45 research outputs found

    The preparation and properties of the condensation products of barbituric acid with several aldehydes and ketones

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    Natural remedies to combat aberrant hallmark signatures including altered glycosylation in oral carcinoma

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    Background: Tobacco associated oral cancers remain a major concern in India with higher incidence and mortality making it an Indian-centric burning issue. To combat this dreadful disease, we investigated effects of certain natural compounds on the hallmark signatures including glycosylation transcripts levels in oral carcinoma. Methods: The tongue carcinoma cells- SAS cells were treated with tobacco compounds, natural compounds and Cisplatin. RNA was isolated from the cells and converted to cDNA. RT-qPCR was performed to evaluate expression levels of various genes. Results: The treatment of tobacco compounds resulted in similar pattern of altered makers (ST3GAL1, NEU3, FUT5, FUT6, MMP2, BCL2) as observed in tobacco habituated patients. The treatment of Curcumin resulted in down regulation of FUT8 and MMP2 which are known to have a significant association with disease progression and metastasis. Furthermore, Curcumin treatment also resulted in up regulation of the good prognostic glycosylation transcript marker i.e. FUT3 showing its protective effect against the tumor invasion and metastasis. Butein treatment resulted in the down regulation of the worst prognostic indicators i.e. FUT8 and MMP2 in a dose dependent manner. Piceatannol treatment showed better protective effects via down regulation of the markers related to the aggressive disease progression (ST3GAL2, FUT5, FUT8, MMP2, VEGFC). Conclusion: The study provides novel approach of targeting aberrant hallmark signatures including glycosylation with natural compounds which may open the possibility of promising therapeutic strategies using natural compounds alone or in combination with other conventional therapies to alleviate the present scenario of this dreadful disease in India

    HPV imprints in western India: The overlooked criteria for cancer profiling

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    Background: In India, HPV infection detection for cancer-typing has been largely evaded. Especially, data on prevalence of HPV types other than the highly prevalent HPV 16 and 18 are lacking, particularly from the western region. Thus, present study aimed to evaluate prevalence of HPV strains in three most prevailing cancers in India i.e. cervical, oral and oropharyngeal cancer. Materials & methods: DNA was isolated from tissue samples of 400 cervical cancer cases, 127 oral cancer cases and 75 oropharyngeal cancer cases and endpoint PCR was performed using degenerative primers MY 09/11, GP 5+/6+ and CP I/II. TS-PCR was conducted to detect HPV 16, 18, 31, 33, 45, 52, 58, 6 and 11. Results: Overall HPV infection was observed in 87% cases of cervical cancer, 12.5% of oral cancer and 26.7% of oropharyngeal cancer using degenerative primers. HPV 16 (72.5% in cervical cancer, 1.33% in oropharyngeal cancer), HPV 18 (14.8% in cervical cancer) and HPV 45 (2.3% in cervical cancer) were observed to be comparatively higher than the other HPV types. All the HPV types except HPV 11 were observed to be present in the studied cohort. HPV was also associated with younger age, well differentiated tumors with no lymph node metastasis. Conclusion: Prominent prevalence of HPV infection was noted in studied population. The study represents need of awareness for HPV screening at clinical set-ups which will lead to upgraded profiling of cancers and better disease management. Moreover, current study provides supportive data for initiation of HPV vaccination programs in India

    Effect of powdered leaves of Lantana camara, Clerodendrum inerme and Citrus limon on the rice moth, Corcyra cephalonica

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    Abstract Powdered leaves of Lantana camara (L.) (Lamiales Verbenaceae), Clerodendrum inerme (L.) (Lamiales Verbenaceae) and Citrus limon (L.) (Sapindales Rutaceae) were tested for their efficacy against the stored grain insect pest Corcyra cephalonica (Stainton) (Lepidoptera Pyralidae). Seven different doses ranging from 0.05 to 2.0 g (0.05, 0.1, 0.15, 0.5, 1.0, 1.5, and 2.0 g) per 20.0 g of rice were tested against this common insect pest of rice to evaluate their effect on its life cycle and mortality. Three higher doses were further tested for their effect on physiological parameters like Total Haemocyte Count (THC), total protein content and glycogen level along with starved insects. L. camara and C. inerme exhibited biopesticidal activity as evidenced by the high mortality rate in treated insects while C. limon was ineffective against C. cephalonica in the tested conditions. There was also a significant reduction in the THC (39-53%), protein (30-38%) and glycogen (40-61%) content in L. camara and C. inerme treated larvae with respect to their controls. This was however similar to the results observed in starved groups (52.0, 39.0 and 82.0% respectively for THC, protein and glycogen) which mimic a physiological condition similar to them

    Clinical Significance of Telomere Length and Associated Proteins in Oral Cancer

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    Purpose: Telomere shortening is an important event during carcinogenesis. Although studies suggest role of multiple proteins in telomere length regulation, there is dearth of reports in oral cancer which is a leading malignancy in Asian countries especially in India. Thus the present study was carried out to study these mechanisms and explore the pathways involved in telomere—telomerase regulation and identify possible prognostic markers to understand the biology of oral tumors for better treatment approaches. Methods: Telomere length was determined by Southern Hybridisation method, telomeric repeat binding factor (TRF) 1 and 2 expression was detected by Western blot method and telomerase activation by telomeric repeat amplifi cation protocol. Statistical analysis was done using SPSS (Version 10) software. Results: Significant shortening of telomeres was seen in the tumor tissues as compared to normal tissues. Poor prognosis was observed in the patients with higher telomere length in malignant tissue, higher tumor to normal telomere length ratio (T/N TRF LR). Expression of TRF-2 but not TRF-1 protein was signifi cantly higher in the malignant tissues. We also observed telomerase activation in 75 malignant tissues.Conclusions: Our results reveal signifi cant clinical usefulness of telomere length, T/N TRF LR and telomerase activation in the prognosis of oral cancer patients. TRF-2 overexpression in malignant tissues appears to play an important role in telomere length shortening in oral cancer. Abbreviations: TRF—Terminal restriction fragment; TRF-1—telomeric repeat binding factor-1; TRF-2—telomeric repeat binding factor-2; T/N TRF LR—Tumor/ Normal TRF length ratio

    Cysteamine Suppresses Invasion, Metastasis and Prolongs Survival by Inhibiting Matrix Metalloproteinases in a Mouse Model of Human Pancreatic Cancer

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    Background: Cysteamine, an anti-oxidant aminothiol, is the treatment of choice for nephropathic cystinosis, a rare lysosomal storage disease. Cysteamine is a chemo-sensitization and radioprotection agent and its antitumor effects have been investigated in various tumor cell lines and chemical induced carcinogenesis. Here, we investigated whether cysteamine has anti-tumor and anti-metastatic effects in transplantable human pancreatic cancer, an aggressive metastatic disease. Methodology/Principal Findings: Cysteamine’s anti-invasion effects were studied by matrigel invasion and cell migration assays in 10 pancreatic cancer cell lines. To study mechanism of action, we examined cell viability and matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) activity in the cysteamine-treated cells. We also examined cysteamine’s anti-metastasis effect in two orthotopic murine models of human pancreatic cancer by measuring peritoneal metastasis and survival of animals. Cysteamine inhibited both migration and invasion of all ten pancreatic cancer cell lines at concentrations (,25 mM) that caused no toxicity to cells. It significantly decreased MMPs activity (IC50 38–460 mM) and zymographic gelatinase activity in a dose dependent manner in vitro and in vivo; while mRNA and protein levels of MMP-9, MMP-12 and MMP-14 were slightly increased using the highest cysteamine concentration. In vivo, cysteamine significantly decreased metastasis in two established pancreatic tumor models, although it did not affect the size of primary tumors. Additionally, cysteamin

    Extracellular vesicles generated by placental tissues ex vivo: A transport system for immune mediators and growth factors

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    Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/144634/1/aji12860_am.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/144634/2/aji12860.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/144634/3/aji12860-sup-0001-Supinfo.pd

    Comparative genomic hybridisation and transcriptome microarray analysis in triple negative breast cancer: An INDIAN study.

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    Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC), which accounts for approximately 15–20% of all breast cancers, defined as lack of expression of estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor and Her-2 neu receptors. TNBC has two subtypes basal like and non-basal like, the former characterised by aggressive biology with limited therapeutic options. This study explored molecular markers involved in pathogenesis of TNBC and investigated novel potential diagnostic and therapeutic targets by CGH array and transcriptome array. aCGH analysis in TNBC demonstrated genes amplified were 3888, number of pathway hits was 1554 and major pathways amplified was found to be WNT signalling pathway and Cadherin signalling pathway. Among all metastatic sites and remission, activation of WNT signalling pathway is commonly observed. TNBC exhibited 1486 copy number variations (CNVR) which is approximately 250 times higher than controls. More than 20 CNVR was observed in all chromosomes and more than 80 CNVR was observed in Chr 1 to Chr 4, Chr 7, Chr 11 and Chr X. Common CNVR associated with amplified regions in Chr 22, Chr 14, Chr 8 and Chr 2 was observed in TNBC and CNVR associated with Chr 22q11.22–23, Chr 6p21.32–33, Chr11q12.2, Chr14q32.22–23, Chr 8p11.22–23, was observed in metastatic disease. In transcriptome array analysis a total of 11,359 differentially expressed genes with fold change 2.0 were in observed in TNBC comprise of 7639 upregulated genes and 3720 downregulated genes. Further, with fold change 10, 1526 upregulated genes and 839 down regulated genes were identified. Panther pathway analysis identified the main pathways of upregulated genes were Wnt signalling pathway, Integrin signalling pathway and Cadherin signalling pathway. The main pathways of down regulated genes were Inflammation mediated by chemokine and cytokine signalling pathways. PPI network shows that COL12A1, COL6A3, FN1, MMP3, WNT5A were key upregulated genes and ITGB7, PTPRC, ITGA4, LCK and CD247 were key down regulated genes. Cytoscape analysis followed by multiple list comparator tool identified top 5 significant hub genes were FN1, MMP3, COLL11A1, COL12A1 and COL3A1. The significant pathway genes obtained by CGH array and transcriptome array when compared, exhibited 5 common genes COL4A1, FN1, COL6A3, COL5A2 and PCDH7. These genes were not overexpressed in Controls and therefore involved in pathogenesis of TNBC. Expressions of these genes were validated by studying protein expression by immunohistochemistry. FN1 and COL6A3 protein over expression predicted worse DFS in TNBC and can be considered as therapeutic targets at diagnosis to reduce the disease metastases. These findings provide new insights into the pathogenesis of TNBC and guide for selection of targets related to diagnosis, prognosis and prediction of treatment in TNBC

    Role of aberrant glycosylation enzymes in oral cancer progression

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    BACKGROUND: Carcinogenesis, a multistep process involves sequential changes during neoplastic transformation. The various hallmarks of cancer aid in cell survival, proliferation, and dissemination. Aberrant glycosylation, a recently defined hallmark of cancer, is influenced by glycosylation enzymes during carcinogenesis. Therefore, the present study measured α-2,3 and α-2,6 sialyltransferase (ST), sialidase, and α-L-fucosidase activity in patients with oral precancerous conditions (OPC) and oral cancer patients. SUBJECTS: The study enrolled 100 oral cancer patients, 50 patients with OPC, 100 healthy controls, and 46 posttreatment follow-ups of oral cancer patients. Blood and saliva were collected from all the participants. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Sialidase activity was measured by spectrofluorimetric method, α-2,3 and α-2,6 ST by ELISA using biotinylated lectins, and α-L-fucosidase by spectrophotometric method. RESULTS: The results depicted increased levels of sialidase, α-2,3 and α-2,6 ST, α-L-fucosidase in patients with OPC and oral cancer patients. Receiver operating characteristic curve indicated significant discriminatory efficacy in distinguishing controls and oral cancer patients for serum and salivary sialidase and α-L-fucosidase activity, and serum α-2,6 ST. Furthermore, serum and salivary α-L-fucosidase activity and serum sialidase activity significantly distinguished controls and patients with OPC. Serum and salivary sialidase, α-L-fucosidase, and serum α-2,3 ST activity were higher in patients with metastasis as compared to nonmetastatic patients. Higher values of serum α-L-fucosidase activity were significantly associated with low-overall survival. CONCLUSION: The increased levels of enzymes correlated with tumor initiation, progression, and metastasis in oral cancer patients. The alterations in glycosyltransferases/glycosidases thus support the view of glycosylation as a hallmark of cancer
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