ELIZA cgi-bash version rev. 1.90
- Medical English LInking keywords finder for the PubMed Zipped Archive (ELIZA) -

return kwic search for tumor out of >500 occurrences
305909 occurrences (No.73 in the rank) during 5 years in the PubMed. [no cache] 500 found
76) On the contrary, p53 loss led to increased apoptosis that had to be overcome for tumor progression.
--- ABSTRACT ---
PMID:24469052 DOI:10.1038/onc.2013.589
2015 Oncogene
* p53 suppresses carcinoma progression by inhibiting mTOR pathway activation.
- Genetic alterations in human cancers and murine models indicate that retinoblastoma (Rb) and p53 have critical tumor suppressive functions in retinoblastoma, a tumor of neural origin, and neuroendocrine tumors including small cell lung cancer and medullary thyroid cancer (MTC). Rb inactivation is the initiating lesion in retinoblastoma and current models propose that induction of apoptosis is a key p53 tumor suppressive function. Genetic studies in mice, however, indicate that other undefined p53 tumor suppressive functions are operative in vivo. How p53 loss cooperates with Rb inactivation to promote carcinogenesis is also not fully understood. In the current study, genetically engineered mice were generated to determine the role of Rb and p53 in MTC pathogenesis and test the hypothesis that p53 suppresses carcinogenesis by inhibiting mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) signaling. Conditional Rb ablation resulted in thyroid tumors mimicking human MTC, and additional p53 loss led to rapid tumor progression. p53 suppressed tumorigenesis by inhibiting cell cycle progression, but did not induce apoptosis. On the contrary, p53 loss led to increased apoptosis that had to be overcome for tumor progression. The mTOR activity was markedly increased in p53-deficient tumors and rapamycin treatment suppressed tumor cell growth, identifying mTOR inhibition as a critical p53 tumor suppressive function. Rapamycin treatment did not result in AKT/mitogen-activated protein kinase activation, providing evidence that this feedback mechanism operative in other cancers is not a general response to mTORC1 inhibition. Together, these studies provide mechanistic links between genetic alterations and aberrant signaling pathways critical in carcinogenesis, and identify essential Rb and p53 tumor suppressive functions in vivo.
--- ABSTRACT END ---
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[frequency of next (right) word to tumor]
(1)36 cells (17)6 size (33)3 lysis (49)2 progression,
(2)23 suppressor (18)6 suppression (34)3 onset (50)2 recurred
(3)22 progression (19)6 tissue (35)3 targeting (51)2 recurrence
(4)20 necrosis (20)6 with (36)3 to (52)2 regression
(5)19 *null* (21)5 angiogenesis (37)3 types (53)2 response
(6)17 growth (22)5 initiating (38)2 1 (54)2 samples,
(7)15 cell (23)5 suppressive (39)2 activity (55)2 site
(8)14 was (24)5 volume (40)2 burden (56)2 size,
(9)12 and (25)4 model (41)2 classification (57)2 that
(10)11 development (26)4 sites (42)2 composed (58)2 the
(11)11 in (27)4 suppressors (43)2 expression (59)2 tissue,
(12)11 of (28)3 effects (44)2 heterogeneity (60)2 tissues
(13)7 microenvironment (29)3 excision (45)2 invasion (61)2 treatment
(14)6 formation (30)3 extension (46)2 is
(15)6 promotion (31)3 had (47)2 metastasis
(16)6 samples (32)3 local (48)2 mice

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--- WordNet output for tumor --- =>膨らみ, 出っ張り, 腫瘍 Overview of noun tumor The noun tumor has 1 sense (first 1 from tagged texts) 1. (18) tumor, tumour, neoplasm -- (an abnormal new mass of tissue that serves no purpose) --- WordNet end ---