Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:1.10.3.1 (tyrosinase)
9,065 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Cell lineage-specific cellular proteins, oncogenes from viral or cellular origin and tumor suppressor genes encode tumor-specific/associated antigens. Such antigens can elicit an major compatibility complex (MHC) class I-restricted cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) response, either naturally in cancer patients or following appropriate immunostimulation (in vitro or in vivo). The reported immune responses in humans to the melanoma-associated MAGE gene products, GP100 and tyrosinase, all self-proteins, support the idea to use wild-type p53 products as targets for T cells. An important step towards this goal is identification of potential p53 CTL epitopes. We identified the wild-type p53 peptides with the highest affinity to the HLA-A*0201 molecule using two assays: the previously described MHC peptide-binding assay and the peptide competition assay. We obtained CTL against four p53 peptides with a high affinity for the HLA-A*0201 molecule. These findings are discussed next to a short review concerning the p53 literature.
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PMID:p53, a potential target for tumor-directed T cells. 808 74

Tyrosinase, the key gene in melanin pigment synthesis, is tissue-specifically expressed in melanocytic cells. Expression of this gene is regulated by various hormones, carcinogens, and environmental factors. The molecular basis underlying tyrosinase gene regulation is still not clear. In this report, we present the effects of tumor suppressor p53 protein in tyrosinase gene expression and melanin synthesis in human melanoma. After stable transfection of wild type p53 expression plasmid into a highly pigmented melanoma cell line, overexpression of wt p53 suppressed the pigmentation of the melanoma cells. The loss of pigmentation was associated with the loss of endogenous tyrosinase expression at the activity and mRNA levels. In order to determine whether the p53 repression of tyrosinase mRNA involved modulation of tyrosinase promoter activity, transient transfection approaches involving p53 expression plasmid and construct containing chloramphenicol acetyl transferase (CAT) reporter gene linked to 270 bp tissue-specific tyrosinase promoter have been used. p53 specifically repressed CAT gene expression from the tyrosinase promoter and not from the Rous sarcoma virus promoter. These data suggest that in human melanoma p53 down-regulates the tissue-specific expression of tyrosinase gene and subsequent melanin synthesis.
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PMID:Tumor suppressor p53 down-regulates tissue-specific expression of tyrosinase gene in human melanoma cell lines. 885 71

The treatment of cancer with tumor vaccines has been a goal of physicians and scientists ever since effective immunization against infectious disease with vaccines was developed. In the past, major tumor antigens had not been molecularly characterized. Recent advances are, however, beginning to define potential molecular targets and strategies and this had evolved with the principle that T-cell mediated responses are a key target for approaches to cancer immunization. In addition, these antigens are not truly foreign and tumour antigens fit more with a self/altered self paradigm, compared to a non-self paradigm for antigens recognized in infectious diseases. Potential antigens include the glycolipids and glycoproteins (e.g. gangliosides), the developmental antigens (e.g. MAGE, tyrosinase, melan-A and gp75) and mutant oncogene products (e.g. p53, ras, and HER-2/neu). Innovations for construction of cancer vaccines are emerging from these advances in molecular immunology and cancer biology. While vaccines against infectious agents are models for vaccine development, there are clearly distinct considerations and problems associated with cancer vaccines. One of the focal issues in designing active cancer immunotherapy is that cancer cells are derived from normal host cells. Thus, the antigenic profile of cancer cells closely mimics that of normal cells. How the immune system identifies and destroys cancer cells is therefore crucial. Clearly, the ultimate goal of tumor vaccine design is the generation of antigen-specific vaccines. The recent success identifying molecularly defined tumor antigens opens up potentially novel strategies for this approach. Vaccine possibilities include purified proteins and glycolipids, peptides, cDNA expressed in various vectors, and a range of immune adjuvants. The molecular and structural definition of tumor antigens provides an opportunity for cautious optimism that we are entering an era when we will soon begin to recapitulate the success of immunization against infectious disease.
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PMID:Definition of tumor antigens suitable for vaccine construction. 893 70

We have investigated the effect of the soybean isoflavone genistein on the growth and differentiation of human melanoma cells. Four human melanoma cell lines, either completely lacking or containing different levels of wild-type p53, were treated with genistein in vitro in culture. It has been found that genistein significantly inhibited cell growth and that the chemosensitivity might depend on cellular p53 content. Specifically, the data suggest that high levels of wild-type p53 expression make cells resistant to genistein's growth-inhibitory action. Further support for this observation came from the stable transfection studies in which p53 transfectants expressing high levels of wild-type p53 became resistant to genistein. With respect to cell differentiation, our study showed that genistein increased melanin content and tyrosinase activity and caused the cells to form dendrite-like structures. Cells lacking p53 responded more than cells with p53 to dendrite-like structure formation. We also observed that genistein-induced differentiation involved an increase in tyrosinase mRNA level; the mechanisms by which genistein increases tyrosinase transcripts remain to be elucidated. Genistein treatment of the melanoma cell lines resulted in cell cycle arrest at G2/M check point and no significant apoptosis was observed.
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PMID:Inhibition of growth and induction of differentiation of metastatic melanoma cells in vitro by genistein: chemosensitivity is regulated by cellular p53. 918 69

Although energy-rich ultraviolet B (UVB) is considered to be primarily responsible for most of the effects associated with solar radiation, small energy recorded as heat appears to contribute to the biologic effects of solar radiation on the skin. We compared the effects of heat and UVB on normal human melanocyte functions. In monolayer culture the following was found. (i) Heat-treated melanocytes showed an increased dendricity and exhibited a larger cell body compared with nontreated melanocytes. (ii) After multiple treatments with UVB (20 mJ per cm2, 312 nm) or heat (42 degrees C for 1 h) for 3 d, melanocytes had a lower survival than nontreated melanocytes, but they resumed proliferation within 6 d in the same manner as seen in control. (iii) The expression levels of cell cycle regulators, p53 and p21 proteins, were increased after multiple treatments with UVB or heat. (iv) The tyrosinase (dopa-oxidase) activity per cell was increased after the multiple treatments with UVB or heat. (v) The number of dopa-positive melanocytes in coculture with keratinocytes in epithelial sheets was greatly increased by UVB or heat treatments. (vi) Similarly, the increased number of tyrosinase-related protein 1 positive melanocytes was seen in skin equivalents after UVB (100 mJ per cm2) or heat (42 degrees C for 1 h) treatments for 7 d. These results suggest that heat shares significant biologic activities with UVB in melanocyte functions. These results could be considered as one of the protective or adaptive responses of the skin pigmentary system to the environment.
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PMID:Regulatory effects of heat on normal human melanocyte growth and melanogenesis: comparative study with UVB. 962 Mar 8

The activities of antioxidant enzymes, and the expression of p21(WAF1) and p53 proteins were studied at different times after subculture during proliferation and differentiation phases. Two human melanoma cell lines were used: IPC182, which is a non-differentiating cell line, and IGR221, which spontaneously differentiates at the end of the exponential growth phase, as evidenced by a marked increase of melanin content and tyrosinase activity. In the two cell lines, the slowing of proliferation coincided with an increase in the activity and amount of immunoreactive superoxide dismutases (SOD1 and SOD2), and a decrease of catalase and glutathione peroxidase activities, and of the glutathione content. The levels of p21WAF1 and p53 proteins were found to be lower in confluent than in proliferative cells. Several parameters were modified only during the differentiation phase of IGR221 cells; in these cells the increase of tyrosinase activity was highly correlated with the increase in SOD2, GST, glutathione reductase, and G6PD activities. The level of glutathione was found to be lower in differentiated IGR221 than in non-differentiated IPC182 cells. These results suggest that p21WAF1 and p53 proteins are not involved in the spontaneous differentiation process of melanoma cells, and that abnormal regulation of the cell cycle inhibition pathway occurred in these cells. The results sustain the hypothesis that alterations of antioxidant enzyme expression are involved in the control of proliferation and differentiation of melanoma cells. Alterations of SOD2 activity may be of particular importance, since variations are observed with both cell growth and cell differentiation.
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PMID:Modulation of antioxidant enzymes p21WAF1 and p53 expression during proliferation and differentiation of human melanoma cell lines. 1023 48

The induction of DNA breaks by UVA (320-400 nm) in the nucleus of normal human melanocytes in culture was investigated using single cell gel electrophoresis, also called the comet assay. Endogenous pigment and/or melanin-related molecules were found to enhance DNA breakage: comets were more intense in melanocytes than in fibroblasts, in cells with high melanin content or after stimulation of melanogenesis by supplying tyrosine in the culture medium. After UVA doses where strong comets were observed, neither cytotoxicity nor stimulation of tyrosinase activity were detected. However, the accumulation of p53 protein suggested that cells reacted to genotoxic stress under these experimental conditions. The same approach was used to compare two sunscreens with identical sun protection factors but different UVA protection factors. The results presented in this paper suggest that human melanocytes may be used as a target cell to evidence broadspectrum photoprotection. Moreover, these data appear to be helpful in getting a better understanding of the role of sunlight in the initiating steps of melanocyte transformation.
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PMID:The human melanocyte as a particular target for UVA radiation and an endpoint for photoprotection assessment. 1037 7

In mammalian cells, terminal differentiation is mutually exclusive with proliferation. However, resistance to differentiation-inducing therapy requires alternative strategies to control poorly responsive tumors. We now show that retroviral transfer of the antisense cyclin D1 gene to differentiation-refractory K1735 melanoma leads to loss of in vivo tumorigenicity, shortened replicative ability, induction of the tumor suppressor p53 protein and of the cdk-inhibitor p21WAF1, increased beta-galactosidase pH 6.0 activity, and elevation in the ratio of superoxide dismutases to peroxidases, all properties associated with replicative senescence. However, pigmentation and tyrosinase expression, characteristic of differentiated melanocytic cells or apoptosis-associated PARP cleavage, were not increased by antisense cyclin D1 transduction. Our data suggests that targetting cyclin D1 inhibition suppresses melanoma tumorigenicity by promoting a cytostatic differentiation-independent pathway, mediated by activation of p53 and anti-oxidant functions.
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PMID:Tumor suppression without differentiation or apoptosis by antisense cyclin D1 gene transfer in K1735 melanoma involves induction of p53, p21WAF1 and superoxide dismutases. 1063 37

We are exposed constantly to potentially harmful compounds and radiations. Complex adaptive protective responses have evolved to prevent such agents causing cellular damage, including potentially oncogenic mutation. The p53 tumour suppressor appears to have a role in co-ordinating such responses: it is activated by diverse insults and it acts as a transcriptional regulator of downstream genes that facilitate cellular adaptation. Ultraviolet (UV) light is a particularly potent inducer of p53 expression. In addition, UV light induces the production of melanin as a protection against further irradiation-induced damage. This study shows that the promoters of the genes coding for the enzymes crucial in melanin biosynthesis, namely tyrosinase and tyrosinase-related protein-1 (TRP-1), are activated by wild-type p53. Both promoters have p53-responsive elements and are activated in vivo in a dose-dependent manner by wild-type p53, as well as by the p53 homologues p73alpha and p63alpha.
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PMID:Transcriptional activation of tyrosinase and TRP-1 by p53 links UV irradiation to the protective tanning response. 1064 Sep 90

The frequent loss of both INK4a and ARF in melanoma raises the question of which INK4a-ARF gene product functions to suppress melanoma genesis in vivo. Moreover, the high incidence of INK4a-ARF inactivation in transformed melanocytes, along with the lack of p53 mutation, implies a cell type-specific role for INK4a-ARF that may not be complemented by other lesions of the RB and p53 pathways. A mouse model of cutaneous melanoma has been generated previously through the combined effects of INK4a(Delta2/3) deficiency (null for INK4a and ARF) and melanocyte-specific expression of activated RAS (tyrosinase-driven H-RAS(V12G), Tyr-RAS). In this study, we made use of this Tyr-RAS allele to determine whether activated RAS can cooperate with p53 loss in melanoma genesis, whether such melanomas are biologically comparable to those arising in INK4a(Delta2/3-/-) mice, and whether tumor-associated mutations emerge in the p16(INK4a)-RB pathway in such melanomas. Here, we report that p53 inactivation can cooperate with activated RAS to promote the development of cutaneous melanomas that are clinically indistinguishable from those arisen on the INK4a(Delta2/3) null background. Genomewide analysis of RAS-induced p53 mutant melanomas by comparative genomic hybridization and candidate gene surveys revealed alterations of key components governing RB-regulated G(1)/S transition, including c-Myc, cyclin D1, cdc25a, and p21(CIP1). Consistent with the profile of c-Myc dysregulation, the reintroduction of p16(INK4a) profoundly reduced the growth of Tyr-RAS INK4a(Delta2/3-/-) tumor cells but had no effect on tumor cells derived from Tyr-RAS p53(-/-) melanomas. Together, these data validate a role for p53 inactivation in melanomagenesis and suggest that both the RB and p53 pathways function to suppress melanocyte transformation in vivo in the mouse.
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PMID:Dual inactivation of RB and p53 pathways in RAS-induced melanomas. 1123 48


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