Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

Antisense oligonucleotides (oligos) against transforming growth factor-alpha (TGF-alpha; MR(1)) and its binding site, the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR; MR(2)), have proven efficacious against PC-3 and LNCaP prostate tumors when evaluated in both in vitro and in vivo models. To enhance their activity, and also to introduce a significantly different type of multifunctional agent into this field, "bispecific" oligos were constructed containing truncated sequences (derived from MR(1) and MR(2)) recognizing both TGF-alpha and EGFR mRNA internal binding sites, located about their respective AUG initiation codons. Two bispecifics were constructed, each having complementary sequences for TGF-alpha and EGFR mRNA, but differing in their 5' to 3' tandem orientation (TGF-alpha/EGFR [MR(12)] and EGFR/TGF-alpha [MR(21)] sequences). These bispecifics were tested in an in vitro system against PC-3 and LNCaP prostate tumor cells, with comparisons made to the original monospecific oligos from which they were derived. Efficacy was also compared when administered either alone or in combination with conventional chemotherapeutic agents. The purpose of this study was: 1) to validate the concept that these newly developed bispecific oligos have antitumor activity; 2) to enhance their efficacy through combination therapy; 3) to identify differences in effectiveness dependent upon binding site orientation; 4) identification of a dominant binding site that can be used to design other bispecifics that target additional tumor regulatory pathways. When fully evaluated against PC-3 cells in a series of experiments, newly developed bispecific oligos are at least as effective as their monospecific counterparts from which they were derived, and the bispecific with the MR(21) orientation is notably more effective than the MR(1) monospecific by 64% (p = 0.014 by Student t-test and p = 0.068 by the more stringent Mann-Whitney U test). Bispecifics were more effective when administered with chemotherapeutics (producing inhibition of 52.1% and 61.2% for MR(12) and MR(21), respectively, with Cytoxan (cyclophosphamide) inhibition of 59.0% and 65.1% for MR(12) and MR(21), respectively, with Taxol (paclitaxel) and 63.0% and 69.4% for MR(12) and MR(21), respectively, with DES [diethylstilbestrol]). Increasing the oligo concentration above 6.25 microM with cyclophosphamide had no additional effect. The sequence directed against EGFR was dominant and contributed most to bispecific activity, particularly when inserted 5' to the TGF-alpha binding sequence (MR(21) orientation). Bispecific oligos are a significant advance in the design of antisense compounds and could play a role in treating prostate cancer, particularly when they are administered with traditional chemotherapeutics. The truncated portion of the MR(2) oligo used here should be included when constructing second-generation bispecifics that target proteins associated with other regulatory pathways, such as apoptosis.
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PMID:Bispecific antisense oligonucleotides with multiple binding sites for the treatment of prostate tumors and their applicability to combination therapy. 1713 30

BRCA2 is central to an utterly diverse biological behavior elicited after integrin-mediated normal and prostate cancer cell adhesion to basement membrane (BM) and extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins. Unlike normal cells, adhesive stimuli in cancer cells activate PI 3-kinase/AKT signaling resulting in BRCA2 degradation and unchecked cancer cell proliferation and metastasis. However, the precise mechanisms involved in normal BRCA2 homeostasis are unknown. We investigated ERK and AKT phosphorylation in normal (PNT1A) and cancer (PC-3) prostate cells after adhesion to ECM and the effects upon BRCA2 and cell proliferation. PNT1A cell adhesion to ECM triggered MAPK/ERK signaling resulting in upregulation of BRCA2 mRNA and protein, with negligible effects upon cell proliferation. Disruption of MAPK/ERK with PD98059 prevented any BRCA2 upregulation inhibiting DNA synthesis below basal levels. PC-3 cells exhibited a defective MAPK/ERK pathway that was unresponsive to adhesion to the ECM, which instead triggered PI 3-kinase/AKT signaling leading to BRCA2 protein depletion and cell proliferation. Reconstitution of MAPK/ERK by recombinant expression of a constitutively active form of MAPK kinase 1 (MEK1) effectively reversed the neoplastic phenotype by increasing BRCA2 expression and preventing any aberrant cell proliferation at rest and upon interaction with ECM proteins. Our results suggest that aberrant loss of MAPK/ERK activity in prostate cancer may play a pivotal role in the malignant phenotype, and provide evidence that interventions aimed at bypassing the signaling block are able to effectively reverse neoplastic unchecked cell proliferation.
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PMID:Constitutive activation of MAPK/ERK inhibits prostate cancer cell proliferation through upregulation of BRCA2. 2708 45

The proinflammatory chemokine interleukin-8 (IL-8) is undetectable in androgen-responsive prostate cancer cells (e.g., LNCaP and LAPC-4), but it is highly expressed in androgen-independent metastatic cells, such as PC-3. In this report, we show IL-8 functions in androgen independence, chemoresistance, tumor growth, and angiogenesis. We stably transfected LNCaP and LAPC-4 cells with IL-8 cDNA and selected IL-8-secreting (IL8-S) transfectants. The IL8-S transfectants that secreted IL-8 at levels similar to that secreted by PC-3 cells (100-170 ng/10(6) cells) were characterized. Continuous or transient exposure of LNCaP and LAPC-4 cells to IL-8 reduced their dependence on androgen for growth and decreased sensitivity (>3.5x) to an antiandrogen. IL-8-induced cell proliferation was mediated through CXCR1 and was independent of androgen receptor (AR). Quantitative PCR, immunoblotting, and transfection studies showed that IL8-S cells or IL-8-treated LAPC-4 cells exhibit a 2- to 3-fold reduction in PSA and AR levels, when compared with vector transfectants. IL8-S cells expressed 2- to 3-fold higher levels of phospho-EGFR, src, Akt, and nuclear factor kappaB (NF-kappaB) and showed increased survival when treated with docetaxel. This increase was blocked by NF-kappaB and src inhibitors, but not by an Akt inhibitor. IL8-S transfectants displayed a 3- to 5-fold increased motility, invasion, matrix metalloproteinase-9 and vascular endothelial growth factor production. LNCaP IL8-S cells grew rapidly as tumors, with increased microvessel density and abnormal tumor vasculature when compared with the tumors derived from their vector-transfected counterparts. Therefore, IL-8 is a molecular determinant of androgen-independent prostate cancer growth and progression.
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PMID:Interleukin-8 is a molecular determinant of androgen independence and progression in prostate cancer. 1763 96

Protracted administration of topotecan (TPT), a topoisomerase I inhibitor, exhibited high anticancer efficacy both in animal models and human cancers. This phenomenon is related to the TPT-induced inhibition of angiogenesis in tumor, but the potential mechanism remains largely unknown. In the present study, we reported that TPT (1-10 microM) could inhibit angiogenesis in a dose-dependent manner in Chick embryo chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) assay. TPT showed strong inhibitory activity against proliferation on human EA.hy926 endothelial cells with an IC50 value of 0.13 microM (MTT assay), lower than that of most sensitive cancer cell lines (IC50 range, 0.17 microM to 5.1 microM). TPT could induce EA.hy926 cells undergoing apoptosis, and the percentage of apoptotic cells induced by TPT (0.05 microM-5.0 microM) were 17.9%-52.3%. The similar results were observed with AO/EB staining. Flow cytometry assay also revealed that various concentrations of TPT induced cell cycle disturbance in EA.hy926 cells. Western blotting results showed that TPT caused an obvious increase of p53 expression and a decline of ERK expression in EA.hy926 cells. In addition, the VEGF expression of PC-3 cells is inhibited by TPT in hypoxia. Altogether, inhibiting proliferation of endothelial cells and down-regulating VEGF expression in cancer cells may involve in the antiangiogenesis mechanism of TPT.
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PMID:Antiproliferation in human EA.hy926 endothelial cells and inhibition of VEGF expression in PC-3 cells by topotecan. 1771 96

In previous studies we demonstrated that antisense oligonucleotides (oligos) against transforming growth factor-alpha (TGF-alpha [MR1]), its binding site the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR [MR2]), and the anti-apoptosis protein bcl-2 (MR4) are efficacious against prostate tumors. In recent reports we also describe how two of these mRNA directed binding sites can be synthesized sequentially within a single linear complementary strand and administered either in the presence or absence of additional therapeutic agents. In these continuing experiments "bispecific" oligo pairs were further evaluated in the presence or absence of Cytoxan, Taxol, or DES. One oligo pair recognized the binding sites for TGF-alpha and EGFR mRNA (TGF-alpha/EGFR [MR12] and EGFR/TGF-alpha [MR21]); another pair recognized binding sites for EGFR and bcl-2 (EGFR/bcl-2 [MR24] and bcl-2/EGFR [MR42]). Oligo pairs differ in their linear 5' to 3' binding site orientations, and were tested in vitro against PC-3 and LNCaP prostate tumor cell lines. Following cell attachment, incubations were for 2 days with the agents followed by 2 days in their absence. When tested against PC-3 cells and combined with LD50 Cytoxan, MR2, MR4, MR24, MR42 significantly inhibited 47.3, 45.7, 68.3, and 64.9%; with LD50 Taxol MR2, MR4, MR24, MR42 significantly inhibited 49.8, 45.8, 64.1, and 59.2%; and with LD50 DES MR2, MR4, MR24, MR42 significantly inhibited 66.6, 67.6, 64.3, and 67.2% respectively. Each agent significantly increased the inhibition produced by either oligo alone.LNCaP cells were also incubated with mono- and bispecific oligos in either the presence or absence of chemotherapeutics. MR2, MR4, MR24, MR42 produced significant inhibitions of 57.4, 58.4, 69.4, and 68.6% with LD50 Cytoxan; 70.4, 70.1, 73.6, and 74.0% with LD50 Taxol; and 49.8, 50.1, 59.6, and 53.9%, respectively with LD50 DES.A complete PC-3 experiment compared MR1, MR2, MR4, MR12, MR21, MR24 and MR42, in the presence of LD50 Cytoxan. Each oligo combined with Cytoxan significantly inhibited: MR1 by 51.0, MR2 by 55.0, MR4 by 58.0; MR12 by 56.0; MR21 by 61.1, MR24 by 65.5 and MR42 by 66.0%. Bispecifics directed against two different pathways, MR24, and MR42 were the most effective.A complete LNCaP experiment compared the same series of oligos also in the presence of LD50 Cytoxan. Each oligo combined with Cytoxan significantly inhibited: MR1 by 49.0, MR2 by 50.0, MR4 by 53.0; MR12 by 52.0; MR21 by 58.6, MR24 by 53.9 and MR42 by 58.0%.
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PMID:Combination chemotherapy employing bispecific antisense oligonucleotides having binding sites directed against an autocrine regulated growth pathway and bcl-2 for the treatment of prostate tumors. 1791 84

BRCA2 is a multifunctional tumor suppressor protein which plays critical roles in DNA repair, transcription, and cell proliferation, and the loss of which has been linked to the biology of several types of cancers. Here, on prostate adenocarcinoma specimens from 80 patients, we demonstrate that BRCA2 protein is lost in carcinoma cells compared to normal and hyperplastic prostate epithelium. Using highly metastatic prostate cancer PC-3 cells, we show that while BRCA2 depletion by small-interfering RNA promoted migration onto the extracellular matrix proteins fibronectin, laminin, and collagens, as well as invasion through the reconstituted basement membrane matrix Matrigel by more than 140%, recombinant BRCA2 overexpression decreased both phenomena by 57-80% and changed cell morphology from angular and spindle to round and compact. The BRCA2 inhibitory effect on cancer cell migration and invasion resulted from down-regulation of matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-9 protein levels due to increased MMP-9 proteolysis, and was signaled through inhibition of PI3-kinase/AKT and activation of MAPK/ERK pathway. In BRCA2-overexpressing PC-3 cells, transient transfection with a constitutively active PI3-kinase mutant or treatment with the MAPK/ERK inhibitor PD98059 rescued MMP-9 levels and restored the migratory and invasive capabilities. Consistently, PI3-kinase inhibition with a dominant-negative mutant or MAPK/ERK activation with a gain-of-function mutant reduced MMP-9 levels and prevented migration and invasion in wild-type PC-3 cells. These results provide novel evidence showing that a functional BRCA2 protein may limit the metastatic potential of neoplastic cells by down-regulating MMP-9 production through inhibition of PI3-kinase/AKT and activation of MAPK/ERK, effectively hindering cancer cell migration and invasion.
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PMID:Loss of BRCA2 promotes prostate cancer cell invasion through up-regulation of matrix metalloproteinase-9. 1816 27

The aim of this study was to design a new one step conjugation of monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) to surface activated pegylated polyester nanoparticles (NPs) and evaluate the pharmacokinetic profile and therapeutic effect of paclitaxel palmitate (pcpl) loaded anti-HER2 immunoNPs in mice as compared to pcpl solution and NPs following IV injection. The density of the antibody conjugated to the NPs was found to be around 35 MAbs/NP (70% coupling efficiency). In vitro cell culture studies showed good binding and uptake results when immunoNPs were incubated with PC-3 and CAPAN-1 cell lines. Both pcpl NPs and immunoNPs showed significant increased t1/2, C(max) and AUC values as compared to the values of pcpl solution in mice. There was no significant difference in the C(max) and AUC values between pcpl NPs and pcpl immunoNPs. However, the immunoNPs concentrated much less in the liver and spleen than NPs. The pharmacokinetic behavior of the immunoNPs was markedly different from the pharmacokinetic profile of the naked MAb showing that the MAb lost its intrinsic molecular pharmacokinetic properties following conjugation to the NPs. The immunoNPs elicited a significant anti-tumor activity as compared to the pcpl solution and NPs, although the tumor growth was not fully inhibited.
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PMID:Overcoming the formulation obstacles towards targeted chemotherapy: in vitro and in vivo evaluation of cytotoxic drug loaded immunonanoparticles. 1834 22

Combined treatment with quercetin and TRAIL induced cytotoxicity and enhanced annexin V staining and poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) cleavage in human prostate cancer cell lines DU-145 and PC-3. These indicators of apoptosis resulted from the activation of caspase-8, -9, and -3. Although the expression levels of FLIPs, cIAP1, cIAP2, and the Bcl-2 family were not changed in quercetin-treated cells, significant downregulation of survivin occurred. Knockdown survivin by siRNA significantly increased TRAIL-induced apoptosis. We hypothesized that quercetin-induced activation of MAPK (ERK, p38, JNK) is responsible for downregulation of survivin gene expression. To test this hypothesis, we selectively inhibited MAPK during treatment with quercetin. Our data demonstrated that inhibitor of ERK (PD98059), but not p38 MAPK (SB203580) or JNK (SP600125), significantly maintained the intracellular level of survivin during treatment with quercetin. Interestingly, PD98059 also prevented quercetin-induced deacetylation of histone H3. Data from survivin promoter activity assay suggest that the Sp1 transcription factor binds to the survivin promoter region and quercetin inhibits its binding activity through deacetylation of histone H3. Quercetin-induced activation of the ERK-MSK1 signal transduction pathway may be responsible for deacetylation of histone H3. Taken together, our findings suggest that quercetin enhances TRAIL induced apoptosis by inhibition of survivin expression, through ERK-MSK1-mediated deacetylation of H3.
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PMID:Quercetin augments TRAIL-induced apoptotic death: involvement of the ERK signal transduction pathway. 1837 72

Recently, statins have been being studied for their proapoptic and antimetastatic effects. However, the exact mechanisms of their anticancer action are still unclear. Dolichyl phosphate is a nonsterol isoprenoid derivative in the mevalonate pathway that affects the expression of the Insulin-like growth factor 1 receptor (IGF-1R). IGF-1R activation is required for prostate cell proliferation; therefore, IGF-1R inhibitory agents may be of preventive and/or therapeutic value. In this study, the effects of simvastatin on IGF-1R signaling in prostate cancer PC-3 cells were examined. Simvastatin suppressed proliferation and induced apoptosis of PC-3, and the expression of IGF-1R was suppressed by simvastatin. Knockdown of IGF-1R by siRNA led to inhibition of proliferation of PC-3. Simvastatin also inhibited IGF-1-induced activation of both ERK and Akt signaling and IGF-1-induced PC-3 cell proliferation. Our results suggest statins are potent inhibitors of the IGF-1/IGF-1R system in prostate cancer cells and may be beneficial in prostate cancer treatment.
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PMID:Simvastatin inhibits the proliferation of human prostate cancer PC-3 cells via down-regulation of the insulin-like growth factor 1 receptor. 1848 4

Using a live cell, high-throughput caspase-3 activator assay, we have identified a novel series of 4-anilinoquinazolines as inducers of apoptosis. In this report, we discuss the discovery of 2-chloro-N-(4-methoxyphenyl)-N-methylquinazolin-4-amine, compound 2b (EP128265, MPI-0441138) as a highly active inducer of apoptosis (EC50 for caspase activation of 2 nM) and as a potent inhibitor of cell proliferation (GI50 of 2 nM) in T47D cells. Compound 2b inhibited tubulin polymerization, was effective in cells overexpressing ABC transporter Pgp-1, and was efficacious in the MX-1 human breast and PC-3 prostate cancer mouse models. In contrast to the SAR of 4-anilinoquinazolines as EGFR kinase inhibitors, the methyl group on the nitrogen linker was essential for the apoptosis-inducing activity of 4-anilinoquinazolines and substitution in the 6- and 7-positions of the quinazoline core structure decreased potency.
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PMID:Discovery of 2-chloro-N-(4-methoxyphenyl)-N-methylquinazolin-4-amine (EP128265, MPI-0441138) as a potent inducer of apoptosis with high in vivo activity. 1865 28


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