Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.7.10.1 (ERK)
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The trkA proto-oncogene encodes a high-affinity NGF receptor that is essential for the survival, differentiation and maintenance of many neural and non-neural cell types. Altered expression of the trkA gene or trkA receptor malfunction have been implicated in neurodegeneration, tumor progression and oncogenesis. We have cloned and characterized the 5' region of the mouse trkA gene and have identified its promoter. trkA promoter sequences are GC-rich, lack genuine TATA or CAAT boxes, and are contained within a CpG island which extends over the entire first coding exon. The mouse trkA transcription start site is located 70/71 bp upstream to the AUG translation initiation codon. Sequence analysis showed that the gene encoding the insulin receptor-related receptor, IRR, is located just 1.6 kbp upstream to the trkA gene and is transcribed in the opposite direction. We have used trkA-CAT transcriptional fusions to study trkA promoter function in transient transfection experiments. RNase protection assays and CAT protein ELISA analyses showed that a 150 bp long DNA segment, immediately upstream to the start site, is sufficient to direct accurate transcription in trkA-expressing cells. Dissection of this fragment allowed us to identify a 13 bp cis-regulatory element essential for both promoter activity and cell-type specific expression. Deletion of this 13 bp segment as well as modification of its sequence by site-directed mutagenesis led to a dramatic decline in promoter activity. Gel mobility shift assays carried out with double-stranded oligonucleotides containing the 13 bp element revealed several specific DNA-protein complexes when nuclear extracts from trkA-expressing cells were used. Supershift experiments showed that the Sp1 transcription factor was a component of one of these complexes. Our results identify a minimal trkA gene promoter, located very close to the transcription start site, and define a 13 bp enhancer within this promoter sequence.
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PMID:Molecular cloning and characterization of the 5' region of the mouse trkA proto-oncogene. 1052 65

Carcinogenesis involves inactivation or subversion of the normal controls of proliferation, differentiation, and apoptosis. However, these controls are robust, redundant, and interlinked at the gene expression levels, regulation of mRNA lifetimes, transcription, and recycling of proteins. One of the central systems of control of proliferation, differentiation and apoptosis is retinoid signaling. The hRAR alpha nuclear receptor occupies a central position with respect to induction of gene transcription in that when bound to appropriate retinoid ligands, its homodimers and heterodimers with hRXR alpha regulate the transcription of a number of retinoid-responsive genes. These include genes in other signaling pathways, so that the whole forms a complex network. In this study we showed that simple, cause-effect interpretations in terms of hRAR alpha gene transcription being the central regulatory event would not describe the retinoid-responsive gene network. A set of cultured bladder-derived cells representing different stages of bladder tumorigenesis formed a model system. It consisted of 2 immortalized bladder cell lines (HUC-BC and HUC-PC), one squamous cell carcinoma cell line (SCaBER), one papilloma line (RT4), and 4 transitional cell carcinomas (TCC-Sup, 5637, T24, J82) of varying stages and grades. This set of cells were used to model the range of behaviors of bladder cancers. Relative gene expression before (constitutive) and after treatment with 10 microM all-trans-retinoic acid (aTRA) was measured for androgen and estrogen receptor; a set of genes involved with retinoid metabolism and action, hRAR alpha nd beta, hRXR alpha and beta CRBP, CRABP I and II; and for signaling genes that are known to be sensitive to retinoic acid, EGFR, cytokine MK, ICAM I and transglutaminase. The phenotype for inhibition of proliferation and for apoptotic response to both aTRA and the synthetic retinoid 4-HPR was determined. Transfection with a CAT-containing plasmid containing an aTRA-sensitive promoter was used to determine if the common retinoic acid responsive element (RARE)-dependent pathway for retinoid regulation of gene expression was active. Each of the genes selected is known from previous studies to react to aTRA in a certain way, either by up- or down-regulation of the message and protein. A complex data set not readily interpretable by simple cause and effect was observed. While all cell lines expressed high levels of the mRNAs for hRXR alpha and beta that were not altered by treatment with exogenous aTRA, constitutive and stimulated responses of the other genes varied widely among the cell lines. For example, CRABP I was not expressed by J82, T24, 5637 and RT4, but was expressed at low levels that did not change in SCaBER and at moderate levels that decreased, increased, or decreased sharply in HUC-BC, TCC-Sup and HUC-PC, respectively. The expression of hRAR alpha, which governs the expression of many retinoid-sensitive genes, was expressed at moderate to high levels in all cell lines, but in some it was sharply upregulated (TCC-Sup, HUC-PC and J82), remained constant (5637 and HUC-BC), or was down-regulated (SCaBER, T24 and RT4). The phenotypes for inhibition of proliferation showed no obvious relationship to the expression of any single gene, but cell lines that were inhibited by aTRA (HUC-BC and TCC-Sup) were not sensitive to 4-HPR, and vice versa. One line (RT4) was insensitive to either retinoid. Transfection showed very little retinoid-stimulated transfection of the CAT reporter gene with RT4 or HUC-PC. About 2-fold enhancement transactivation was observed with SCaBER, HUC-BC, J82 and T24 cells and 3-8 fold with 5637, TCC-Sup cells. In HUC-BC, a G to T point mutation was found at position 606 of the hRAR alpha gene. This mutation would substitute tyrosine for asparagine in a highly conserved domain. These data indicate that retinoid signaling is probably a frequent target of inactivation in bladder carcinogenesis. (ABSTRAC
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PMID:Complexity, retinoid-responsive gene networks, and bladder carcinogenesis. 1059 47

Doxorubicin (Dox), an anthracyclin antineoplastic agent, causes dilated cardiomyopathy. CARP has been identified as a nuclear protein whose mRNA levels are exquisitely sensitive to Dox. In this study we investigated the molecular mechanisms underlying the repression of CARP expression by Dox in cultured neonatal rat cardiac myocytes. Dox (1 micromol/l)-mediated decrease in CARP mRNA levels was strongly correlated with BNP but not with ANP mRNA levels. Hydrogen peroxide scavenger catalase (1 mg/ml) but not hydroxyl radical scavengers dimethylthiourea (10 mmol/l) or mannitol (10 mmol/l) blunted the Dox-mediated decrease in CARP and BNP expression. Superoxide dismutase inhibitor diethyldithiocarbamic acid (10 mmol/l), which inhibits the generation of hydrogen peroxide from superoxide metabolism, attenuated the repression. PD98059 (MEK1 inhibitor, 50 micromol/l), SB203580 (p38 MAP kinase inhibitor, 10 micromol/l), calphostin C (protein kinase C (PKC) inhibitor, 1 micromol/l), non-selective protein tyrosine kinase inhibitors genistein (50 micromol/l) or herbimycin A (1 micromol/l) failed to abrogate the downregulation of CARP and BNP expression by Dox. In contrast, H7 (30 micromol/l), a potent inhibitor of serine/threonine kinase, significantly blocked Dox-mediated downregulation of CARP and BNP expression. Transient transfection of a series of 5'-deletion and site-specific mutation constructs revealed that M-CAT element located at -37 of the human CARP promoter mediates Dox-induced repression of CARP promoter activity. These results suggest that a genetic response to Dox is mediated through the generation of hydrogen peroxide, which is selectively linked to the activation of H7-sensitive serine/threonine kinase distinct from PKC and well characterized mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases (ERK and p38MAP kinase). Furthermore, our data implicated M-CAT element as a Dox-response element within the CARP promoter in cardiac myocytes.
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PMID:Doxorubicin represses CARP gene transcription through the generation of oxidative stress in neonatal rat cardiac myocytes: possible role of serine/threonine kinase-dependent pathways. 1090 Jan 67

Rat pheochromocytoma PC12 cells undergo neuronal differentiation in response to nerve growth factor (NGF). The differentiation involves protein kinase cascades that include the kinases MEK and ERK, as well as activation of the transcription factors c-Jun and c-Fos. We show here, that exposure of PC12 cells to mannosylerythritol lipid (MEL), a yeast extracellular glycolipid, enhances the activity of acetylcholinesterase and interrupts the cell cycle at the G1 phase, with resulting outgrowth of neurites and partial cellular differentiation. Treatment with MEL stimulates the phosphorylation of ERK to a similar extent as treatment with NGF, although, the appearance of phosphorylated ERK is somewhat delayed. Both the MEL-induced outgrowth of neurites and the increase in the activity of acetylcholinesterase are prevented by PD98059, a specific inhibitor of MEK. Northern blotting analysis of c-jun transcripts and analysis of transcription in PC12 cells of a c-jun/CAT reporter construct demonstrated a significant increase in the rate of transcription of the c-jun gene upon treatment with MEL. The sequence elements required for the MEL-mediated activation of transcription of the c-jun gene are located between nucleotides -126 and -79 in the 5' flanking region. Our results suggest that MEL induces characteristics of neuronal differentiation in PC12 cells, with transactivation of the c-jun gene, via an ERK-related signal cascade that is partially overlapping the pathways activated in response to NGF. These results might provide the groundwork for the use of microbial extracellular glycolipids as novel reagents for the treatment of cancer cells.
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PMID:Mannosylerythritol lipid induces characteristics of neuronal differentiation in PC12 cells through an ERK-related signal cascade. 1116 72

Urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA) contributes to tumor progression in prostate cancer (CaP). We have previously shown that u-PA expression is upregulated through the AP-1 and PEA3 sites and repressed by androgen. However, signaling pathways mediating u-PA gene expression in CaP are not delineated. We hypothesized that MAPK pathways mediate u-PA in CaP, and thereby studied specific ERK, JNK, and P38-MAPK pathway mutant constructs and inhibitors in vitro. Human, androgen insensitive CaP PC3 cells stably transfected with the androgen receptor expression vector and vector alone were used. A u-PA promoter CAT vector transiently expressed with dominant negative mutant signaling constructs was studied. All mutants drastically reduced u-PA promoter activity. Furthermore, inhibition of PI3K, an upstream regulator in the JNK/SAPK pathway, decreased u-PA promoter transcription. Collectively, these results show that MAPK pathways ERK, JNK/SAPK, and P38-MAPK represent a significant component in the regulation of u-PA expression in human CaP.
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PMID:Signal transduction-mediated regulation of urokinase gene expression in human prostate cancer. 1167 74

The invasive phenotype of cancers critically depends on the expression of proteases such as the M(R) 92,000 type IV collagenase (MMP-9). Several growth factors and oncogenes were found to increase promoter activity and as a consequence protease expression. This frequently requires the activation of the transcription factor AP-1 by signal transduction cascades such as the ERK and JNK pathways. We have previously demonstrated that the tumor promoter TPA can induce MMP-9 expression via a third signaling cascade, the p38 pathway. Considering that TPA is a potent activator of AP-1, we hypothesized that this transcription factor might also be required for p38 pathway-dependent MMP-9 regulation. While dominant negative p38 and MKK-6 mutants reduced MMP-9 promoter activity in CAT assays, a construct encoding an activating mutation in the MKK-6 protein potently stimulated it. This was mediated via 144 bp of the 5'flanking region of the wild-type promoter, which contains an AP-1 site at -79. Both point mutations in this motif and the expression of a c-jun protein lacking its transactivation domain and therefore acting as a dominant negative AP-1 mutant abrogated MKK-6-dependent promoter stimulation. Finally SB 203580, a specific p38 pathway inhibitor, reduced MMP-9 expression/secretion and in vitro invasion of cancer cells. Thus, our results provide evidence that also the third SAPK/MAPK signaling cascade, the p38 signal transduction pathway, stimulates MMP-9 expression in an AP-1-dependent fashion.
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PMID:The p38 SAPK pathway regulates the expression of the MMP-9 collagenase via AP-1-dependent promoter activation. 1171 47

Several members of the ETS family of transcription factors contribute to tumorigenesis in many different tissues, including breast epithelium. The ESX gene is an epithelial-specific Ets member that is particularly relevant to breast cancer. ESX is amplified in early breast cancers, it is overexpressed in human breast ductal carcinoma in situ, and there may be a positive feedback loop between the HER2/neu proto-oncogene and ESX. Despite this progress in our understanding of ESX, its ability to regulate tumor-related gene expression and to modulate breast cell survival, remain unknown. Here we show that HA-ESX stimulates the collagenase and HER2/neu promoters, but fails to activate an intact stromelysin promoter. However, HA-ESX activates, in a dose-dependent manner, a heterologous promoter containing eight copies of the Ets binding site derived from the stromelysin gene (p8Xpal-CAT). Analysis of the ability of constructs encoding nine Ets family members to activate the HER2/neu promoter revealed three patterns of gene activation: (1) no effect or repressed promoter activity (Elk-1 and NET); (2) intermediate activity (ER81, GABP, ESX, and HA-Ets-2); and, (3) maximal activity (Ets-1, VP-16-Ets-1, and EHF). Based on these observations, we also determined whether ESX is capable of conferring a survival phenotype upon immortalized, but nontransformed and ESX negative MCF-12A human breast cells. Using a colony formation assay, we found that HA-ESX and HA-Ets-2, mediated MCF-12A cell survival rates that approached those generated by oncogenic V12 Ras, whereas empty vector resulted in negligible colony formation. By contrast, in immortalized and transformed T47D breast cancer cells, which express both HER2/neu and ESX, we found that antisense and dominant-negative HA-ESX inhibited T47D colony formation, whereas control vector allowed formation of many colonies. These results are significant because they show that HA-ESX is able to differentially activate several malignancy-associated gene promoters, and that ESX expression is required for cellular survival of nontransformed MCF-12A and transformed T47D human mammary cells.
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PMID:The epithelial-specific ETS transcription factor ESX/ESE-1/Elf-3 modulates breast cancer-associated gene expression. 1271 34

In human saphenous vein endothelial cells (HSVECs), tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNFalpha) and bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS), but neither interferon gamma (IFNgamma) nor interleukin 1beta (IL-1beta), stimulate arginine transport. The effects of TNFalpha and LPS are due solely to the enhancement of system y+ activity, whereas system y+L is substantially unaffected. TNFalpha causes an increased expression of SLC7A2/CAT-2B gene while SLC7A1/CAT-1 expression is not altered by the cytokine. The suppression of PKC-dependent transduction pathways, obtained with the inhibitor chelerytrhine, the inhibitor peptide of PKCzeta isoform, or chronic exposure to phorbol esters, does not prevent TNFalpha effect on arginine transport. Likewise, ERK, JNK, and p38 MAP kinases are not involved in the cytokine effect, since arginine transport stimulation is unaffected by their specific inhibitors. On the contrary, inhibitors of NF-kappaB pathway hinder the increase in CAT2B mRNA and the stimulation of arginine uptake. These results indicate that in human endothelial cells the activation of NF-kappaB pathway mediates the TNFalpha effects on arginine transport.
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PMID:The stimulation of arginine transport by TNFalpha in human endothelial cells depends on NF-kappaB activation. 1523 57

Transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGF-beta1) transcriptionally regulates the expression of genes that encode specific proteins (e.g., plasminogen activator inhibitor-1; PAI-1) important in stromal remodeling and cellular invasion. Definition of molecular events underlying TGF-beta1-initiated PAI-1 transcription, therefore, may lead to the identification of new therapeutic targets for diseases associated with elevated PAI-1 synthesis (e.g., tissue fibrosis, vascular disorders, tumor progression). An intact upstream stimulatory factor (USF)-binding E box motif (5'-(-165)CACGTG(-160)-3') at the HRE-2 site in the rat PAI-1 gene was required for PAI-1 transcription in TGF-beta1-treated cells. Mutation of the CA dinucleotide to TC at position -165/-164 in a reporter construct driven by 764 bp of PAI-1 promoter sequence decreased TGF-beta1-dependent CAT activity by >80% indicating the necessity for a consensus hexanucleotide E box motif in induced expression. The same CA --> TC substitution eliminated USF binding to an 18-bp HRE-2 DNA target highlighting the importance of site occupancy to transcriptional activation. Transfection of a dominant-negative USF construct, moreover, completely inhibited formation of USF/HRE-2 probe complexes, attenuated PAI-1 promoter-driven luciferase activity and reduced the response of the endogenous PAI-1 gene to TGF-beta1 (to that approximating quiescent controls). Maximal immediate-early PAI-1 induction upon exposure to TGF-beta1 required EGFR, p21ras, MEK and pp60(c-src) signaling as pharmacologic or dominant-negative inhibition of any of the four intermediates (EGFR, p21ras, MEK, pp60(c-src)) virtually eliminated TGF-beta1-augmented PAI-1 levels. U0126 titering experiments, furthermore, revealed that the same MEK inhibitor concentration that blocked the TGF-beta1 increase in ERK1/2 phosphorylation (20 microM) also effectively attenuated the PAI-1 inductive response suggesting a requirement for stimulated ERK signaling in TGF-beta1-mediated PAI-1 expression. These data suggest a model whereby TGF-beta1 activates a complex signaling cascade to affect PAI-1 gene control and involves USF occupancy of a critical E box motif at the HRE-2 site in the PAI-1 gene.
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PMID:TGF-beta 1-induced PAI-1 expression is E box/USF-dependent and requires EGFR signaling. 1645 17

Although 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene (TNT) has been found to uncouple nitric oxide synthase (NOS), thereby leading to reactive oxygen species (ROS), cellular response against TNT still remains unclear. Exposure of bovine aortic endothelial cells (BAECs) to TNT (100 microM) resulted in serine 1179 phosphorylation of endothelial NOS (eNOS). With specific inhibitors (wortmannin and LY294002), we found that PI3K/Akt signaling participated in the eNOS phosphorylation caused by TNT, whereas the ERK pathway did not. ROS were generated following exposure of BAECs to TNT. However, TNT-mediated phosphorylation of either eNOS or Akt was drastically blocked by NAC and PEG-CAT. Interestingly, pretreatment with apocynin, a specific inhibitor for NADPH oxidase, diminished the phosphorylation of eNOS and Akt. These results suggest that TNT affects NADPH oxidase, thereby generating hydrogen peroxide, which is capable of activating PI3K/Akt signaling associated with eNOS Ser 1179 phosphorylation.
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PMID:Serine 1179 phosphorylation of endothelial nitric oxide synthase caused by 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene through PI3K/Akt signaling in endothelial cells. 1651 56


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