Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.7.10.1 (ERK)
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Investigation of early breast carcinogenesis is limited by the difficulty in obtaining cell cultures or adequate fresh frozen material and by the fact that available data from in situ techniques are interpreted in terms of various classification systems. Our studies in a series of pure ductal carcinomas in situ (DCIS) were conducted in accordance with the recommendations of the international Consensus Conference (Hum. Pathol., 28, 122-125, 1997) relative to processing, determination of lesion extent, and histological stratification primarily on nuclear grade (NG). A multifactorial study performed in 15 low- and 16 high-NG DCIS (68% detected by mammography) included the following: (1) morphological analysis of NG, necrosis, and architectural pattern; (2) detection of numerical genomic abnormalities at ERBB2, MYC, CCND1, Xq1.2 and 20q13 loci by fluorescence in situ hybridization on interphase nuclei; and (3) immunohistochemical determination of cell proliferation, p53 accumulation, hormonal receptors and bcl-2 expression on serial sections of formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded specimens. High NG, comedo/solid pattern and necrosis were significantly associated with amplification at one or more loci, the number of amplified loci, amplification at the ERBB2 locus, absence of bcl-2 and hormonal receptor expression and high cell proliferation (p < 0.05). High NG and comedo/solid pattern were significantly associated with MYC amplification and p53 accumulation, and necrosis with CCND1 amplification (the only gene amplification detected in low NG DCIS). These data provide additional information on the early steps of breast carcinogenesis, in accordance with currently recognized criteria of histological classification.
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PMID:Gene amplifications detected by fluorescence in situ hybridization in pure intraductal breast carcinomas: relation to morphology, cell proliferation and expression of breast cancer-related genes. 1100 1

C-cell hyperplasia (CCH) and medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) in patients affected by germline mutations of the RET oncogene represent an exceptional opportunity to study the regulation of proliferation and apoptosis during tumour initiation and progression. In 56 specimens [CCH, n=1; MTC with CCH, n=26; MTC, n=20; lymph-node metastasis (LNM), n=9] from 46 patients [multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2a (MEN2a), n=24; MEN2b, n=2; familiar MTC (FMTC), n=4; sporadic MTC, n-16] and 3 cases of non-neoplastic CCH, proliferation activity (MIB1), the rate of apoptosis [dUTP nick end labelling (TUNEL)] and expression of p53, bcl-2, bcl-x and bax were investigated and compared with clinical data. In MEN-associated CCH and small MTC, bcl-2 was strongly expressed, bcl-x was moderately expressed and bax was only weakly expressed. Advanced tumours and LNM did show a more heterogeneous bcl-2 staining accompanied by an increased bax expression and accelerated proliferation. The rate of apoptosis was extremely low in all investigated tumours. P53 was detectable in three patients with rapidly growing and extensively metastasising MTC. No somatic p53 mutations were found. Hereditary MTC with germline RET mutations at codon 918 (MEN2b) and codon 634 revealed a bias towards a higher proliferation activity at a younger age and are more frequently accompanied by LNM. CCH and MTC are characterised with a preponderance of bcl-2 as a factor blocking the programmed cell death. While MTC, in general, is a slowly growing tumour, a minority of tumours do progress rapidly with high proliferation. The factors leading to an accelerated tumour progression do not seem to take their effect via the regulation of apoptosis. Certain alterations of RET are supposed to have a direct or indirect implication on proliferation and, because of this, an effect on the clinical course.
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PMID:Regulation of proliferation and apoptosis in sporadic and hereditary medullary thyroid carcinomas and their putative precursor lesions. 1103 45

Recent neuroimaging studies have demonstrated regional central nervous system volume reductions in mood disorders, findings that are complemented by postmortem observations of cell atrophy and loss. It is thus noteworthy that lithium and valproate have recently been demonstrated to robustly increase the expression of the cytoprotective protein bcl-2 in the central nervous system. Chronic lithium not only exerts neuroprotective effects in several preclinical paradigms but also enhances hippocampal neurogenesis. Valproate robustly promotes neurite outgrowth and activates the ERK mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway, a signaling pathway utilized by many endogenous neurotrophic factors. Consistent with its preclinical neurotrophic/neuroprotective effects, chronic lithium treatment of patients with manic-depressive illness increases brain N-acetylaspartate (a putative marker of neuronal viability and function) levels, an effect that is localized almost exclusively to gray matter. To determine if lithium was producing neuropil increases, quantitative three-dimensional magnetic resonance imaging studies were undertaken, which revealed that chronic lithium significantly increases total gray matter volume in the human brain of patients with manic-depressive illness. Together, these results suggest that a reconceptualization about the optimal long-term treatment of recurrent mood disorders is warranted. Optimal long-term treatment for these severe illnesses may only be achieved by the early use of agents with neurotrophic/neuroprotective effects, irrespective of the primary, symptomatic treatment.
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PMID:Clinical and preclinical evidence for the neurotrophic effects of mood stabilizers: implications for the pathophysiology and treatment of manic-depressive illness. 1106 71

Expression of bcl-2 protein was investigated and correlated with Bax, p53 and Rb proteins, c-erbB-2, EGFR and the proliferation indices PCNA, Ki-67 and MIB1 as well as with the conventional clinicopathological parameters in 95 cases for breast cancer tissue and 20 cases of benign hyperplastic lesions. Bcl-2 and Bax proteins immunoreactivity was detected in normal, hyperplastic and neoplastic breast epithelium. Expression of the bcl-2 protein was detected in 40% of carcinomas (> 10% positive neoplastic cells) and 85.2% of the benign hyperplastic lesions. Bax protein expression was detected in 8.1% of the carcinomas and 5.3% in the hyperplastic group. Rb and p53 proteins were detected in 75.5% and 45.5% of carcinomas. No relationship was observed between bcl-2 expression and patient's age, tumour size, tumour type and grade, lymph node status, Rb protein expression and proliferation indices. However, a strong positive relationship was detected between bcl-2 and Bax (p = 0.008), estrogen (ER) (p = 0.007) and progesterone receptors' (PgR) status (p = 0.0003). An inverse correlation with p53 protein (p = 0.004) was detected. Furthermore, a strong correlation was also observed between pRb and p53 (p = 0.001). The results indicate that in breast cancer bcl-2 protein expression may be under hormonal control. Since the expression is bcl-2 protein was inversely correlated with p53 protein expression, we suggest that bcl-2 may be related with favourable outcome in breast cancer.
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PMID:Immunohistochemical expression of Bcl-2 protein in breast lesions: correlation with Bax, p53, Rb, C-erbB-2, EGFR and proliferation indices. 1120 51

Flavopiridol inhibits phosphokinases. Its activity is strongest on cyclin dependent kinases (cdk-1, -2, -4, -6, -7) and less on receptor tyrosine kinases (EGFR), receptor associates tyrosine kinases (pp60 Src) and on signal transducing kinases (PKC and Erk-1). Although the inhibiting activity of flavopiridol is strongest for cdk, the cytotoxic activity of flavopiridol is not limited to cycling cells. Resting cells are also killed. This fact suggests that inhibition of cdks involved in the control of cell cycle is not the only mechanism of action. Inhibition of cdk's with additional functions (i.e. involved in the control of transcription or function of proteins that do not control cell cycle) may contribute to the antitumoral effect. Moreover, direct and indirect inhibition of receptor activation (EGFR) and/or a direct inhibition of kinases (pp60 Src, PKC, Erk-1) involved in the signal transduction pathway could play a role in the antiproliferative activity of flavopiridol. From pharmacokinetic data in patients it can be concluded that the inhibitory activity (IC50) of flavopiridol on these kinases is in the range of concentrations that might be achieved intracellularly after systemic application of non-toxic doses of flavopiridol. However, no in situ data from flavopiridol treated cells have been published yet that prove that by inhibition of EGFR, pp60 Src, PKC and/or Erk-1 (in addition to inhibition of cdk's) flavopiridol is able to induce apoptosis. Thus many questions regarding the detailed mechanism of antitumoral action of flavopiridol are still open. For the design of protocols for future clinical studies this review covers the essential information available on the mechanism of antitumoral activity of flavopiridol. The characteristics of this antitumoral activity include: High rate of apoptosis, especially in leukemic cells; synergy with the antitumoral activity of many cytostatics; independence of its efficacy on pRb, p53 and Bcl-2 expression; lack of interference with the most frequent multidrug resistance proteins (P-glycoprotein and MRP-190); and a strong antiangiogenic activity. Based on these pharmacological data it can be concluded that flavopiridol could be therapeutically active in tumor patients: independent on the genetic status of their tumors or leukemias (i.e. mutations of the pRb and/or p53, amplification of bcl-2); in spite of drug resistance of their tumors induced by first line treatment (and caused by enhanced expression of multidrug resistance proteins); in combination with conventional chemotherapeutics preferentially given prior to flavopiridol; and due to a complex mechanism involving cytotoxicity on cycling and on resting tumor cells, apoptosis and antiangiogenic activity. In consequence, flavopiridol is a highly attractive, new antitumoral compound and deserves further elucidation of its clinical potency.
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PMID:Mechanisms of action of flavopiridol. 1131 60

Active angiogenesis, together with an up-regulation of angiogenic factors, is evident in the synovium of both rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and osteoarthritis (OA). The present study assessed, by immunohistochemistry, the microvessel density in the synovium of these arthritides and in normal controls, in relation to the expression of the angiogenic factors vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and platelet-derived endothelial cell growth factor (PD-ECGF) and the apoptosis-related proteins bcl-2 and p53. More importantly, using the novel 11B5 MAb, the activated "VEGF/flk-1(KDR)-receptor" microvessel density was assessed. VEGF expression in fibroblasts was diffuse in both RA and OA. Diffuse PD-ECGF expression of fibroblasts was noted in all cases of RA, while fibroblast reactivity was focal in the OA material. The standard microvessel density (sMVD), as assessed with the anti-CD31 monoclonal antibody (MAb), was higher in RA (64+/-12) and in OA (65+/-16) than in normal tissues (52+/-8; p=0.008 and 0.0004, respectively). The activated microvessel density (aMVD), assessed with the 11B5 MAb, was significantly higher in RA (29+/-10) than in OA (17+/-4; p<0.0001) and than in normal tissues (14+/-2; p<0.0001). The "activation ratio" (aMVD/sMVD) was statistically higher in RA (0.46+/-0.17) than in OA and normal synovial tissues, the latter two having a similar ratio (0.28+/-0.08 and 0.26+/-0.03, respectively). Cytoplasmic bcl-2 expression was frequent in the synovial cells of OA, but rare in RA. Nuclear p53 protein accumulation was never observed. It is suggested that the angiogenic pathway VEGF/flk-1(KDR) may play an important role in the pathogenesis of RA and OA. Thus, failure of VEGF/flk-1(KDR) activation, in the presence of increased VEGF expression, may indicate a synovium with an impaired capacity to establish a viable vasculature, consistent with the degenerative nature of OA. On the other hand, the activated angiogenesis in RA shows a functional, still pathologically up-regulated VEGF/flk-1(KDR) pathway. Whether restoration of an impaired VEGF/flk-1(KDR) pathway in OA, or inhibition of this in RA, would prove of therapeutic importance requires further investigation.
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PMID:The angiogenic pathway "vascular endothelial growth factor/flk-1(KDR)-receptor" in rheumatoid arthritis and osteoarthritis. 1132 48

Regional metastasis is an important factor in the prognosis and treatment of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC). The results of earlier studies suggested the possibility of predicting nodal metastasis in HNSCC using biological markers. To identify which factors may be relevant in the metastatic behaviour of these tumours, the expression of several markers involved in tumour progression was studied in both nodal metastases and their corresponding primary tumours. Expression of p53, Rb, cyclin D1, myc, bcl-2, EGFR, neu, E-cadherin, epithelial cell adhesion molecule (Ep-CAM), and nm23 was studied in 54 primary tumours and their corresponding metastases in patients with HNSCC. The expression of most genes involved in tumourigenesis (p53, Rb, cyclin D1, myc, bcl-2, EGFR, neu, and E-cadherin) was similar in primary tumours and metastases. The expression of nm23 and Ep-CAM was found to be more frequently lower than higher in metastases, compared with their primary tumours. Whereas most genetic alterations of primary tumours remain unchanged in metastases, expression of the cell adhesion molecule Ep-CAM and of nm23 is more frequently reduced than increased in metastases, compared with their primary tumours, suggesting relevance to the process of metastasis. This also implies differences in the regulation of markers involved in tumourigenesis and the process of metastasis.
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PMID:Expression of genetic markers in lymph node metastases compared with their primary tumours in head and neck cancer. 1143 61

Bcl-2 family proteins play a critical role in the regulation of cell survival by controlling the activation of the cell death executing caspase machinery. Recent work demonstrated that they also provide a link between growth factor signaling and cell survival control. Raf-1 has been identified initially as an essential component of the mitogenic Ras-Raf-MEK-ERK cascade. However, expression of oncogenic Raf-1 also efficiently suppresses apoptotic cell death. This process requires mitochondrial translocation of Raf-1 which can be achieved either by co-expression of the anti-apoptotic protein Bcl-2 or by fusion with the transmembrane domain of the yeast outer mitochondrial membrane protein Mas 70p. It is currently unclear how mitochondrial Raf-1 prevents apoptosis. One possible mechanism involves the phosphorylation of the pro-apoptotic protein Bad resulting in the restoration of Bcl-2 function. Alternatively, the role of Bcl-2 could be limited to the mitochondrial translocation of Raf-1 and survival signaling by Raf-1 is Bcl-2 independent. To test for the mutual requirement of Raf-1 and Bcl-2 in apoptosis suppression the individual proteins were singly tested for survival activity in a genetic background which precludes the expression of the other. The results obtained in these studies demonstrate that ablation of Raf-1 or Bcl-2 expression in fibroblast cells significantly increases the sensitivity towards doxorubicin induced cell death. Reversion of the mutant phenotype could be achieved in either case by introducing a functional bcl-2 gene or a mitochondria targeted version of oncogenic Raf-1, demonstrating that each protein by itself is sufficient to confer protection. Our data thus suggest the existence of two separate pathways of survival signaling at the mitochondria controlled either by Bcl-2 or by Raf-1.
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PMID:Independent control of cell survival by Raf-1 and Bcl-2 at the mitochondria. 1152 Nov 92

The cytotoxic activity of the imidazoacridinone C1311 was assessed on two ovarian cancer cell lines (A2780, OAW42) and one osteogenic sarcoma cell line (U2-OS) and their sublines (A2780Cp8, OAW42-MER and U2-OS-R) with experimentally induced resistance to cisplatin. A 1-h exposure to C1311 significantly inhibited the growth of all cell lines, with IC50 values ranging from 0.50 +/-0.11 to 4.10+/-0.36 microM. No or only partial cross-resistance was found between C1311 and cisplatin in the different cell lines. Treatment with equitoxic (IC50) C1311 concentrations consistently induced accumulation of cells in the G2M phase. The cyclin B1-associated p34(cdc2) kinase activity in cells arrested in G2M was superimposable to that of control cells in the OAW42-MER and U2-OS cell lines, whereas a reduction of cdc2 catalytic activity was observed in OAW42 and U2-OS-R cells. Exposure to C1311 (IC50) induced apoptosis in the U2-OS and U2-OS-R cell lines, whereas in the OAW42 and OAW42-MER cell lines there was a negligible percentage of apoptotic cells. In U2-OS, U2-OS-R and OAW42 cells, C1311 induced an increase in p53 expression and an increase in p21waf1 protein, whereas p53 failed to transactivate p21waf1 in OAW42-MER cells. An almost complete abrogation of bcl-2 was observed in U2-OS-R cells in correspondence with the peak of apoptosis induction. Our results indicate that C1311 is active against human ovarian cancer and osteogenic sarcoma cells and is not cross-resistant with CDDP. Moreover, C1311 blocks cells in the G2M phase and induces apoptosis in a small percentage of osteogenic sarcoma cells.
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PMID:Cell growth inhibition, G2M cell cycle arrest and apoptosis induced by the imidazoacridinone C1311 in human tumour cell lines. 1157 53

HER2 amplification/overexpression is a marker of poor prognosis in breast cancer. The prognostic impact of HER2 positivity is lower in node-negative compared with node-positive women. The only significant, independent prognostic factors in breast cancer are node status, HER2 status and menopausal status. HER2-positive tumors also contain p53 abnormalities, tend to be hormone receptor and bcl-2 negative, have lymphoid infiltration (LI) and a high mitotic index. Patients with LI who are HER2 positive have a better prognosis than those who are HER2 negative, whereas HER2-positive patients without LI have a significantly worse prognosis than HER2-negative patients. Morphological and biological alterations appear to identify two categories of breast tumor. Two hypotheses may explain the progression to two tumor types: (1) atypical ductal hyperplasia (ADH) is a precursor of ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS), which is a precursor of invasive ductal carcinoma (IDC); or (2) ADH is a precursor of HER2-negative IDC whereas DCIS is a precursor of HER2-positive IDC. The second theory fits well with two breast cancer subsets and the characteristics of ADH and DCIS. The first type of IDC occurs in older patients, progresses slowly due to estrogen dependency but is aggressive long term. The other type progresses rapidly, is HER2 positive and is more likely to occur in young patients.
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PMID:HER2 as a prognostic factor in breast cancer. 1169 90


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