Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:2.7.10.1 (
ERK
)
95,504
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Segmented polyurethanes have been used extensively in implantable medical devices, but their tunable mechanical properties make them attractive for examining the effect of biomaterial modulus on engineered musculoskeletal tissue development. In this study, a family of segmented degradable poly(esterurethane urea)s (PEUURs) were synthesized from 1,4-diisocyanatobutane, a poly(epsilon-caprolactone) (
PCL
) macrodiol soft segment and a tyramine-1,4-diisocyanatobutane-tyramine chain extender. By systematically increasing the
PCL
macrodiol molecular weight from 1100 to 2700Da, the storage modulus, crystallinity and melting point of the
PCL
segment were systematically varied. In particular, the melting temperature, T(m), increased from 21 to 61 degrees C and the storage modulus at 37 degrees C increased from 52 to 278MPa with increasing
PCL
macrodiol molecular weight, suggesting that the crystallinity of the
PCL
macrodiol contributed significantly to the mechanical properties of the polymers. Bone marrow stromal cells were cultured on rigid polymer films under osteogenic conditions for up to 21 days. Cell density, alkaline phosphatase activity, and
osteopontin
and osteocalcin expression were similar among PEUURs and comparable to poly(d,l-lactic-coglycolic acid). This study demonstrates the suitability of this family of PEUURs for tissue engineering applications, and establishes a foundation for determining the effect of biomaterial modulus on bone tissue development.
...
PMID:Synthesis and characterization of segmented poly(esterurethane urea) elastomers for bone tissue engineering. 1741 51
Breast cancer cells preferentially metastasize to bone, leading to the formation of primarily osteolytic lesions. Osteoprotegerin (OPG) plays multifactorial roles in the development of osteolytic bone metastases. An increase in the ratio of receptor activator of nuclear factor kappaB ligand (RANKL) to OPG increases osteoclastogenesis within the bone microenvironment. OPG also acts as a survival factor for cancer cells by protecting them from tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) mediated apoptosis. This study compares OPG production in vitro in a number of breast cancer cell lines exhibiting both differences in metastatic capacity and in preferential metastasis to bone. Our studies demonstrated that OPG expression by MDA-231, MDA-
MET
, and MDA-231/K cancer cells was directly correlated with bone specific homing and colonization potential but not with metastasis of cancer cells to other organs; both in IL-1 beta stimulated and control cells. We also demonstrated expression of other bone-related markers including type I collagen, osteocalcin,
osteopontin
, and Runx2 in these cells. However, the generally lower expression of these markers in the bone selective cell line MDA-
MET
suggested that increased OPG expression in the bone specific variant was not merely a consequence of enhanced osteomimicry by these cells but that it has a significant role in the metastatic process. Co-culture of breast cancer cells with osteoblastic cells (hFOB 1.19) led to an overall downregulation in OPG production, which was not affected by the bone homing and colonization potential of the cell lines, suggesting that OPG alone is not indicative of osteolytic bone activity by breast cancer cells.
...
PMID:Osteoprotegrin and the bone homing and colonization potential of breast cancer cells. 1747 10
Despite their potential to impact diagnosis and treatment of cancer, few protein biomarkers are in clinical use. Biomarker discovery is plagued with difficulties ranging from technological (inability to globally interrogate proteomes) to biological (genetic and environmental differences among patients and their tumors). We urgently need paradigms for biomarker discovery. To minimize biological variation and facilitate testing of proteomic approaches, we employed a mouse model of breast cancer. Specifically, we performed LC-MS/MS of tumor and normal mammary tissue from a conditional
HER2
/
Neu
-driven mouse model of breast cancer, identifying 6758 peptides representing >700 proteins. We developed a novel statistical approach (SASPECT) for prioritizing proteins differentially represented in LC-MS/MS datasets and identified proteins over- or under-represented in tumors. Using a combination of antibody-based approaches and multiple reaction monitoring-mass spectrometry (MRM-MS), we confirmed the overproduction of multiple proteins at the tissue level, identified fibulin-2 as a plasma biomarker, and extensively characterized
osteopontin
as a plasma biomarker capable of early disease detection in the mouse. Our results show that a staged pipeline employing shotgun-based comparative proteomics for biomarker discovery and multiple reaction monitoring for confirmation of biomarker candidates is capable of finding novel tissue and plasma biomarkers in a mouse model of breast cancer. Furthermore, the approach can be extended to find biomarkers relevant to human disease.
...
PMID:Integrated pipeline for mass spectrometry-based discovery and confirmation of biomarkers demonstrated in a mouse model of breast cancer. 1799 39
Osteopontin
(
OPN
) is a secreted protein that is overexpressed in a number of human cancers, and has been associated with increased metastatic burden and poor prognosis in breast cancer patients. The
OPN
protein contains several conserved structural elements including heparin- and calcium-binding domains, a thrombin-cleavage site, a CD44 binding site, and two integrin-binding sites. Experimental studies have shown that the ability of
OPN
to interact with a diverse range of factors, including cell surface receptors (integrins, CD44), secreted proteases (matrix metalloproteinases, urokinase plasminogen activator), and growth factor/receptor pathways (TGFalpha/
EGFR
, HGF/Met) is central to its role in malignancy. These complex signaling interactions can result in changes in gene expression, which ultimately lead to alterations in cell properties involved in malignancy such as adhesion, migration, invasion, enhanced tumor cell survival, tumor angiogenesis, and metastasis. Therefore,
OPN
is not merely associated with cancer, but rather it plays a multi-faceted functional role via complex molecular cross-talk with other factors. This review will focus on the role of
OPN
in breast cancer, in particular on the malignancy-promoting aspects of
OPN
that may reveal opportunities for new approaches to the clinical management of breast cancer.
...
PMID:Osteopontin overexpression in breast cancer: knowledge gained and possible implications for clinical management. 1772 86
We examined the role of
osteopontin
(
OPN
) in NIK- and MEKK1-dependent MMP-9 activation, melanoma growth and lung metastasis and its clinical significance in malignant melanoma. Here we report that
OPN
induces alphavbeta3 integrin-mediated MEKK1-dependent JNK1 phosphorylation.
OPN
stimulates NIK- or JNK1-dependent c-Jun expression. In contrast,
OPN
induces MEKK1-dependent JNK1 activation that leads to downregulation of ERK1/2 activation.
OPN
triggers NIK- and MEKK1-dependent AP-1 activation whereas NIK-dependent AP-1 activation is independent of JNK1 that leads to pro-MMP-9 activation. In vivo studies indicate that the levels of pNIK and MMP-9 are significantly higher in the
OPN
-induced primary tumor and metastasized lung compared to control. Clinical data revealed that the enhanced level of
OPN
and pNIK expression in the skin biopsies correlates with Clark's level and Breslow thickness. Altogether,
OPN
regulates negative cross-talk between NIK/
ERK
and MEKK1/JNK1 pathways that controls melanoma progression.
...
PMID:Osteopontin stimulates melanoma growth and lung metastasis through NIK/MEKK1-dependent MMP-9 activation pathways. 1778 54
While the acquisition of invasiveness is a critical step in early stage breast carcinomas (DCIS), no established molecular markers reliably identify tumor progression. The metastasis gene
osteopontin
is subject to alternative splicing, which yields 3 messages,
osteopontin
-a,
osteopontin
-b and
osteopontin
-c.
Osteopontin
-c is selectively expressed in invasive, but not in noninvasive, breast tumor cell lines, and it effectively supports anchorage independence. We evaluated
osteopontin
-c as a biomarker. The RNA message for
osteopontin
-c was present in 16 of 20 breast cancers (80%), but was undetectable in 22 normal specimens obtained from reduction mammoplasty. In contrast,
osteopontin
-a RNA was expressed at various levels in all 20 breast cancers, 11 tumor-surrounding tissues and 21 normal samples. The splice variant
osteopontin
-b was present at barely detectable levels in 18 of 20 cancers and in 6 of 22 normal breasts. By immunohistochemistry, 66 of 69 normal breasts were negative, while 3 showed low level staining. Among the breast cancers, 43 of 56 cores (77%) stained positive for
osteopontin
-c. When correlated with tumor grade, the staining for
osteopontin
-c increased from grade 1 to grade 3. In a total of 178 breast specimens analyzed,
osteopontin
-c was present in 78% of cancers, 36% of surrounding tissues and 0% of normal tissues. Furthermore,
osteopontin
-c detects a higher fraction of breast cancers than estrogen receptor (ER), progesterone receptor or
HER2
. In conjunction,
osteopontin
-c, ER and
HER2
reliably predict grade 2-3 breast cancer. Hence,
osteopontin
-c is a diagnostic and prognostic marker that may have value in a diagnostic panel together with conventional breast cancer markers.
...
PMID:Osteopontin-c is a selective marker of breast cancer. 1830 53
Although changes in gene expression are necessary for arterial remodeling during hypertension, the genes altered and their mechanisms of regulation remain uncertain. The goal of this study was to identify cerebral artery genes altered by hypertension and define signaling pathways important in their regulation. Intact cerebral arteries from Dahl salt-sensitive normotensive and hypertensive high-salt (HS) rats were examined by immunostaining, revealing an increased phosphorylation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2 (ERK1/2) and expression of the proliferative marker Ki-67 in arteries from hypertensive animals. Arterial RNA analyzed by microarray and validated with RT-quantitative PCR revealed that jun family member junB and matricellular genes plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) and
osteopontin
(
OPN
) were significantly overexpressed in HS arteries. Fisher exact test and annotation-based gene subsets showed that genes upregulated by Jun and Ca(2+)/cAMP-response element-binding protein (CREB) were overrepresented. A model of cultured rat cerebrovascular smooth muscle cells was used to test the hypothesis that angiotensin II (ANG II), JunB, and CREB are important in the regulation of genes identified in the rat hypertension model. ANG II induced a transient induction of junB and a delayed induction of PAI-1 and
OPN
mRNA levels, which were reduced by
ERK
inhibition with U-0126. Silencing junB using small-interfering RNA reduced mRNA levels of
OPN
but not PAI-1. The silencing of CREB reduced PAI-1 induction by ANG II but enhanced the transcription of
OPN
. Together, these results suggest that salt-induced hypertensive disease promotes changes in matricellular genes that are stimulated by ANG II, regulated by
ERK
, and selectively regulated by JunB and CREB.
...
PMID:Genes overexpressed in cerebral arteries following salt-induced hypertensive disease are regulated by angiotensin II, JunB, and CREB. 1815 95
Primary central nervous system (CNS) lymphoma (PCNSL) is a diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) confined to the CNS. A genome-wide gene expression comparison between PCNSL and non-CNS DLBCL was performed, the latter consisting of both nodal and extranodal DLBCL (nDLBCL and enDLBCL), to identify a "CNS signature." Pathway analysis with the program SigPathway revealed that PCNSL is characterized notably by significant differential expression of multiple extracellular matrix (ECM) and adhesion-related pathways. The most significantly up-regulated gene is the ECM-related
osteopontin
(SPP1). Expression at the protein level of ECM-related SPP1 and CHI3L1 in PCNSL cells was demonstrated by immunohistochemistry. The alterations in gene expression can be interpreted within several biologic contexts with implications for PCNSL, including CNS tropism (ECM and adhesion-related pathways, SPP1,
DDR1
), B-cell migration (CXCL13, SPP1), activated B-cell subtype (MUM1), lymphoproliferation (SPP1, TCL1A, CHI3L1), aggressive clinical behavior (SPP1, CHI3L1, MUM1), and aggressive metastatic cancer phenotype (SPP1, CHI3L1). The gene expression signature discovered in our study may represent a true "CNS signature" because we contrasted PCNSL with wide-spectrum non-CNS DLBCL on a genomic scale and performed an in-depth bioinformatic analysis.
...
PMID:Pathway analysis of primary central nervous system lymphoma. 1912 20
Bone cells and their precursors are sensitive to changes in their biomechanical environment. The importance of mechanical stimuli has been observed in bone homeostasis and osteogenesis, but the mechanisms responsible for osteogenic induction in response to mechanical signals are poorly understood. We hypothesized that compressive forces could exert an osteogenic effect on osteoblasts and act in a dose-dependent manner. To test our hypothesis, electrospun poly(epsilon-caprolactone) (
PCL
) scaffolds were used as a 3-D microenvironment for osteoblast culture. The scaffolds provided a substrate allowing cell exposure to levels of externally applied compressive force. Pre-osteoblasts adhered, proliferated and differentiated in the scaffolds and showed extensive matrix synthesis by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and increased Young's modulus (136.45+/-9.15 kPa) compared with acellular scaffolds (24.55+/-8.5 kPa). Exposure of cells to 10% compressive strain (11.81+/-0.42 kPa) resulted in a rapid induction of bone morphogenic protein-2 (BMP-2), runt-related transcription factor 2 (Runx2), and MAD homolog 5 (Smad5). These effects further enhanced the expression of genes and proteins required for extracellular matrix (ECM) production, such as alkaline phosphatase (Akp2), collagen type I (Col1a1), osteocalcin/bone gamma carboxyglutamate protein (OC/Bglap), osteonectin/secreted acidic cysteine-rich glycoprotein (ON/Sparc) and
osteopontin
/secreted phosphoprotein 1 (OPN/Spp1). Exposure of cell-scaffold constructs to 20% compressive strain (30.96+/-2.82 kPa) demonstrated that these signals are not osteogenic. These findings provide the molecular basis for the experimental and clinical observations that appropriate physical activities or microscale compressive loading can enhance fracture healing due in part to the anabolic osteogenic effects.
...
PMID:Compressive forces induce osteogenic gene expression in calvarial osteoblasts. 1819 Nov 37
The intracellular signaling events controlling human mesenchymal stem cell (hMSC) differentiation into osteoblasts are poorly understood. Collagen-binding domain is considered an essential component of bone mineralization. In the present study, we investigated the regulatory mechanism of osteoblastic differentiation of hMSC by the peptide with a novel collagen-binding motif derived from
osteopontin
. The peptide induced influx of extracellular Ca2+ via calcium channels and increased intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) independent of both pertussis toxin and phospholipase C, and activated
ERK
, which was inhibited by Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase (CaMKII) antagonist, KN93. The peptide-induced increase of [Ca2+]i is correlated with
ERK
activation in a various cell types. The peptide stimulated the migration of hMSC but suppressed cell proliferation. Furthermore, the peptide increased the phosphorylation of cAMP-response element-binding protein, leading to a significant increase in the transactivation of cAMP-response element and serum response element. Ultimately, the peptide increased AP-1 transactivation, c-jun expression, and bone mineralization, which are suppressed by KN93. Taken together, these results indicate that the novel collagen-binding peptide promotes osteogenic differentiation via Ca2+/CaMKII/
ERK
/AP-1 signaling pathway in hMSC, suggesting the potential application in cell therapy for bone regeneration.
...
PMID:A novel collagen-binding peptide promotes osteogenic differentiation via Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II/ERK/AP-1 signaling pathway in human bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells. 1824 57
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>