Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:2.7.11.1 (protein kinase)
81,284 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Vitamin A is essential for normal cellular growth and differentiation. A vast amount of laboratory data have clearly demonstrated the potent antiproliferative and differentiation-inducing effects of vitamin A and the synthetic analogues (retinoids). Recent in-vitro work has led to the exciting proposal that protein kinase-C may be centrally involved in many of retinoids' anticancer actions including the effects on ornithine decarboxylase induction, intracellular polyamine levels, and epidermal growth factor receptor number. Several intervention trials have clearly indicated that natural vitamin A at clinically tolerable doses has only limited activity against human neoplastic processes. Therefore, clinical work has focused on the synthetic derivatives with higher therapeutic indexes. In human cancer prevention, retinoids have been most effective for skin diseases, including actinic keratosis, keratoacanthoma, epidermodysplasia verruciformis, dysplastic nevus syndrome, and basal cell carcinoma. Several noncutaneous premaligancies, however, are currently receiving more attention in retinoid trials. Definite retinoid activity has been documented in oral leukoplakia, laryngeal papillomatosis, superficial bladder carcinoma, cervical dysplasia, bronchial metaplasia, and preleukemia. Significant therapeutic advances are also occurring with this class of drugs in some drug-resistant malignancies and several others that have become refractory, including advanced basal cell cancer, mycosis fungoides, melanoma, acute promyelocytic leukemia, and squamous cell carcinoma of the skin and of the head and neck. This report comprehensively presents the clinical data using retinoids as anticancer agents in human premalignant disorders and outlines the ongoing and planned studies with retinoids in combination and adjuvant therapy.
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PMID:Vitamin A derivatives in the prevention and treatment of human cancer. 306 55

Retinoids, the synthetic and natural analogs of vitamin A, frequently block the phenotypic expression of cancer in vitro; they also inhibit growth and induce differentiation in many animal and human malignant cell types. Only recently has it become possible to propose a unifying mechanism of retinoid action, which involves the protein kinase-C cascade system. This system may mediate retinoids' many diverse actions, including their effects on enzyme synthesis, membrane properties, growth factors, binding proteins, genomic and postgenomic expression, the extracellular matrix, and immunologic responses. Ongoing in vitro studies of retinoid structure-activity relationships, effects on oncogene expression, reversal of drug-resistance, and, especially, the protein kinase-C cascade system should help clarify the precise mechanism of their anticancer action. Many in vitro and in vivo assay systems are available for testing the 2000 + synthetic retinoids. These assays indicate specific drug sensitivities, which may help focus future clinical trials. In human cancer prevention, retinoids have been most effective for skin diseases, including actinic keratosis, keratoacanthoma, and basal cell carcinoma; however, nondermatologic premalignancies, such as oral leukoplakia, bronchial metaplasia, laryngeal papillomatosis, cervical dysplasia, myelodysplastic syndromes, and the urinary bladder, also respond to retinoid therapy. Significant therapeutic advances are also occurring with this class of drugs in refractory malignancies, including advanced cutaneous squamous and basal cell cancer, mycosis fungoides, and acute promyelocytic leukemia. Newer third-generation retinoids, such as the highly potent retinoidal benzoic acid derivatives, are demonstrating therapeutic indexes far higher than earlier-generation retinoids. Current in vitro testing is also demonstrating that retinoids have synergistic activity in combination with other agents (eg, biologic modifiers, hormones, and DNA synthesis inhibitors) and treatment modalities (eg, irradiation). Notwithstanding the progress already made with retinoids in human cancer, many in vitro questions remain, and clinical work is just beginning.
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PMID:Retinoids as preventive and therapeutic anticancer agents (Part I). 354 57

Oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) is one of the most common types of head and neck neoplasms in the world. Patients diagnosed with OSCC exhibit a poor prognosis. WW domain-containing oxidoreductase (WWOX), as a candidate tumor-suppressor gene, is involved in the genesis and progression of tumors. The deletion of the WWOX gene has been identified in OSCC and oral leukoplakia, but the function and mechanism of WWOX in OSCC remain unknown. Therefore, the present study investigated the role of WWOX in oral squamous carcinoma cells. The results revealed that an elevation of WWOX expression had an inhibitory effect on the growth of three types of oral squamous carcinoma cells, with the most evident effect occurring in Tca8113 cells. Also, in the Tca8113 cells, WWOX overexpression significantly inhibited colony formation, and induced apoptosis and cell cycle arrest. Microarray analysis, reverse transcription-quantitative polymerase chain reaction and western blotting methods detected that WWOX overexpression contributed to the differential expression of the genes involved in mediating the extracellular-signal regulated protein kinase/mitogen-activated protein kinase (ERK/MAPK) signaling pathway. These results suggest that the tumor-suppressor function of the WWOX gene may be associated with the modulation of the ERK/MAPK signaling pathway, thus providing a novel target for OSCC therapy.
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PMID:Exploring the mechanism of WWOX growth inhibitory effects on oral squamous cell carcinoma. 2852 26