Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (p53)
77,613 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Luteinizing Hormone Releasing Hormone (LHRH) agonists exert both "in vitro" and "in vivo" a direct inhibitory action on the growth of both androgen-dependent (LNCaP) and androgen-independent (DU 145) human prostatic cancer cell lines. The present experiments have been performed to investigate the mechanisms involved in this direct antiproliferative action of LHRH agonists. In particular, the aim was to study whether these compounds might exert their antiproliferative effect by interfering with the stimulatory action of epidermal growth factor (EGF) both "in vitro" and "in vivo". To this purpose, the effects of LHRH agonist, Zoladex (LHRH-A), on the mitogenic action of EGF, on EGF-activated intracellular signaling mechanisms (tyrosine phosphorylation of EGF receptor and c-fos proto-oncogene expression), and on the concentration of EGF receptors have been evaluated in both LNCaP and DU 145 cells. The results of these "in vitro" studies show that in LNCaP cells LHRH-A counteracts the mitogenic action of EGF, abrogates the EGF-induced c-fos expression and reduces the concentration of EGF-binding sites, without modifying the EGF induced tyrosine phosphorylation. In DU 145 cells, LHRH-A antagonizes the proliferative action of EGF, inhibits tyrosine phosphorylation of EGF receptor induced by EGF and significantly reduces the number of EGF binding sites, without altering the stimulation of c-fos expression induced by EGF. For the "in vivo" experiments, male nude mice were s.c. injected in the flank with DU 145 cells and treated for 14 days with LHRH-A (100 micrograms/days). At the end of the treatment, the concentration of EGF receptors on membrane preparations as well as on tumor volume were found to be significantly lower in LHRH-A treated animals than in control mice. The mitotic index and the expression of the proliferation-associated antigen Ki67 were found similar in control as well as in treated animals. In addition no modification of apoptotic index (expression of p53) was observed. These data suggest that LHRH agonists may inhibit the proliferation of the tumor cells by interfering with the stimulatory actions of EGF.
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PMID:Effects of LHRH agonists on the growth of human prostatic tumor cells: "in vitro" and "in vivo" studies. 939 87

Experiments have been performed to clarify whether LHRH agonists might decrease growth of hormone-unresponsive prostate cancer in vivo. Male nude mice were injected s.c. with the human androgen-independent prostate tumor DU 145 cells; osmotic minipumps releasing the LHRH agonist Zoladex (LHRH-A) for 14 days were simultaneously implanted under the skin. Treatment with LHRH-A induced a significant decrease in tumor growth up to the end of the treatment. In subsequent experiment, minipumps releasing LHRH-A were implanted in nude mice either 7 or 14 days after cell inoculation. When the treatment was started 7 days after inoculation of the cells, tumor growth was significantly decreased up to 28 days; thereafter, tumor volume remained lower than in controls, although not significantly. When LHRH-A was administered beginning 14 days after cell inoculation, tumor growth was not significantly affected at any time interval considered. LHRH-A did not appear to induce apoptosis in DU 145 cells, at least on the basis of the apoptotic index and immunohistochemical staining of the p53 protein. On the other hand, treatment with LHRH-A was accompanied by a significant decrease of the concentration of epidermal growth factor receptors in DU 145 prostate cancer specimens. Our results show that the LHRH agonist used significantly inhibits the growth of DU 145 androgen-independent prostate tumor xenografts in nude mice.
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PMID:Growth-inhibitory effects of luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) agonists on xenografts of the DU 145 human androgen-independent prostate cancer cell line in nude mice. 959 Jan 26