| Literature DB >> 30159314 |
Kenji Ishida1, Michael H Hsieh1,2,3.
Abstract
Infection with Schistosoma haematobium leads to urogenital schistosomiasis, which has been correlated with the occurrence of bladder cancer. However, mechanisms responsible for this association have not yet been clearly identified. In this short review, we provide an update, highlighting the most recent studies on schistosome-associated bladder cancer, including those that focus on identifying changes in host biology during S. haematobium infection, as well as studies for the identification of potentially pro-carcinogenic parasite molecules, and we offer a discussion on some possible mechanisms driving schistosomal bladder cancer.Entities:
Keywords: bladder; bladder cancer; cancer; mouse models; schistosomiasis; schistosomiasis haematobia
Year: 2018 PMID: 30159314 PMCID: PMC6104441 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2018.00223
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
Recent key papers relevant to schistosomal bladder cancer.
| COX2 and iNOS associated with schistosomal bladder tumor (biopsy) | ( |
| EGFR and TGFα associated with schistosomal bladder tumor (biopsy) | ( |
| Mouse bladder wall injection method | ( |
| (Transcriptome) Change in transcript level of cancer-related genes following mouse bladder wall injection | ( |
| (Genome/epigenetics) Change in global gene methylation following mouse bladder wall injection | ( |
| (Proteome) Urine proteome profiles ± infection, ± bladder pathology | ( |
| (Microbiome) Urine microbiome profiles ± infection, ± bladder pathology | ( |
| CHO cells exposed to total worm antigen: proliferation↑, migration↑, apoptosis↓; can generate tumors when injected into nude mice | ( |
| Mutation in the | ( |
| Host sex-specific effect of p53 haploinsufficiency on urothelial abnormality following bladder wall injection | ( |
| Nitrosamine treatment and mouse bladder wall injection resulting in urothelial abnormality and transcription level differences in | ( |
| Estrogen- and guanine-derived metabolites found in the urine of patients infected with | ( |