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Query: EC:2.7.10.2 (
focal adhesion kinase
)
44,029
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The most frequent alterations found in astrocytomas are two major groups of signaling proteins: the cell cycle and the growth factor-regulated signaling pathways. The aim of our study was to detect changes in expression of the following proteins: the tumor suppressors PTEN, p53, and p21Waf1/Cip1, glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP, as a marker of astroglial differentiation), the phosphorylated form of protein kinase B/Akt (
PKB
/Akt), which is downstream to the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), and
MDM2
, which degrades p53. Paraffin-embedded astrocytoma tissue samples from 89 patients were divided into low grade (grade I-II; 42 samples) and high grade astrocytomas (grade III-IV; 47 samples). Mouse monoclonal antibodies against GFAP, PTEN,
PKB
/Akt phosphorylated on serine 473, EGFR, p53, p21Waf1/Cip1 and
MDM2
were used, followed by standard indirect immunohistochemical method. EGFR protein was detected in 29 % of low grade and in 60 % of high grade astrocytomas. The expression of phosphorylated
PKB
/Akt was found in roughly the same proportions: in 86% of low grade and in 79% of high grade astrocytomas. PTEN was not found in most of astrocytomas, 64% of low grade and 74% of high grade tumors showed no PTEN staining. Overexpression of the mutated form of p53 or loss of p53 expression, however, was found in about 63% in both groups of astrocytomas with no differences between them. GFAP expression was decreased in tumor astrocytes compared to normal astrocytes and this decreased with grading. GFAP positive tumor cells were detected in only 50% of low grade, and 32% of high grade astrocytomas. The level of
MDM2
expression was similar in both grades. Loss of p21Waf1/Cip1 expression was shown in 20% of low and in 45% of high grade tumors. In the subgroup of high grade tumors with wild type p53, 86% showed p21Waf1/Cip1 expression, whereas in the subgroup of high grade tumors with altered p53, only 35% displayed p21Waf1/Cip1. We conclude that EGFR expression increases with astrocytoma grading. EGFR activation may subsequently lead to stimulation of the
PKB
/Akt survival pathway. PTEN defects may also participate in aggressive tumor behaviour through activation of the
PKB
/Akt pathway. The alteration of p53 supports the finding that the cell cycle regulation is also disrupted during development of astrocytomas. The changes in PTEN and p53 expression, and activation of
PKB
/Akt are events in the early stages of astrocytomagenesis. EGFR is one of the factors, which drives the progression of astrocytomas from low to high grade stage.
...
PMID:Could changes in the regulation of the PI3K/PKB/Akt signaling pathway and cell cycle be involved in astrocytic tumor pathogenesis and progression? 1782 24
To gain further insight into alterations in cellular pathways, tumor profiling, and marker discovery in colorectal cancer (CRC) we used a new antibody microarray specific for cell signaling. Soluble protein extracts were prepared from paired tumor/normal biopsies of 11 patients diagnosed with colorectal carcinoma at different stages; four liver carcinomas were used as a reference. Antibody microarray analysis identified 46 proteins that were differentially expressed between normal colorectal epithelium and adenocarcinoma. These proteins gave a specific signature for CRC, different from other tumors, as well as a panel of novel markers and potential targets for CRC. Twenty-four proteins were validated by using a specific colorectal cancer tissue microarray and immunoblotting analysis. Together with some previously well known deregulated proteins in CRC (beta-catenin, c-MYC, or p63), we found new potential markers preferentially expressed in CRC tumors: cytokeratin 13, calcineurin, CHK1, clathrin light chain, MAPK3, phospho-
PTK2
/
focal adhesion kinase
(Ser-910), and
MDM2
. CHK1 antibodies were particularly effective in discriminating between tumoral and normal mucosa in CRC. Moreover a global picture of alterations in signaling pathways in CRC was observed, including a significant up-regulation of different components of the epidermal growth factor receptor and Wnt/beta-catenin pathways and the down-regulation of p14(ARF). The experimental approach described here should be applicable to other pathologies and neoplastic processes.
...
PMID:A proteomics analysis of cell signaling alterations in colorectal cancer. 1784 89
Adenoid cystic carcinoma (ACC) is a rare but distinctive tumor. Oligonucleotide array comparative genomic hybridization has been applied for cataloging genomic copy number alterations (CNAs) in 17 frozen salivary or bronchial tumors. Only four whole chromosome CNAs were found, and most cases had 2-4 segmental CNAs. No high level amplification was observed. There were recurrent gains at 7p15.2, 17q21-25, and 22q11-13, and recurrent losses at 1p35, 6q22-25, 8q12-13, 9p21, 12q12-13, and 17p11-13. The minimal region of gain at 7p15.2 contained the HOXA cluster. The minimal common regions of deletions contained the CDKN2A/CDKN2B, TP53, and LIMA1 tumor suppressor genes. The recurrent deletion at 8q12.3-13.1 contained no straightforward tumor suppressor gene, but the MIRN124A2 microRNA gene, whose product regulates MMP2 and CDK6. Among unique CNAs, gains harbored CCND1, KIT/PDGFRA/KDR,
MDM2
, and
JAK2
. The CNAs involving CCND1,
MDM2
, KIT, CDKN2A/2B, and TP53 were validated by FISH and/or multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification. Although most tumors overexpressed cyclin D1 compared with surrounding glands, the only case to overexpress
MDM2
had the corresponding CNA. In conclusion, our report suggests that ACC is characterized by a relatively low level of structural complexity. Array CGH and immunohistochemical data implicate
MDM2
as the oncogene targeted at 12q15. The gain at 4q12 warrants further exploration as it contains a cluster of receptor kinase genes (KIT/PDGFRA/KDR), whose products can be responsive to specific therapies.
...
PMID:High-resolution array comparative genomic hybridization analysis of human bronchial and salivary adenoid cystic carcinoma. 1833 73
Abstract Internal mammary artery (IMA) coronary artery bypass grafts (CABG) are remarkably resistant to intimal hyperplasia (IH) as compared to saphenous vein (SV) grafts following aorto-coronary anastomosis. The reason behind this puzzling difference still remains an enigma. In this study, we examined the effects of IGF-1 stimulation on the PI3K-AKT/
PKB
pathway mediating proliferation of smooth muscle cells (SMCs) of IMA and SV origin and the specific contribution of phosphatase and tensin homologue (PTEN) in regulating the IGF-1-PI3K-AKT/
PKB
axis under these conditions. Mitogenic activation with IGF-1, time-dependently stimulated the phosphorylation of PI3K and AKT/
PKB
in the SV SMCs to a much greater extent than the IMA. Conversely, PTEN was found to be significantly more active in IMA SMCs. Transient overexpression of PTEN in SMCs of SV and IMA inhibited AKT/
PKB
activity and upstream of AKT/
PKB
, caused a reduction of IGF-1 receptors. Downstream, PTEN overexpression in SV SMCs induced the transactivation of tumour suppressor protein p53 by down-regulating the expression of its inhibitor
MDM2
. However, PTEN overexpression had no significant effect on
MDM2
and p53 expression in IMA SMCs. PTEN overexpression inhibited IGF-1-induced SMC proliferation in both SV and IMA. PTEN suppression, induced by siRNA transfection of IMA SMCs diminished the negative regulation of PI3K-
PKB
signalling leading to greater proliferative response induced by IGF-1 stimulation. Thus, we show for the first time that early inactivation of PTEN in SV SMCs leads to temporally increased activity of the pro-hyperplasia PI3K-AKT/
PKB
pathway leading to IH-induced vein graft occlusion. Therefore, modulation of the PI3K-AKT/
PKB
pathway via PTEN might be a novel and effective strategy in combating SV graft failure following CABG.
...
PMID:Temporal PTEN inactivation causes proliferation of saphenous vein smooth muscle cells of human CABG conduits. 1836 44
Endometrial serous carcinomas (ESC) constitute only approximately 10% of endometrial cancers, but have a substantially higher case-fatality rate than their more common endometrioid counterparts. The precise composite of factors driving endometrial serous carcinogenesis and progression remain largely unknown, but we attempt to review the current state of knowledge in this report. ESC probably do not evolve through a single pathway, and their underlying molecular events probably occur early in their evolution. TP53 gene mutations occur in 22.7 to 96% of cases, and p53 protein overexpression is seen in approximately 76%. By gene expression profiling, p16 is upregulated in ESC significantly above both normal endometrial cells and endometrioid carcinomas, and 92-100% of cases display diffuse expression of the p16 protein by immunohistochemistry (IHC). Together, these findings suggest dysregulation of both the p16(INKA)/Cyclin D-CDK/pRb-E2F and the ARF-
MDM2
-p53 cell cycle pathways in ESC. By IHC, HER2/neu is overexpressed (2+ or 3+) in approximately 32.1% of ESC, and approximately 54.5% of cases scored as 2+ or 3+ by IHC display c-erbB2 gene amplification as assessed by fluorescent in situ hybridization. Genetic instability, typically manifested as loss of heterozygosity in multiple chromosomes, is a common feature of ESC, and one study found loss of heterozygosity at 1p32-33 in 63% of cases. A subset of ESC display protein expression patterns that are characteristic of high grade endometrial carcinomas, including loss of the metastasis suppressor CD82 (KAI-1) and epithelial-to-mesenchymal transformation, the latter manifested as E-cadherin downregulation, P-cadherin upregulation, and expression of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transformation-related molecules such as zinc-finger E-box-binding homeobox 1 (ZEB1) and
focal adhesion kinase
. Preliminary data suggests differential patterns of expression in ESC of some isoforms of claudins, proteases, the tumor invasiveness and progression-associated oncofetal protein insulin-like growth factor II mRNA-binding protein 3 (IMP3), as well as a variety of other molecules. At the morphologic level, evidence that indicates that endometrial glandular dysplasia (EmGD) is the most likely morphologically recognizable precursor lesion to ESC is presented. We advocate use of the term endometrial intraepithelial carcinoma (EIC, or its other appellations) only as a morphologic descriptor and never as a diagnostic/pathologic statement of biologic potential. Given its potential for extrauterine extension, we consider the lesions described as EIC, when present in isolation, as examples of localized ESC, and patients should be managed as such. Morphologically normal, p53 immunoreactive endometrial cells (the so-called "p53 signatures"), show a statistically significant association with ESC, display p53 mutations in a significant subset, and form the start of a progression model, outlined herein, from p53 signatures to EmGD to localized ESC to the more conventionally invasive neoplasm. The identification of a morphologically-recognizable precursor holds the promise of early detection of ESC, with the attendant reduction in its overall associated mortality rate. Deciphering the molecular basis for endometrial serous carcinogenesis should uncover potential targets for diagnosis, therapy, and/or disease surveillance.
...
PMID:Insights into endometrial serous carcinogenesis and progression. 1929 1
Cross-talk between the two transcription factors, p53 and hypoxia inducible factor 1alpha (HIF1A), is important in different pathophysiological conditions (Hammond and Giaccia, 2006, Clin Cancer Res 12:5007-5009) such as in the transition from myocardial hypertrophy to cardiac dilatation and heart failure. In that context, p53 induces HIF1A degradation which in turn provokes the transition from compensatory hypertrophy to myocardial thinning and chamber dilatation (Sano et al., 2007, Nature 446:444-448). In order to investigate the mechanism of p53-induced HIF1A degradation, we used the established in vitro model of deferroxamine (DFX)-induced HIF1A accumulation in H9c2 cardiac cells (Sano et al., 2007, Nature 446:444-448). Here, we report that opposite to HIF1A accumulation following exposure to DFX, prolonged DFX-induced p53 activation and HIF1A protein decrease, without any change in Hif1a mRNA. HIF1A protein decrease accompanied upregulated HIF1A ubiquitination.
MDM2
, an ubiquitin E3 ligase target gene of p53, was upregulated following prolonged DFX, but using p53/Mdm2 double-null mouse embryonic fibroblasts, we found that p53 upregulated HIF1A ubiquitination and degradation independently of
MDM2
. Moreover, with prolonged DFX treatment, an enhanced interaction between
MDM2
and HIF1A was lacking. Instead, phospho-Akt(ser473) was decreased during the phase coinciding with HIF1A degradation, and inhibition of
PKB
/Akt phosphorylation using PI3K inhibitor (LY294002) upregulated HIF1A ubiquitination. In summary, we propose that p53-induced HIF1A degradation is not exclusively
MDM2
-mediated, but reversible by
PKB
/Akt phosphorylation.
...
PMID:PKB/Akt activation inhibits p53-mediated HIF1A degradation that is independent of MDM2. 1995 Feb 14
The present study investigated the effect of curcumin, a phenolic compound with yellow color from Curcuma longa L., on the expression of the apoptosis-related genes [BAX (Bcl-2 associated protein X),
PKB
, p53,
MDM2
(mouse double minute 2), caspase 9, c-Ski, smad1 and smad4] in hamster opisthorchiasis. On Opisthorchis viverrini infection treated with dietary curcumin apoptosis-related gene expression profiles were similar to O. viverrini-infected group, but the expression levels seemed lower. Light microscopic observation revealed that aggregation of inflammatory cells surrounding the hepatic bile ducts in the groups infected with O. viverrini and treated with dietary curcumin was lower than in infected group. The intensity of the response is correlated with expression of the genes studied. The results suggest that curcumin reduces pathogenesis in hamster-opisthorchiasis by controlling apoptosis-related gene expression.
...
PMID:Effect of curcumin on pathogenesis of hamster-opisthorchiasis through apoptosis-related gene expression. 2057 54
JAK2
(V617F) is a gain of function mutation that promotes cytokine-independent growth of myeloid cells and accounts for a majority of myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPN). Mutations in p53 are rarely found in these diseases before acute leukemia transformation, but this does not rule out a role for p53 deregulation in disease progression. Using Ba/F3-EPOR cells and ex vivo cultured CD34(+) cells from MPN patients, we demonstrate that expression of
JAK2
(V617F) affected the p53 response to DNA damage. We show that E3 ubiquitin ligase
MDM2
accumulated in these cells, due to an increased translation of
MDM2
mRNA. Accumulation of the La autoantigen, which interacts with
MDM2
mRNA and promotes its translation, was responsible for the increase in MDM2 protein level and the subsequent degradation of p53 after DNA damage. Downregulation of La protein or cell treatment with nutlin-3, a
MDM2
antagonist, restored the p53 response to DNA damage and the cytokine-dependence of Ba/F3-EPOR-
JAK2
(V617F) cells. Altogether, these data indicate that the
JAK2
(V617F) mutation affects p53 response to DNA damage through the upregulation of La antigen and accumulation of
MDM2
. They also suggest that p53 functional inactivation accounts for the cytokine hypersensitivity of
JAK2
(V617F) MPN and might have a role in disease progression.
...
PMID:JAK2(V617F) negatively regulates p53 stabilization by enhancing MDM2 via La expression in myeloproliferative neoplasms. 2178 63
TBP-1 /Tat-Binding Protein 1 (also named Rpt-5, S6a or PSMC3) is a multifunctional protein, originally identified as a regulator of HIV-1-Tat mediated transcription. It is an AAA-ATPase component of the 19S regulative subunit of the proteasome and, as other members of this protein family, fulfils different cellular functions including proteolysis and transcriptional regulation. We and others reported that over expression of TBP-1 diminishes cell proliferation in different cellular contexts with mechanisms yet to be defined. Accordingly, we demonstrated that TBP-1 binds to and stabilizes the p14ARF oncosuppressor increasing its anti-oncogenic functions. However, TBP-1 restrains cell proliferation also in the absence of ARF, raising the question of what are the molecular pathways involved. Herein we demonstrate that stable knock-down of TBP-1 in human immortalized fibroblasts increases cell proliferation, migration and resistance to apoptosis induced by serum deprivation. We observe that TBP-1 silencing causes activation of the Akt/
PKB
kinase and that in turn TBP-1, itself, is a downstream target of Akt/
PKB
. Moreover,
MDM2
, a known Akt target, plays a major role in this regulation. Altogether, our data suggest the existence of a negative feedback loop involving Akt/
PKB
that might act as a sensor to modulate TBP-1 levels in proliferating cells.
...
PMID:A regulatory mechanism involving TBP-1/Tat-Binding Protein 1 and Akt/PKB in the control of cell proliferation. 3148 38
While
MDM2
inhibitors hold great promise as cancer therapeutics, drug resistance will likely limit their efficacy as single agents. To identify drug combinations that might circumvent resistance, we screened for agents that could synergize with
MDM2
inhibition in the suppression of cell viability. We observed broad and robust synergy when combining
MDM2
antagonists with either MEK or PI3K inhibitors. Synergy was not limited to cell lines harboring MAPK or PI3K pathway mutations, nor did it depend on which node of the PI3K axis was targeted.
MDM2
inhibitors also synergized strongly with BH3 mimetics, BCR-
ABL
antagonists, and HDAC inhibitors.
MDM2
inhibitor-mediated synergy with agents targeting these mechanisms was much more prevalent than previously appreciated, implying that clinical translation of these combinations could have far-reaching implications for public health. These findings highlight the importance of combinatorial drug targeting and provide a framework for the rational design of
MDM2
inhibitor clinical trials.
...
PMID:MDM2 antagonists synergize broadly and robustly with compounds targeting fundamental oncogenic signaling pathways. 2481 Sep 62
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