In the present study, we have used three molecular methods (ASP-real-time PCR, ASP-DNA-FLA PCR and direct sequencing) to detect the DDR2 gene mutation in 143 patients with NSCLC metastases to the central nervous system (CNS).
We have utilized in situ hybridization and immunocytochemistry techniques to examine the expression of both alpha 2-macroglobulin (alpha 2-MR) and the 39 kDa receptor-associated protein (RAP) in 8 benign (BPH) and 34 malignant human prostate tissues, including 4 metastases.
Therefore, we conclude that NALP1 is expressed low in colon cancer and associated with the survival and tumor metastasis of patients, and treatment with DAC can restore NALP1 levels to suppress the growth of colon cancer.
Examining ways of controlling human lung cancer metastases, we investigated the antimetastatic effect of chimeric monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) against P-glycoprotein and ganglioside GM2 (MH162 and KM966, respectively).
Our results suggest that pharmacological inhibition of ABCG2 and ABCB1 during ponatinib therapy might benefit patients with brain (micro)metastases positioned behind an intact blood-brain barrier, or with substantial expression of these transporters in the malignant cells.
Since these levels were lower than expected for RCC, we asked whether the metastases possessed a phenotype different from primary RCC and examined MDR-1 expression in 5 paired cell lines derived from primary and metastatic RCC.
Our results suggest that pharmacological inhibition of ABCB1 and ABCG2 during osimertinib therapy might potentially be considered to further benefit patients with brain (micro-)metastases positioned behind an intact blood-brain barrier, or with substantial expression of these transporters in the tumor cells, without invoking a high toxicity risk.
Additionally, we report that MDR1 methylation correlates with regional nodal metastases in the context of two specific bacterial subpopulations, Enterobacteriaceae and Tenericutes (P < 0.001 for each).
However, MDR1 RNA expression was less frequent in locally advanced tumors and was absent in the primary tumors of all six patients who had distant metastases.
TPGS can inhibit P-glycoprotein, enhance drug absorption, induce mitochondrial-associated apoptosis or other apoptotic pathways, promote drug penetration and tumor accumulation, and even inhibit tumor metastasis.
Our results suggest that pharmacological inhibition of ABCB1 during ibrutinib therapy might benefit patients with malignancies or (micro)metastases positioned behind an intact blood-brain barrier, or with substantial expression of this transporter in the malignant cells.
No significant relationship was found between the expression of the resistance-related proteins P-glycoprotein or glutathione S-transferase-pi and the incidence of metastases.
The identification of organ-specific cytokines that can upregulate expression of mdr-1 (or other resistant mechanisms) may suggest an approach to overcome the resistance of some metastases to particular chemotherapeutic agents.
Patient-derived cultures of the BRAF mutant/NRAS wild type and BRAF wild type/NRAS mutant metastases showed more homogeneous single-cell gene expression patterns with gene expression modules for proliferation and ABC transporters.
Real-time quantitative PCR of the samples obtained from microdissected tumor tissue revealed a significant difference in the mRNA levels of HLA-ABC heavy chain and beta2m between the two types of metastases, i.e., lower levels in progressing metastases and high levels in regressing ones, confirming the immunohistological findings.
HLA.ABC and LFA-3 were positive on ganglioneuroblastoma or ganglioneuroma, but they were negative on neuroblastoma, independently of the clinical staging; HLA.ABC and LFA-3 were induced in vivo by chemotherapy in parallel with tumoral cell differentiation, in both the primary and the metastases.
In the SK-N-SH xenograft model metastasis formation was slightly dependent on the expression of selectins, while LAN 1 cells developed metastases completely independent of selectin expression.
Strong MRP staining was more frequent in T3 and T4 tumors than in T1 and T2 tumors and in the primary tumors of patients with distant metastases but was independent of age, menopausal status, histology, histological grade, estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor, and lymph node involvement.
SUR1 expression was greater in supratentorial ependymoma compared to glioblastoma and metastases (p < 0.05) and greater in medulloblastoma compared to glioblastoma (p < 0.05).
Collectively, these data suggest that ABCG1 plays a crucial role in tumorigenesis in metastatic cancer and that depletion of ABCG1 triggers tumor regression with the accumulation of EVs and their derivatives and cargos, implicating a novel ABCG1-targeting therapeutic strategy by which redundant and toxic substances may be accumulated in tumors leading to their regression.