology, stage, erbB-1,
erbB-2
, ras and PD-ECGF expression was not found. A relationship of borderline significance was observed between PD-ECGF and p53 expression. There was also no relationship between PD-ECGF expression and proliferative activity (G1 phases, S phases, cyclin A). In contrast, a correlation between PD-ECGF- and VEGF-expression was detectable (p=0.009). Furthermore, PD-ECGF expression was related to the response of lung carcinomas to doxorubicin (p=0.0004). Of 35 sensitive tumors, 26 carcinomas were PD-ECGF-positive (74%) while of 108 resistant carcinomas only 43 tumors (40%) exhibited PD-ECGF expression.
...
PMID:Expression of platelet-derived endothelial cell growth factor in non-small cell lung carcinomas: relationship to various biological factors. 977 89
It has been shown that human thymidine phosphorylase (TP) is identical to
platelet-derived
endothelial cell growth factor
and has angiogenic activity. In the present study, the expression of TP was examined in 139 mammary carcinomas and 35 benign mammary disorders using biochemical and immunohistochemical methods. Moreover, in order to evaluate the significance of TP expression in mammary carcinomas, the relationship between vascular density and various clinicopathological factors, including age and menopausal status of patients with a mammary carcinoma, were compared with the size, nodal status, expression of estrogen receptor (ER), progesterone receptor (PgR), c-
erbB-2
, p53 and TP of a mammary carcinoma.
Thymidine phosphorylase
expression increased in both the nuclei and cytoplasm of mammary carcinoma cells in comparison to mammary benign disorder cells. The number of microvessels in mammary carcinomas was generally correlated to the number of tumor cells with TP expression in cytoplasm. The number of cells with TP expression in cytoplasm was significantly large in tumors that measured 3-4 cm in diameter, compared with tumors measuring 1-2 and 5-6 cm in diameter. In mammary tumors of 1-4 cm diameter, TP expression and vessel density were significantly high in tumors negative for ER or positive for c-erbB2 and in tumors positive for TP or c-erbB2, respectively; whereas tumors of 5-6 cm in diameter were not modified by any clinicopathological factors. The results indicated that TP plays an important angiogenetic role in mammary carcinomas, especially tumors with a certain progression.
...
PMID:The expression of thymidine phosphorylase/platelet-derived endothelial cell growth factor is correlated to angiogenesis in breast cancer. 983 53
Morphologic examinations of mammary neoplasias arising in BALB/c (H-2d) mice carrying the activated rat
HER-2/neu
oncogene (BALB-NeuT), and in FVB (H-2q) mice bearing the wild-type proto-oncogene (FVB-NeuN), indicate that both conditions result in a very human-like lobular carcinoma of alveolar type, whose histotype is the result of the preferential expression of
HER-2/neu
products in the epithelium of lobular ducts and lobules. Detailed analysis of tumor progression indicates that transition from lobular hyperplasia to overt carcinoma is associated with a high epithelial proliferation rate, as assessed by anti-proliferating cell nuclear antigen immunostaining, and coincides with the activation and maximal extension of tumor angiogenic process as assessed by microvessel count (anti-CD31), anti-beta3 integrin, and anti-laminin immunostaining. Neovascularization is accompanied by vascular
endothelial cell growth factor
and basic fibroblast growth factor production by hyperplastic epithelial cells. By contrast with the BALB-NeuT tumors, E-cadherin expression is almost nonexistent in those arising in FVB-NeuN mice and this may explain their high metastatic potential. Despite their different kinetics, however, the lung metastases observed in both strains are histologically similar and resemble the primary tumor. Both strains can thus be proposed as models for "in vivo" investigation of the origin and progression of the alveolar type of lobular mammary carcinoma and the testing of new therapeutic approaches.
...
PMID:Analysis of mammary carcinoma onset and progression in HER-2/neu oncogene transgenic mice reveals a lobular origin. 1053 89
We investigated the expression of
platelet-derived
endothelial cell growth factor
/thymidine phosphorylase (PD-ECGF/TP) in primary bladder cancer, its association with clinicopathologic findings, and their prognostic value. mRNA was extracted from 20 bladder cancer specimens and 6 normal bladder mucosal tissues. Relative amounts of PD-ECGF/TP mRNA were evaluated by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and compared with the level of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase mRNA (used as an internal standard). PD-ECGF/TP expression was examined by immunohistochemistry in 85 patients who underwent cystectomy for bladder cancer. Serum PD-ECGF/TP levels were measured in 23 patients using a sandwich-type enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. By RT-PCR analysis, expression of PD-ECGF/TP was found to be 7-fold higher in invasive tumors than in superficial tumors (P<0.01) and 9-fold higher than in normal bladder (P<0.01). Out of 85 transitional cell carcinoma tissue samples, 69 (81%) were evaluated as PD-ECGF/TP-positive by immunohistochemical staining. PD-ECGF/TP expression correlated significantly with tumor grade (P = 0.001), depth of invasion (P = 0.012), and lymphatic invasion (P = 0.01). No correlation was found between expression of PD-ECGF/TP and the number of tumors, tumor configuration, lymph node involvement, venous invasion, c-
erbB-2
expression, or overall survival. We could not detect a significant serum level of PD-ECGF/TP in any patient. The results suggest that PD-ECGF/TP might give valuable information for bladder cancer management, though it may not be a good new tumor marker for bladder cancer.
...
PMID:Expression of platelet-derived endothelial cell growth factor/thymidine phosphorylase in human bladder cancer. 1066 52
Carbonic anhydrase-9 (CA9), a transmembrane enzyme with an extracellular active site, is involved in the reversible metabolism of the carbon dioxide to carbonic acid. Up-regulation of CA by hypoxia and the hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) pathway has been recently postulated (Wykoff et al. Cancer Res., 60: 7075-7083, 2000). In the present study we examined the expression of this enzyme in non-small cell lung cancer. Of 107 cases analyzed, 39 (36.4%) had strong membrane/cytoplasmic expression of CA9 and were grouped as positive. The staining was confined around areas of necrosis, and a significant association of CA9 expression with the extent of necrosis was noted (P = 0.004). Nevertheless, 38 of 74 cases with focal or extensive necrosis did not express CA9. CA9 expression was more frequent in the squamous cell histology (P = 0.001) and with advanced T stage (P = 0.009). A significant coexpression of CA9 with
platelet-derived
endothelial cell growth factor
and basic fibroblast growth factor receptor expression was noted. Double staining of CA9 with anti-CD31 monoclonal antibody revealed an overall higher microvessel density in the areas expressing CA9 than in negative areas (P = 0.0005). Thirty-one of 38 CA9-positive cases were positive for HIF1a/HIF2a, but HIF positivity was a more common event (68 of 107) and their patterns of expression were diffuse (not confined in the necrotic areas). A direct association of CA9 expression with epidermal growth factor receptor, c-
erbB-2
, and MUC1 expression was also noted (P < 0.04). Survival analysis showed that CA9 expression is related to poor prognosis. CA9 expression in tumors with low vascularization defined a prognosis similar to the one of patients with highly angiogenic tumors. Multivariate analysis revealed that CA9 expression is a significant prognostic factor independent of angiogenesis. We conclude that CA9 is an important molecule in non-small cell lung cancer, the up-regulation of which occurs in highly hypoxic/necrotic regions of the tumors. The expression of CA9 is linked to the expression of a constellation of proteins involved in angiogenesis, apoptosis inhibition, and cell-cell adhesion disruption, which explains the strong association of CA9 with poor outcome.
...
PMID:Expression of hypoxia-inducible carbonic anhydrase-9 relates to angiogenic pathways and independently to poor outcome in non-small cell lung cancer. 1169 24
Non-small cell lung cancer is the most common cause of cancer-related death in North America and Europe. Despite improvements in the diagnosis and treatment of the disease the prognosis remains poor, the overall 5-year survival being 4-14%. An increased understanding of the molecular biology of the disease may identify novel targets for drug development. We evaluated epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR),
HER-2/neu
, matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-2, MMP-9, p53 and bcl-2 expression and microvessel density (MVD) in patients who underwent surgery with curative intent in our department between 1991 and 1996. Co-expression of EGFR/MMP-9, MVD and bcl-2 were found to be independent prognostic variables, which allowed prediction of patient outcome independent of surgical stage. Other prognostic factors identified in our series were gender, surgical stage, platelet count, extent of necrosis, the hypoxia marker carbonic anhydrase-9 and beta-catenin. In collaboration with groups in Oxford and Greece, we were also able to establish the angiogenic growth factors vascular endothelial growth factor and
platelet-derived
endothelial growth factor as prognostic variables. The inter-relationships between these factors are currently being examined in an expanded patient series. Through this work we hope to be able to construct an integrated biological prognostic model which can be tested in prospective studies. This work has identified several potential targets for novel therapeutic agents currently in development.
...
PMID:Towards a biological staging model for operable non-small cell lung cancer. 1172 Jul 47