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Query: EC:2.7.10.1 (
ERK
)
95,504
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Liver steatosis is frequently encountered at organ harvest and, although functionally inapparent in the donor, may seriously affect the functional recovery of the graft after ischemic preservation. The present study was aimed to investigate the diagnostic value of alpha-
glutathione S-transferase
(
GST
) in non-ischemic and ischemic livers with or without compensated steatosis. A histologically documented mild to moderate steatosis was induced in livers of male Wistar rats by fasting for 2 days and subsequent feeding of a fat-free diet enriched in carbohydrates. Fatty livers (FL) were retrieved and perfused in vitro for 45 min either immediately or after ischemic preservation at 4 degrees C in
HTK
solution. Effluate was collected during isolated perfusion and later analysed for liver specific enzymes, including
GST
. Normal livers (NL) were excised from healthy rats and underwent the same protocol. Non-ischemic livers showed similar enzyme release (FL versus NL) for ALT or GLDH but significant differences in
GST
. After ischemic preservation of NL, enzyme release increased mildly with respect to the non-ischemic reference values for ALT, remained unchanged for GLDH and rose substantially for
GST
. In FL, there was a more than 10-fold increase in all parameters, being most pronounced for GLDH as a marker of mitochondrial damage. It is concluded that
GST
may discriminate between healthy and suboptimal steatotic livers prior to ischemia and that the release of
GST
upon postischemic reperfusion of normal livers proves to be the most sensitive indicator for hepatocellular injury. However,
GST
turned out to be less useful for the detection of postischemic reperfusion injury in steatotic grafts.
...
PMID:Value of alpha glutathione S-transferase for in vitro evaluation of preservation injury in normal and steatotic livers. 1111 71
This paper reviews studies published in the international scientific literature evaluating the influence of genetically based metabolic polymorphisms on biological indicators of genotoxic risk in environmental or occupational exposure. Exposures due to life style (i.e. diet or smoking) were not considered. Indicators are subdivided into internal dose indicators (concentration of the substance or its metabolites in biological fluids, urinary mutagenicity, adducts of hemoglobin, plasma proteins and DNA), and early biological effects (chromosome aberrations, sister chromatid exchanges, micronuclei, COMET assay, HPRT mutants). The metabolic genotypes (or phenotypes) examined by various authors are: ALDH2 (aldehyde dehydrogenase), CYP (P450 cytochrome) 1AI, CYP1A2, CYP2E1, CYP2D6,
EPHX
(epoxidohydrolase), NAT2 (N-acetyl transferase), NQO1 (NAD(P)H: kinone oxidoreductase), PON1 (paraoxonase), GST (
glutathione S-transferase
) M1, GSTT1 and GSTP1. In more than half the studies (52 out of 96), no influence of genotype was found in the biological indicator. This may be due either to the poor sensitivity of the indicator used, or to low exposure. In studies examining the effect of genotype on the indicator, the biological plausibility of the result was evaluated, i.e., whether the effect is consistent with the type of enzymatic activity expressed. Four studies reported not very reliable results and suggest either the unfavourable influence of genotype GSTM1 with high detoxifying activity, or enzymatic activity poorly involved in the metabolism of the xenobiotics in question (NAT2 in the case of PAH). As regards urinary metabolites of genotoxic agents, eight studies reported the modulating effect of genotype. The urinary excretion of mercapturic acids was greater in subjects with high GST activity. In exposure to PAH, urinary 1-pyrenol and PAH metabolites turn out to be significantly influenced by genotypes CYP1A1 or GSTM1 null; in exposure to aromatic amines, the influence of NAT2 on exposure indicators (levels of acetylated and non-acetylated metabolites) was confirmed. Exposure to benzene led to an increase in t-t-MA in some genotypes, although experimental verification is still necessary. As regards urinary mutagenicity, the effect of genotype GSTM1 null is reported, and of the same genotype combined with NAT2 slow, in non-smoking individuals subjected to high exposure to PAH and in cigarette-smoking/coke-oven workers. Lastly, the determination of urinary metabolites in monitoring exposure to genotoxic substances, provides sufficient evidence that genetically based metabolic polymorphisms must be taken into account in the future. There is still little evidence regarding the importance of genotype on the level of protein adducts in environmental and occupational exposure. A relatively large number of publications (22) dealt with DNA adduct levels in PAH exposure. In 18 studies, the biological indicator clearly increases with respect to values in control subjects. Of these studies, seven reported the influence of GSTM1 null on DNA adducts and, of the five studies which also examined genotype CYP1A1, four reported the influence on DNA adduct level of genotype CYP1A1, alone or in combination with GSTM1 null. It therefore seems as if the unfavourable association for the activating/detoxifying metabolism of PAH is a risk factor for the formation of PAH-DNA adducts. Most publications (25 out of 41; 61%) dealing with metabolic polymorphisms in effect indicators (cytogenetic markers, COMET assay, HPRT mutants) did not report any increase in the indicator due to exposure to the genotoxic agents studied. These indicators of genotoxic damage, including mainly the frequency of HPRT mutants (100%), Mn (90%) and the COMET assay (67%), are not sufficiently sensitive in revealing exposure, confirming that they are not particularly suitable for measuring exposure to genotoxic substances in occupational or environmental exposures. It is therefore difficult to assess the influence of metabolic genotypes by means of this type of biological indicator. The few positive results reported for SCE in occupational studies mentioned the influence of genotype ALDH2, either alone or in combination with genotype CYP2E1 in exposure to CVM, or in combination with GSTM1 null in exposure to epichlorohydrin. For CA the results showed unfavourable combinations of genotypes CYP2E1, GSTM1 and PON1 in exposure to pesticides, and GSTM1 null in combination with NAT2 slow in exposure to urban air. All the remaining studies on the effect of genotype on biological indicators of cytogenetic damage reported negative results.
...
PMID:[Biomarkers of gentotoxic risk and metabolic polymorphism]. 1118 84
The abnormal appearance and age-dependent loss of resident fibroblast growth factor receptor-2 (FGFR2) and gain of activity of
FGFR1
in epithelial cells is a hallmark of the slow progression to malignancy in some models of prostate cancer. Pericellular matrix heparan sulfate (HS) is an integral subunit of the FGFR tyrosine kinase complex that restricts activity in absence of FGF, facilitates binding of an activating FGF, and confers specificity for FGF isoforms. In this report, we isolated and purified HS proteoglycan (HSPG) from premalignant prostate tumor epithelial cells based on the ability of the HS chains to form a binary complex with immunoglobulin module II of the ectopic and progression-promoting
FGFR1
that was competent to bind FGF. The
FGFR1
affinity-purified product exhibited a specific activity of over 600 times that of crude cellular HSPG enriched from cell lysates by ion exchange chromatography. The purified preparation exhibited a single NH(2)-terminal sequence with 11 of 13 residues identical to syndecan-1. The activity of purified recombinant
glutathione S-transferase
-tagged syndecan-1 expressed in premalignant epithelial cells confirmed that syndecan-1 bears HS chains that exhibit the rare motif that forms the FGF-binding complex with ectopic
FGFR1
. These results are the first to identify by affinity purification a specific HSPG core protein, the HS chains of which act as an integral subunit of the FGFR complex. The results suggest that syndecan-1 provides HS chains in premalignant epithelial cells to both the FGFR2- and
FGFR1
-signaling complexes that are integral to their dual roles in progression to malignancy.
...
PMID:A rare premalignant prostate tumor epithelial cell syndecan-1 forms a fibroblast growth factor-binding complex with progression-promoting ectopic fibroblast growth factor receptor 1. 1143 73
RRR-alpha-tocopherol succinate (vitamin E succinate, VES) is a potent, selective apoptotic agent for cancer cells but not normal cells. VES has been shown to inhibit the growth of a wide variety of tumor cells in cell culture and animal models. Studies addressing mechanisms of action of VES-induced apoptosis have identified transforming growth factor-beta, Fas/CD95-APO-1, and mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling pathway involvement. Here we show that MAPKs, the extracellular signal-regulated kinases (ERK), and the stress-activated protein kinases, c-Jun NH2-terminal kinases (JNK), but not p38, are critical mediators in VES-induced apoptosis of human breast cancer MDA-MB-435 cells. VES activates ERK1/2 and JNK both in level and duration of kinase activity. Expression of dominant negative mutants of ERK1, MAPK/ERK activator-1, or JNK1 but not p38 blocked phosphorylation of the substrate
glutathione S-transferase
-c-Jun and inhibited VES-induced apoptosis. Increased phosphorylation and transactivation activity of nuclear transcription factors c-Jun, ATF-2, and
Elk
-1 are observed after VES treatments; however, only c-Jun and ATF-2 appear to be involved in VES-induced apoptosis based on antisense blockage experiments. Collectively, these results imply a critical role for ERK1 and JNK1 but not p38 in VES-induced apoptosis of human MDA-MB-435 breast cancer cells.
...
PMID:Activation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase and c-Jun-NH(2)-terminal kinase but not p38 mitogen-activated protein kinases is required for RRR-alpha-tocopheryl succinate-induced apoptosis of human breast cancer cells. 1152 56
We have examined the ability of epidermal growth factor (EGF)-stimulated
ERK
activation to regulate Grb2-associated binder-1 (Gab1)/phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) interactions. Inhibiting
ERK
activation with the MEK inhibitor U0126 increased the EGF-stimulated association of Gab1 with either full-length
glutathione S-transferase
-p85 or the p85 C-terminal Src homology 2 (SH2) domain, a result reproduced by co-immunoprecipitation of the native proteins from intact cells. This increased association of Gab1 and the PI3K correlates with an increase in PI3K activity and greater phosphorylation of Akt. This result is in direct contrast to what we have previously reported following HGF stimulation where MEK inhibition decreased the HGF-stimulated association of Gab1 and p85. In support of this divergent effect of
ERK
on Gab1/PI3K association following HGF and EGF stimulation, U0126 decreased the HGF-stimulated association of p85 and the Gab1 c-Met binding domain but did not alter the EGF-stimulated association of p85 and the c-Met binding domain. An examination of the mechanism of this effect revealed that the treatment of cells with EGF + U0126 increased the tyrosine phosphorylation of Gab1 as well as its association with another SH2-containing protein, SHP2. Furthermore, overexpression of a catalytically inactive form of SHP2 or pretreatment with pervanadate markedly increased EGF-stimulated Gab1 tyrosine phosphorylation. These experiments demonstrate that EGF and HGF-mediated
ERK
activation result in divergent effects on Gab1/PI3K signaling. HGF-stimulated
ERK
activation increases the Gab1/PI3K association, whereas EGF-stimulated
ERK
activation results in a decrease in the tyrosine phosphorylation of Gab1 and a decreased association with the PI3K. SHP2 is shown to associate with and dephosphorylate Gab1, suggesting that EGF-stimulated
ERK
might act through the regulation of SHP2.
...
PMID:ERK negatively regulates the epidermal growth factor-mediated interaction of Gab1 and the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase. 1189 55
The aryl hydrocarbon receptor complex heterodimeric transcription factor, comprising the basic helix-loop-helix-Per-ARNT-Sim (bHLH-PAS) domain aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR) and aryl hydrocarbon receptor nuclear translocator (ARNT) proteins, mediates the toxic effects of TCDD (2,3,7,8 tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin). The molecular events underlying TCDD-inducible gene activation, beyond the activation of the AHRC, are poorly understood. The SRC-1/NCoA-1, NCoA-2/GRIP-1/
TIF
-2, and p/CIP/AIB/ACTR proteins have been shown to act as mediators of transcriptional activation. In this report, we demonstrate that SRC-1, NCoA-2, and p/CIP are capable of independently enhancing TCDD-dependent induction of a luciferase reporter gene by the AHR/ARNT dimer. Furthermore, injection of anti-SRC-1 or anti-p/CIP immunoglobulin G into mammalian cells abolishes the transcriptional activity of a TCDD-dependent reporter gene. We demonstrate by coimmunoprecipitation and by a reporter gene assay that SRC-1 and NCoA-2 but not p/CIP are capable of interacting with ARNT in vivo after transient transfection into mammalian cells, while AHR is capable of interacting with all three coactivators. We confirm the interactions of ARNT and AHR with SRC-1 with immunocytochemical techniques. Furthermore, SRC-1, NCoA-2, and p/CIP all associate with the CYP1A1 enhancer region in a TCDD-dependent fashion, as demonstrated by chromatin immunoprecipitation assays. We demonstrate by yeast two-hybrid,
glutathione S-transferase
pulldown, and mammalian reporter gene assays that ARNT requires its helix 2 domain but not its transactivation domain to interact with SRC-1. This indicates a novel mechanism of action for SRC-1. SRC-1 does not require its bHLH-PAS domain to interact with ARNT or AHR, but utilizes distinct domains proximal to its p300/CBP interaction domain. Taken together, these data support a role for the SRC family of transcriptional coactivators in TCDD-dependent gene regulation.
...
PMID:Recruitment of the NCoA/SRC-1/p160 family of transcriptional coactivators by the aryl hydrocarbon receptor/aryl hydrocarbon receptor nuclear translocator complex. 1202 42
Sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) is a bioactive sphingolipid metabolite that has novel dual actions. S1P is the ligand for a family of G protein-coupled receptors known as S1PRs that mediate various physiological functions. Growth factors rapidly activate sphingosine kinase type 1 (SPHK1) resulting in phosphorylation of sphingosine to form S1P, which plays important roles in cell growth regulation and protection from apoptosis. However, little is known of the mechanism(s) by which SPHK activity is regulated. Using a yeast two-hybrid screening approach, we cloned a 3-kb cDNA encoding a SPHK1-interacting protein (SKIP). BLAST analysis revealed that SKIP corresponded to the C-terminal region of a larger ( approximately 7 kb) cDNA that encoded a protein with a high degree of similarity to a family of protein kinase A anchor proteins (AKAP). In confirmation of the yeast two-hybrid assay,
glutathione S-transferase
(
GST
)-SPHK1 specifically pulled down SKIP, whereas
GST
did not. Moreover, immunoprecipitation of in vitro translated SPHK1 and SKIP revealed that SKIP and SPHK1 are tightly associated. Furthermore, SKIP overexpression in NIH 3T3 fibroblasts reduced SPHK1 activity and interfered with its biological functions. The apoptotic-sparing effect of SPHK1 against serum deprivation was reduced when co-transfected with SKIP. In addition, SPHK1-enhanced cell proliferation was also abolished by SKIP, with a corresponding decrease in activation of
ERK
. Taken together, these results indicate that SKIP is a novel protein likely to play a regulatory role in the modulation of SPHK1 activity.
...
PMID:Cloning and characterization of a protein kinase A anchoring protein (AKAP)-related protein that interacts with and regulates sphingosine kinase 1 activity. 1208 51
The etiology of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is largely unknown. Biologic and epidemiologic data implicate exogenous toxicants, including cytotoxic drugs, benzene, radiation, and cigarette smoking. Allelic variation in genes encoding enzymes such as NADP(H) quinone oxidoreductase (NQO1) and
glutathione S-transferase
T1 (GSTT1) that metabolize environmental toxicants predispose to subtypes of AML, including therapy-related AML. We assayed NRAS oncogene mutation and
FLT3
internal tandem duplication in 447 AML patients with an abnormal karyotype treated in Medical Research Council (MRC) AML clinical trials. Functional allelic variant frequencies in genes encoding carcinogen-metabolizing enzymes GSTT1, GSTM1, CYP1A1, CYP2D6, CYP2C19, SULT1A1, and NQO1 were previously determined for this cohort.
FLT3
internal tandem duplication (ITD) frequency was 17%, and NRAS mutation 12% for the entire cohort. The 2 mutations were found together in only 4 patients. No association was found between enzyme allelic variant frequencies and the presence of
FLT3
ITD for the entire cohort or within cytogenetic subgroups. CYP1A1*2B (Val) high-inducibility variant allele was overrepresented in patients with NRAS mutation compared with no mutation, for (1) the entire AML cohort (n = 8/53 vs 26/371; odds ratio [OR] = 2.36; 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.01-5.53) and (2) the poor-risk karyotype group (n = 6/14 vs 4/89; OR = 15.94; 95% CI 3.71-68.52) comprising patients with partial/complete deletion of chromosome 5 or 7, or abnormalities of chromosome 3. The CYP1A1*2B allele may predispose to the development of these subgroups of AML by augmented phase 1 metabolism to highly reactive intermediates of CYP1A1 substrates, including polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, or by generation of oxidative stress as a metabolic by-product.
...
PMID:CYP1A1*2B (Val) allele is overrepresented in a subgroup of acute myeloid leukemia patients with poor-risk karyotype associated with NRAS mutation, but not associated with FLT3 internal tandem duplication. 1246 38
An expression vector (pJW4) for a human epidermal growth factor (hEGF)-CH1 fusion protein was constructed by fusing the gene for hEGF with the gene for CH1 of murine IgG1 with/without a peptide linker sequence [(GGGGS)3] and inserting the recombinant gene into vector pGEX2T. Expression vector pGEX2T was transfected into E. coli (BL-21) and hEGF-CH1 expressed by induction of the lac Iq promotor with 50 microM isopropyl beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG). hEGF- CH1 fused to
glutathione S-transferase
(
GST
) was isolated and purified by affinity chromatography.
GST
was cleaved using thrombin. SDS-PAGE demonstrated a protein with the expected M(r) (18 kDa) positive for hEGF by Western blot. hEGF-linker-CH1 exhibited preserved binding to A431 (2-3 x 10(6)
EGFR
/cell) and MDA-MB-468 breast cancer cells (1-2 x 10(6)
EGFR
/cell). hEGF-CH1 without the linker exhibited poor receptor binding. hEGF-linker-CH1 also exhibited strong binding to soluble
EGFR
equivalent to that of hEGF. The tumor and normal tissue distribution of hEGF-linker-CH1 labeled with 123I was compared with 123 I-hEGF at 24 h after i.v. injection to mice implanted with s.c. MDA-MB-468 xenografts. Fusion of hEGF with CH1 increased its retention in the blood 14-fold but did not significantly increase tumor uptake. Tumor/blood ratios were higher for hEGF than for hEGF-linker-CH1. We conclude that hEGF is more attractive than hEGF-linker-CH1 for imaging
EGFR
-positive tumors.
...
PMID:Fusion of the CH1 domain of IgG1 to epidermal growth factor (EGF) prolongs its retention in the blood but does not increase tumor uptake. 1253 70
A cross-sectional study was carried out on 48 workers exposed to styrene and 14 unexposed healthy controls in order to investigate the genotoxic potential of styrene exposure. DNA damage was assessed in peripheral blood leukocytes (WBCs) by the comet assay. Polymorphisms in
glutathione S-transferase
genes (GSTM1, GSTT1, GSTP1) and the gene encoding microsomal epoxide hydrolase (
EPHX
) were characterized to assess their possible modifying role in styrene metabolism and subsequent DNA damage. Exposed workers showed significantly higher levels of DNA damage compared to controls. Among workers, the GSTM1 and GSTT1 polymorphisms significantly affected comet parameters. Subjects bearing a GSTM1pos genotype showed a significantly higher proportion of damaged nuclei compared to people lacking GSTM1-1 expression (GSTM1null), whereas GSTT1pos workers showed significantly lower DNA damage than GSTT1null individuals. Styrene-7,8-oxide (SO)-induced DNA damage was assessed in vitro in WBCs isolated from the healthy controls. A clear dose-response relationship at micromolar doses of SO was found for the whole group. WBCs collected from subjects bearing the homozygous wildtype GSTP1 genotype showed a significant protection compared to cells from subjects bearing at least one GSTP1 variant allele. The field survey confirms that styrene exposure is associated with increased DNA damage and indicates a modulating role for GSTM1 and GSTT1 genotypes. In vitro experiments suggest that the extent of SO-induced DNA strand breaks depends, at least in part, on interindividual differences in GSH-conjugation capabilities.
...
PMID:Genetic polymorphism of drug-metabolizing enzymes and styrene-induced DNA damage. 1271 79
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