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Open AccessJournal Article

Tumor Malignancy Defined by Aberrant Glycosylation and Sphingo(glyco)lipid Metabolism

Sen-itiroh Hakomori
- 01 Dec 1996 - 
- Vol. 56, Iss: 23, pp 5309-5318
TLDR
Glycosylation analogues and sphingolipid analogues that inhibit protein kinase C and receptor-associated tyrosine kinase have been applied for inhibition of metastasis and provide the basis for development of "anti-adhesion therapy."
Abstract
Aberrant glycosylation expressed in glycosphingolipids and glycoproteins in tumor cells has been implicated as an essential mechanism in defining stage, direction, and fate of tumor progression This general concept is supported by results from three lines of study: (a) Numerous clinicopathological studies have shown a clear correlation between aberrant glycosylation status of primary tumor and invasive/metastatic potential of human cancer as reflected by 5- or 10-year survival rates of patients (b) Carbohydrates expressed in tumor cells are either adhesion molecules per se or modulate adhesion receptor function Some are directly involved in cell adhesion They are recognized by selectins or other carbohydrate-binding proteins or by complementary carbohydrates (through carbohydrate-carbohydrate interaction) N- or O-glycosylation of functionally important membrane components may alter tumor cell adhesion or motility in a direction that either promotes or inhibits invasion and metastasis Examples of such receptors are E-cadherin, integrins, immunoglobulin family receptors (eg, CD44), and lysosome-associated membrane protein (c) Gangliosides and sphingolipids modulate transmembrane signaling essential for tumor cell growth, invasion, and metastasis The transducer molecules susceptible to gangliosides and sphingolipids include integrin receptors, tyrosine kinase-linked growth factor receptors, protein kinase C, and G-protein-linked receptor affecting protein kinase A Some glycosphingolipids (eg, Gb3Cer, Le(y), ceramide, and sphingosine induce tumor cell differentiation and subsequent apoptosis Shedded gangliosides may block immunogenicity of tumor cells, providing conditions favorable for "escape" from immunological suppression of tumor growth by the host Various reagents that block carbohydrate-mediated tumor cell adhesion or block glycosylation processing have been shown to inhibit tumor cell metastasis This provides the basis for further development of "anti-adhesion therapy" Ganglioside analogues and sphingolipid analogues that inhibit protein kinase C and receptor-associated tyrosine kinase have been applied for inhibition of metastasis A crucial mechanism for inhibition of metastasis by these reagents may involve blocking of transmembrane signaling for expression of P- and E-selectin This provides the basis for development of "ortho-signaling therapy"

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Citations
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Biological Roles of Glycans

TL;DR: It is time for the diverse functional roles of glycans to be fully incorporated into the mainstream of biological sciences, as they are no different from other major macromolecular building blocks of life, simply more rapidly evolving and complex.
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The sweet and sour of cancer: glycans as novel therapeutic targets.

TL;DR: A growing body of evidence supports crucial roles for glycans at various pathophysiological steps of tumour progression, and increased understanding of these roles sets the stage for developing pharmaceutical agents that target these molecules.
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Glycosylation defining cancer malignancy: New wine in an old bottle

TL;DR: The concept of glycosylation-dependent promotion or inhibition of tumor progression has developed in conjunction with clinicopathological studies and appears to be considered “in the shade” of more popular topics such as oncogenes and antioncogene, apoptosis, angiogenesis, growth factor receptors, integrin and caderin function, etc., despite the fact that aberrant glycosYLation profoundly affects all of these processes.
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Control of mucin-type O-glycosylation: A classification of the polypeptide GalNAc-transferase gene family

TL;DR: An overview of the GalNAc-T gene family in animals is presented and a classification of the genes into subfamilies, which appear to be conserved in evolution structurally as well as functionally are proposed.
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Glycoprotein glycosylation and cancer progression

TL;DR: Evidence that beta1, 6GlcNAc-branching of N-glycans contributes directly to cancer progression is reviewed, and possible functions for the glycans are considered.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Programmed cell death induced by ceramide

TL;DR: The effects of C2-ceramide on DNA fragmentation were prevented by the protein kinase C activator phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate, which suggests the existence of two opposing intracellular pathways in the regulation of apoptosis.
Journal ArticleDOI

A new variant of glycoprotein cd44 confers metastatic potential to rat carcinoma cells

TL;DR: Using a monoclonal antibody raised against a surface glycoprotein of the metastasizing rat pancreatic carcinoma cell line BSp73ASML, cDNA clones have been isolated that encode glycoproteins with partial homology to CD44, a presumed adhesion molecule.
Book ChapterDOI

Aberrant glycosylation in tumors and tumor-associated carbohydrate antigens

TL;DR: Aberrant glycosylation as such may be the basis of inappropriate cell/cell and cell/matrix interactions that may be reflected in the abnormal cell social behavior of tumor cells, such as uncontrolled cell growth, invasiveness, and metastatic potential.
Journal ArticleDOI

Selectin ligands

TL;DR: This review analyzes the matter and suggests the hypothesis that at least some of the specificity of the selectins may involve recognition of "clustered saccharide patches."
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