Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:P61278 (
somatostatin
)
22,083
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The effects of insulin and
somatostatin
on the growth and the colony formation of two human pancreatic cancer cell lines, BxPC-3 and SOJ-6, were studied. The BxPC-3 cell line (American Type Culture Collection no. CRL 1687) was derived from a moderately differentiated pancreatic
adenocarcinoma
. The SOJ-6 cell line is a subclone of SOJ that was initiated from ascites of a well-differentiated pancreatic
adenocarcinoma
. Both cell lines express fetoacinar pancreatic antigen, an antigen that might be associated with early transformation stages. However, these lines have different proliferation and tumoral powers. SOJ-6 cells showed an almost twofold higher division rate over BxPC-3 cells when cultured in RPMI-1640 medium containing 10% fetal bovine serum. The tumorigenic degree of SOJ-6 cells, as assessed by tumor growth in nude mice, was about three times greater than that of BxPC-3. The in vitro growth of BxPC-3 cells was significantly promoted by insulin, and was slightly inhibited by
somatostatin
, whereas the growth of SOJ-6 cells was not influenced by these hormones. Using a clonogenic assay in soft agar, the average ratio of colony numbers formed by SOJ-6 and BxPC-3 was about 10/1, indicating a good correlation between the colony formation and tumorigenic degree in vivo. In this test, the number of colonies formed by BxPC-3 cells was increased about twofold in insulin-supplemented medium. On the other hand,
somatostatin
inhibited the colony formation by a factor of four to six. However, no hormonal modulation of the colony formation of SOJ-6 cells was observed. Our data show that pancreatic cancer cell lines respond differently to pancreatic hormones, and suggest that this may be correlated to a tumour stage or a tumour type.
...
PMID:Effects of insulin and somatostatin on the growth and the colony formation of two human pancreatic cancer cell lines. 167 59
In 51 patients with gastric
adenocarcinoma
the fasting blood concentrations of hCG, beta hCG, alpha subunits, ADH, calcitonin, enteroglucagon, gastrin, GH, melatonin,
somatostatin
, estradiol, CEA and pepsinogen I in the peripheral vein were estimated by radioimmunoassay at the time of diagnosis and, in those who underwent surgery, 7 days after the operation, to determine the incidence of the modifications of the above mentioned substances' blood levels and the existence of possible markers. In presence of increases of the examined parameters greater than 50%, considering M +/- 2 SD of 10 control subjects as normal range, the tumours were examined immunohistochemically. In patients with gastric
adenocarcinoma
, in comparison with normal subjects, we found significant higher blood levels of hCG alpha subunits, gastrin and CEA and lower of melatonin, pepsinogen I and GH. The immunohistological results demonstrated CEA in both examined cases, alpha subunits in 2 of 6 (respectively in dysplasic areas and in surrounding non neoplastic mucosa) and enteroglucagon in 1 of 3 (dysplasic areas). Our results indicate that none of the parameters we examined, because of their non-specificity or of the low incidence of their modifications, can be considered a marker of gastric
adenocarcinoma
.
...
PMID:[Changes in hormonal and biochemical parameters in gastric adenocarcinoma]. 180 10
The binding characteristics of several
somatostatin
(SS-14) analogs developed in our laboratory were examined in various human and animal tumors and normal tissues. In rat cerebral cortex and human breast cancer membranes the interaction of SS-14 with its binding sites was rapid, specific, saturable, linear with protein concentrations, and dependent on time and temperature. Analysis of kinetic and equilibrium experimental data showed that the interaction of [125I-Tyr11]SS-14 with the binding sites in all normal and tumoral tissue specimens was consistent with the presence of a single class of noncooperative binding sites. Superactive octapeptide analogs of
somatostatin
-containing hexapeptide sequences Cys-Phe-D-Trp-Lys-Thr-Cys or Cys-Tyr-D-Trp-Lys-Val-Cys showed significant binding affinities to SS-14 receptors. Among these analogs, D-Trp-Cys-Phe-D-Trp-Lys-Thr-Cys-Thr-NH2 (RC-98-I) showed the highest binding affinity to normal human pancreatic tissue and human pancreatic
adenocarcinoma
. In contrast, Sandostatin (SMS 201-995) bound only to normal pancreas, not to human pancreatic cancers. Analog RC-98-I also showed a high binding to human and rat prostate cancers. In human epithelial ovarian cancers and an arrhenoblastoma, analogs D-Phe-Cys-Phe-D-Trp-Lys-Thr-Cys-Trp-NH2 (RC-95-I), D-Phe-Cys-Tyr-D-Trp-Lys-Val-Cys-Thr-NH2 (RC-121) and D-Phe-Cys-Tyr-D-Trp-Lys-Val-Cys-Trp-NH2 (RC-160) appeared to be the most potent in displacing labeled SS-14. Analogs Ac-Phe-Cys-Phe-D-Trp-Lys-Thr-Cys-Thr-NH2 (RC-101-I) as well as RC-121, RC-160, and RC-95-I, but not SMS-201-995, showed high binding affinity in human breast cancers. In specimens of human meningioma the highest binding was found with analogs RC-121, RC-95-I, and RC-101-I. Since marked variations in binding affinities were noted for several analogs in the tissues of origin and the tumors, this suggest that differences may exist between
somatostatin
receptors not only in normal vs. cancerous tissues, but also among various tumors. Our findings also imply that some analogs could be therapeutically superior to others in the treatment of certain tumors.
...
PMID:Evaluation of receptors for somatostatin in various tumors using different analogs. 196 67
In a series of 130 cases of
adenocarcinoma
of the large intestine, enterochromaffin (EC) cells were detected in 54 cases (41.5%) by immunocytochemistry with anti-chromogranin monoclonal antibody. Among the 54 cases, 30 were found positive for serotonin, 14 for
somatostatin
, 11 for glucagon, 5 for pancreatic polypeptide, and only one for gastrin. The cases with EC cells (++) or polypeptide positive cells exhibited higher grade of differentiation, earlier stage of tumour extension and higher survival rate than those without EC cells. A significant difference of the EC cell population pattern among different histological grades of the tumours and nonneoplastic mucosa was found. The proportion of hormone, especially polypeptide positive cells was the highest in the mucosa and lowest in the moderately poorly differentiated carcinomas. The incidence, methodology and clinicopathological significance of EC cells found in the tumours are discussed.
...
PMID:[Immunocytochemical study of enterochromaffin cells in carcinoma of the large intestine]. 197 23
Somatostatin
analogues have been suggested as possible therapy for human pancreatic cancer. This paper investigates the effect of the
somatostatin
analogue SMS 201-995 (Sandoz) in the Syrian golden hamster model of nitrosamine-induced pancreatic carcinogenesis. Step-wise increasing doses of i.v. SMS 201-995 suppressed pancreatic juice output from a median basal value of 212 mg/kg body wt/h (Q1:Q3 = 121:334) to a median basal value of 70 mg/kg body wt/h during infusion of 5 micrograms/kg body wt/h of SMS 201-995 (Q1:Q3 = 64:102, P less than 0.05). Chronic s.c. injection of 5 and 10 micrograms/kg body wt SMS 201-995 twice daily for 3 days each week, did not affect pancreatic wet wt or pancreatic total DNA content after 1 or 6 weeks of treatment when compared to controls. The most interesting and unexpected finding in our study was that SMS 201-995 seemed to promote pancreatic carcinogenesis when administered in low dosage. More SMS 201-995 treated animals receiving 5 micrograms/kg body wt developed invasive pancreatic
adenocarcinoma
than controls after 15 weeks of carcinogen (4/10 animals versus 0/10, P less than 0.05, Fisher's exact test) and pancreatic involvement by tumour was more extensive (17/75 pancreatic blocks affected versus 0/71, P less than 0.001). When carcinoma in situ and microcarcinomata were analysed with invasive lesions, animals injected with 5 micrograms/kg body wt SMS 201-995 were still significantly more affected than controls (33/75 blocks versus 9/71, P less than 0.001). Hamsters injected with the higher SMS 201-995 dose (10 micrograms/kg body wt) did not show any increase in malignancy over the controls. These results suggest that the effect of SMS 201-995 on pancreatic carcinogenesis in the Syrian hamster is complex and varies with dose administered. Further work is required before its use on man can be justified.
...
PMID:The effect of the somatostatin analogue SMS 201-995 on experimental pancreatic carcinogenesis in the Syrian golden hamster. 204 91
The effect of enprostil and the
somatostatin
analogue SMS 201 995 on the growth of a clonal variant of the human gastric
adenocarcinoma
cell line, MKN45, was studied. The derived cell line grew twice as fast as MKN45 when grown as a xenograft line in nude mice. However, it did not respond trophically to gastrin either in vitro or in vivo (unlike MKN45) although it possessed the same number of gastrin receptors as the parental line. Gastrin production by the cell line during in vitro culture was twice that of MKN45; thus, the cell line was denoted MKN45G. When MKN45G was grown as xenografts in nude mice (n = 10/group), enprostil (20 micrograms/kg/day) significantly inhibited tumour growth when administered continuously by an osmotic mini-pump from day 1 to day 7 of a 20-day experiment, and induced tumour regression when administered from day 7 to day 14. Enprostil reduced postprandial serum gastrin levels when administered from day 7 to day 14 and prevented gastrin release by MKN45 in vitro. SMS 201 995 at doses of 25 and 240 micrograms/kg/day induced tumour regression when administered from day 1 to day 7 and the former dose reduced post-prandial serum gastrin levels at day 5. Gastrin release by MKN45G was not affected by SMS 201 995 in vitro, thus its effect may not be mediated directly via gastrin, requiring interaction between other hormones or growth factors in the in vivo situation.
...
PMID:The effect of the E2 prostaglandin enprostil, and the somatostatin analogue SMS 201 995, on the growth of a human gastric cell line, MKN45G. 210 79
Biopsy specimens obtained from eight patients with lung cancer were tested for content of
somatostatin
receptors by autoradiography.
Somatostatin
receptors were detected in two of three patients with small cell lung cancer (SCLC) but in none of five patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) including
adenocarcinoma
(two), squamous cell carcinoma (two), and bronchoalveolar carcinoma (one). In those with SCLC, specific somatostatin receptor binding was evidenced only in tumor foci and not in surrounding stroma or normal lung parenchyma. Further tissue characterization by immunoperoxidase staining with the pancytokeratin monoclonal antibody, mAB-lu-5, revealed labeling to all of the NSCLC but to none of the SCLC specimen. Selective immunoreactivity was detected in both the SCLC and the NSCLC specimen to chromogranin and neuron-specific enolase (NSE) whereas none of the specimen had detectable immunostaining to
somatostatin
, bombesin, serotonin, adrenocorticotropic hormone, neurofilament, calcitonin, and synaptophysin. The identification of
somatostatin
receptors in primary human lung cancer may have a bearing on the biology of this disease and perhaps on the clinical application of
somatostatin
analogues in patients with SCLC.
...
PMID:Identification of somatostatin receptors in human small cell lung carcinoma. 217 45
A case of signet-ring cell carcinoid of the gallbladder is reported. The tumour diffusely infiltrated the gallbladder wall and extensively ulcerated the mucosa. Neoplastic nests were composed of numerous signet-ring cells mixed with clear endocrine cells. The latter expressed chromogranin A, gastrin and
somatostatin
and contained neurosecretory granules. The diagnostic problem of differentiating between signet-ring cell carcinomas and composite
adenocarcinoma
-carcinoid tumours is discussed.
...
PMID:Signet-ring cell carcinoid of the gallbladder. 217 77
The effect of subcutaneous
somatostatin
analogue SMS 201-995 (Sandoz Pharmaceuticals Corp., East Hanover, NJ) was investigated in a patient with acute postoperative secretory diarrhea. The patient was hospitalized with bowel obstruction caused by a descending colon
adenocarcinoma
. One week after left hemicolectomy and transverse colostomy, watery colostomy output, which exceeded 10 L per day developed. Jejunal perfusion studies suggested that the patient's diarrhea was caused by abnormal net secretion of water and electrolytes by the small intestine. Circulating levels of various peptide hormones were normal with the exception of elevated level of pancreatic polypeptide. SMS 201-995 administration reduced colostomy output and normalized many of the abnormalities found during jejunal perfusion. These results indicate that the patient's acute secretory diarrhea, occurring after large intestinal obstruction, originated in the small intestine and that SMS 201-995 can be used to manage this unusual severe postoperative problem.
...
PMID:Severe posthemicolectomy diarrhea: evaluation and treatment with SMS 201-995. 239 36
It is well known that carcinoid tumors and some small-cell carcinomas of the lung contain dense-core granules (DCGs). Moreover, a small number of tumors presenting with epidermoid, large-cell, or
adenocarcinoma
histologic characteristics (so-called atypical endocrine tumors), also contain DCGs. Herein, we describe certain histochemical features of DCG tumors and compare them with other major lung tumor types that lack DCGs (non-DCG tumors). All DCG tumors contained neuron-specific enolase and many contained serotonin. These markers were not present in any non-DCG tumor. Other histochemical markers (glycogen, mucosubstances, corticotropin, beta-human chorionic gonadotropin, keratin,
somatostatin
, and calcitonin) were found in a proportion of DCG and non-DCG tumors, but were, in general, more common in non-DCG tumors and atypical endocrine tumors than in carcinoids and small-cell carcinomas. alpha-Fetoprotein was rarely found in non-DCG tumors, and was never observed in DCG tumors. The atypical endocrine group represents a class of tumors with a remarkably mixed and varied phenotype. Their potential significance is discussed and methods to facilitate their diagnosis are suggested.
...
PMID:Histochemical studies of dense-core granulated tumors of the lung. Neuron-specific enolase as a marker for granulated cells. 240 47
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>