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)

mac25, a retinoic acid-inducible gene that is expressed at high levels in senescent epithelial cells, was initially cloned as a gene that is differentially expressed in meningioma. Although the homology of its product with members of family of insulin-like growth factor-binding proteins was suggested, the product also exhibits strong homology to follistatin, an activin-binding protein. However, a domain corresponding to the carboxyl terminus of follistatin is not found in mac25. The carboxyl-terminally truncated form of follistatin, generated by alternative splicing, has stronger activin-binding activity than the complete form. This result suggests that mac25 might act as an activated follistatin. Clonal growth of a p53-deficient osteosarcoma cell line was strongly inhibited when the murine mac25 gene, as well as the p53 gene, was introduced. Resembling activins that belong to the transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) superfamily, mac25 and p53 might associate with similar but distinct targets, namely cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors. However, there is no evidence for compensation of p53 function by mac25 in the development of p53-deficient mice, as judged from the pattern of expression of mac25 in mice. mac25 might act as a tumor suppressor, modulating signaling of the TGF-beta family, as does alpha-inhibin.
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PMID:A follistatin-like gene, mac25, may act as a growth suppressor of osteosarcoma cells. 864 39

There are two points (brake-points) through which the cell must pass before it can enter cell division. Progress through each brake-point requires the presence of an active cyclin-dependent kinase (Cdk). There are specific cyclins to activate the Cdk's at different parts of the cell cycle. Activation of the cyclin-Cdk complex is tightly regulated by the phosphorylation state of the Cdk. Exogenous growth stimulators (hormones, growth factors, and cytokines) all work through an intracellular kinase cascade that drives the production and activation of early nuclear proteins that, in turn, induce transcription of the genes for cyclins, Cdk's, and other cell cycle regulators. Retinoblastoma protein regulates cell division by inactivating specific growth-promoting proteins. Therefore, mutation of the Rb gene can lead to uncontrolled cell division and thus promotion of transformed cells. p53 protein will prevent replication of cells with damaged DNA. Hence, transformed cells can only readily progress to tumors if the p53 gene is mutated in a manner that inactivates the protein product. Members of the bcl-2 family act, in homodimers and heterodimers, to shunt cells either into cell division or into apoptosis. Understanding the mechanisms by which the balance of cell cycle: apoptosis can be manipulated will lead to new ways of controlling abnormal cellular growth. Most aspects of cellular function reflect changes in phosphorylation of critical serine, threonine, and tyrosine residues on the relevant regulatory proteins. The kinases the phosphatases involved are themselves under tight control.
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PMID:The cell cycle and regulation of cancer cell growth. 865 73

It is now evident that the cell cycle machinery has a variety of elements negatively regulating cell cycle progression. However, among these negative regulators in cell cycle control, only 4 have been shown to be consistently involved in the development of human cancers as tumor suppressors: Rb (Retinoblastoma susceptibility protein), p53, and two recently identified cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors, p16INK4A/MTS1 and p15INK4B/MTS2. Because there are functional interrelations among these negative regulators in the cell cycle machinery, it is particularly interesting to investigate the multiplicity of inactivations of these tumor suppressors in human cancers, including leukemias/lymphomas. To address this point, we examined inactivations of these four genes in primary lymphoid malignancies by Southern blot and polymerase chain reaction-single-strand conformation polymorphism analyses. We also analyzed Rb protein expression by Western blot analysis. The p16INK4A and p15INK4B genes were homozygously deleted in 45 and 42 of 230 lymphoid tumor specimens, respectively. Inactivations of the Rb and p53 genes were 27 of 91 and 9 of 173 specimens, respectively. Forty-one (45.1%) of 91 samples examined for inactivations of all four tumor suppressors had one or more abnormalities of these four tumor-suppressor genes, indicating that dysregulation of cell cycle control is important for tumor development. Statistical analysis of interrelations among impairments of these four genes indicated that inactivations of the individual tumor-suppressor genes might occur almost independently. In some patients, disruptions of multiple tumor-suppressor genes occurred; 4 cases with p16INK4A, p15INK4B, and Rb inactivations; 2 cases with p16INK4A, p15INK4B, and p53 inactivations; and 1 case with Rb and p53 inactivations. It is suggested that disruptions of multiple tumor suppressors in a tumor cell confer an additional growth advantage on the tumor.
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PMID:Inactivation of multiple tumor-suppressor genes involved in negative regulation of the cell cycle, MTS1/p16INK4A/CDKN2, MTS2/p15INK4B, p53, and Rb genes in primary lymphoid malignancies. 865 7

While oncoproteins encoded by small DNA tumor viruses and Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) latent antigens facilitate G1/S progression, the EBV lytic switch transactivator Zta was found to inhibit growth by causing cell cycle arrest in G0/G1 in several epithelial tumor cell lines. Expression of Zta results in induction of the tumor suppressor protein, p53, and the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors, p21 and p27, as well as accumulation of hypophosphorylated pRb. Up-regulation of p53 and p27 occurs by post-transcriptional mechanisms while expression of p21 is induced at the RNA level in a p53-dependent manner. Inactivation of pRb by transient overexpression of the human papillomavirus E7 oncoprotein indicates that pRb or pRb-related proteins are key mediators of the growth-inhibitory function of Zta. These findings suggest that EBV plays an active role in redirecting epithelial cell physiology to facilitate the viral replicative program through a Zta-mediated growth arrest function.
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PMID:The Epstein-Barr virus bZIP transcription factor Zta causes G0/G1 cell cycle arrest through induction of cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors. 865 72

The p21WAF-1 gene is positively regulated by the wild-type p53 protein. p21WAF-1 has been shown to interact with several cyclin-dependent kinase complexes and block the activity of G1 cyclin-dependent kinases (cdks). Mutational analysis with the p21WAF-1 gene localized a site, at amino acid residues 21 and 24 in the amino terminus of the protein, for p21WAF-1 binding to cyclins D and E. This region of the protein is conserved (residues 21 to 26) in other p21WAF-1 family members, p27kip-1 and p57kip-2. The same p21WAF-121,24 mutant also fails to bind to cyclin D1-cdk 4 or cyclin E-cdk 2 complexes in vitro, suggesting that amino acid residues 21 and 24 are important for p21WAF-1-cdk-cyclin trimeric complex interactions. The p21WAF-1 wild-type protein will suppress tumor cell growth in culture while p21WAF-1 mutant proteins with defects in residues 21 and 24 fail to suppress tumor cell growth. The overexpression of cyclin D or E in these cells will partially overcome the growth suppression of wild-type p21WAF-1 protein in cells. These results provide evidence that p21WAF-1 acts through cyclin D1-cdk4 and cyclin E-cdk2 complexes in vivo to induce the growth suppression. The p21WAF-1 binding sites for cyclins (residues 21 to 26), cdk2 (residues 49 to 71), and proliferating-cell nuclear antigen (residues 124 to 164) have all been mapped to discrete sites on the protein.
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PMID:Analysis of wild-type and mutant p21WAF-1 gene activities. 865 54

The cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) inhibitor p21 is induced by the tumor suppressor gene product p53 and is thought to be important for the arrest of the cell cycle following DNA damage. Here we have investigated the contribution of p21 in inhibiting different cyclin-CDK complexes that drive different cell cycle transitions following UV irradiation-induced DNA damage in normal human fibroblasts and immortalized rodent fibroblasts. When cells were exposed to a low dose of UV irradiation, both p53 and p21 were induced; the protein kinase activities associated with Cdc2, Cdk2, and Cdk4 were inhibited; and there was a good correlation between their inhibition and binding to p21. p21 alone is likely to be sufficient for the inhibition of Cdk2 because all the cyclin-complexed forms of Cdk2 were associated with p21 after irradiation. In contrast, only a small proportion of Cdk4 and Cdc2 was complexed with p21, although the level of Cdk4 associated with either p21 or p27 was increased after irradiation. Furthermore, recombinant p21 added to an unirradiated cell lysate at the same level as that induced by irradiation damage inhibited only the kinase activity associated with Cdk2. Cdc2 is likely to be inhibited by Thr-14/Tyr-15 phosphorylation after irradiation because Cdc2 was tyrosine-phosphorylated, and recombinant Cdc25 was able to increase its kinase activity significantly. Taken together, these results suggest that different CDKs are inhibited by different mechanisms following UV-induced DNA damage: Cdk2 is inhibited by the elevated level of p21; Cdk4 is inhibited by cooperation of p21 with other CDK inhibitors, like p27, and possibly by phosphorylation; and Cdc2 is inhibited by Thr-14/Tyr-15 phosphorylation. It is likely that these underlying mechanisms that inactivate CDKs are similar for other kinds of DNA damage.
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PMID:Cyclin-dependent kinases are inactivated by a combination of p21 and Thr-14/Tyr-15 phosphorylation after UV-induced DNA damage. 866 25

Flavopiridol (L86-8275), a N-methylpiperidinyl, chlorophenyl flavone, can inhibit cell cycle progression in either G1 or G2 and is a potent cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) 1 inhibitor. In this study, we used MCF-7 breast carcinoma cells that are wild type for p53 and pRb positive and contain CDK4-cyclin D1 and MDA-MB-468 breast carcinoma cells that are mutant p53, pRb negative, and lack CDK4-cyclin D1 to investigate the G1 arrest produced by Flavopiridol. Recombinant CDK4-cyclin D1 was inhibited potently by Flavopiridol (Kiapp, 65 nM), competitive with respect to ATP. Surprisingly, CDK4 immunoprecipitates derived from Flavopiridol-treated MCF-7 cells (3 h, 300 nM Flavonolpiridol) had an approximately 3-fold increased kinase activity compared with untreated cells. Cyclin D and CDK4 levels were not different at 3 hr, but cyclin D levels and CDK4 kinase activity decreased thereafter. The phosphorylation state of pRb was shifted from hypercoincident to hypocoincident with the development of G1 arrest. Asynchronous MDA-MB-468 cells were inhibited in cell cycle progression at both G1 and G2 by Flavopiridol. Flavopiridol inhibited the in vitro kinase activity of CDK2 using an immune complex kinase assay (IC50, 100 nM at 400 microM ATP). Immunoprecipitated CDK2 kinase activity from either MCF-7 or MDA-MB-468 cells exposed to Flavopiridol (300 nM) for increasing time showed an initial increased activity (approximately 1.5-fold at 3 h) compared with untreated cells, followed by a loss of kinase activity to immeasurable levels by 24 h. This increased immunoprecipitated kinase activity was dependent on the Flavopiridol concentration added to intact cells and was associated with a reduction of CDK2 tyrosine phosphorylation. Cyclin E and A levels were not altered to the same extent as cyclin D, and neither CDK4 nor CDK2 levels were changed in response to Flavopiridol. Inhibition of the CDK4 and/or CDK2 kinase activity by Flavopiridol can therefore account for the G1 arrest observed after exposure to Flavopiridol.
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PMID:Flavopiridol induces G1 arrest with inhibition of cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) 2 and CDK4 in human breast carcinoma cells. 867 31

CDKN2/p16 inhibits the cyclin D/cyclin-dependent kinase complexes that phosphorylate pRb, thus blocking cell cycle progression. We previously reported that p16 levels are low to undetectable in normal human uroepithelial cells (HUCs) and in immortalized uroepithelial cells with functional pRb, whereas p16 levels are markedly elevated in immortal HUCs with altered pRb (T. Yeager et al., Cancer Res., 55: 493-497, 1995). We now report that elevation of p16 levels occurs at senescence in HUCs, including HUCs transformed by human papillomavirus 16 E7 or E6, whose oncoprotein products lead to functional loss of pRb and p53, respectively. We also report that six of six independently immortalized E7 HUCs show high levels of p16 similar to those observed at HUC senescence, whereas p16 is undetectable in five of five immortal E6 HUCs. Four of the five independent E6 HUCs that lost p16 at immortalization showed hemizygous deletion of the 9p21 region. However, no homozygous CDKN2 deletions were detected, and only one CDKN2 mutation was identified. For the first time, these data associate elevated p16 with senescence in human epithelial cells. These data also suggest that a component of immortalization may be abrogation, either by pRb inactivation (as in the E7-transformed HUCs) or by p16 inactivation (as in the E6-transformed HUCs), of a p16-mediated senescence cell cycle block.
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PMID:Elevated p16 at senescence and loss of p16 at immortalization in human papillomavirus 16 E6, but not E7, transformed human uroepithelial cells. 867 33

p53 is involved in at least three cell cycle checkpoints in normal cells: two in G1, activated by either DNA damage or by ribonucleotide pool depletion in the absence of damage, and one in metaphase/anaphase activated by an incomplete mitotic spindle. We tested whether any of these checkpoints require the DNA-activated protein kinase (DNAPK), since data indicate that it is activated by damaged DNA to modify p53 in cultured cells and in cell-free systems. Fibroblasts isolated from mice with severe combined immune deficiency (SCID) were used because the sole genetic defect underlying this syndrome lies within the DNAPK gene. This report shows that age-matched SCID and isogenic wild-type embryonic fibroblasts arrested in response to DNA damage, ribonucleoside triphosphate depletion, and spindle poisons, whereas p53-/- fibroblasts failed to do so. Therefore, DNAPK-deficient scid cells preserve normal p53-dependent cell cycle checkpoints. The data provide one explanation of why scid mice are not tumor prone though they are deficient in double-strand break repair.
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PMID:p53-dependent cell cycle arrests are preserved in DNA-activated protein kinase-deficient mouse fibroblasts. 867 45

Cell cycle progression is controlled by cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) at the transition of both G1 to S and G2 to M phases. The activities of CDKs are negatively regulated by CDK inhibitors. Deregulation of CDK activity at the G1-S transition allows an aberrant progression of the cell cycle in tumor cells. Recent developments on cell cycle control have revealed a signal transducing pathway of tumor suppressor genes, p53 and pRb, concerning CDK and CDK inhibitors. CDK inhibitor p21 is a target of p53. p53 binds a promoter of the p21 gene and activates the transcription of p21. Consequently, cell cycle progression is blocked at the G1 phase through the suppression of CDK activity. pRb is a substrate of CDK. pRb functions to suppress cell cycle progression at the G1 phase associated with the E2F transcription factor. Phosphorylated pRb by CDK releases an active E2F, which promotes the expression of genes whose products may play a crucial role in controlling G1-S progression. These findings have deepened our understanding on the molecular mechanisms of tumor growth suppression.
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PMID:[The cell cycle and the tumor suppressor genes]. 869 37


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