Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:2.7.11.22 (cdc2)
8,319 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF) affects the growth of carcinoma cells, and we thus analyzed its underlying mechanisms. Carcinoma cells constitutively express LIF mRNA, and 23 lines (92.0%) and all (100%) of 25 lines express LIF receptor mRNAs of LIFRbeta and gp130, respectively. Exogenous addition of LIF promoted significant cell proliferation in 4 lines (MCF-7, ZR-75-1, Hs-700T and Panc-1) and suppressed cell growth in 3 lines (AZ-521, GBK-1 and HT-29). LIF significantly induced an immediate early response of genes c-fos and junB 3 hr after stimulation, but not of c-jun during the process of proliferation of MCF-7 and Hs-700T cells, with maximum levels at 30-60 min. The cell-cycle-related gene cyclin E was also induced in MCF-7 and Hs-700T cells, whereas cyclinA, cdk2, c-myc, c-myb and p53 mRNAs were not induced. On the other hand, LIF inhibited growth and increased the rate of cell death of AZ-521 and GBK-1 cells. LIF increased the number of TUNEL-positive cells in AZ-521 cells and DNA fragmentation in AZ-521 and GBK-1 cells. LIF induced apoptosis related genes c-myc and ICE during suppression of cell growth, but p53, p21, c-fos, cyclin A and cyclin E were not induced. Our results suggest that LIF is linked to cell proliferation and apoptosis in some human carcinoma cell lines. It is considered that this is related to differences in signal transduction and induction of oncogenes.
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PMID:Leukemia inhibitory factor induces apoptosis and proliferation of human carcinoma cells through different oncogene pathways. 925 11

7-hydroxystaurosporine (UCN-01) is a more selective protein kinase C inhibitor than staurosporine. UCN-01 exhibits antitumor activity in experimental tumor models and is presently in clinical trials. Our study reveals that human myeloblastic leukemia HL60 and K562 and colon carcinoma HT29 cells undergo internucleosomal DNA fragmentation and morphological changes characteristic of apoptosis after UCN-01 treatment. These three cell lines lack functional p53, and K562 and HT29 cells are usually resistant to apoptosis. DNA fragmentation in HT29 and K562 cells occurred after 1 day of treatment while it took less than 4 h in HL60 cells. Cycloheximide prevented UCN-01-induced DNA fragmentation in HT-29 cells, but not in HL60 and K562 cells, suggesting that macromolecular synthesis is selectively required for apoptotic DNA fragmentation in HT29 cells. UCN-01-induced DNA fragmentation was preceded by activation of cyclin B1/cdc2 kinase. Further studies in HL60 cells showed that UCN-01-induced apoptosis was associated with degradation of CPP32, PARP, and lamin B and that the inhibitor of caspases (ICE/CED-3 cysteine proteases), Z-VAD-FMK, and the serine protease inhibitor, DCI, protected HL60 cells from UCN-01-induced DNA fragmentation. However, only DCI and TPCK, but not Z-VAD-FMK, inhibited DNA fragmentation in the HL60 cell-free system, suggesting that serine protease(s) may play a role in the execution phase of apoptosis in HL60 cells treated with UCN-01. Z-VAD-FMK and DCI also inhibited apoptosis in HT29 cells. These data demonstrate that the protein kinase C inhibitor and antitumor agent, UCN-01 is a potent apoptosis inducer in cell lines that are usually resistant to apoptosis and lack p53 and that caspases and probably serine proteases are activated during UCN-01-induced apoptosis.
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PMID:7-Hydroxystaurosporine (UCN-01) induces apoptosis in human colon carcinoma and leukemia cells independently of p53. 926 Sep 9

We previously reported that all-trans retinoic acid (RA) and fenretinide (4HPR) suppress HL-60 leukemia cell growth and cause partial cell arrest in the G1-to-S phase. Moreover, 4HPR but not RA induces apoptosis in HL-60 cells. To investigate further the observed biological effects, cyclin D1 and cdk4 expression and the level of phosphorylation of the retinoblastoma protein Rb were assessed. Cyclin D1 and cdk4 expression and Rb phosphorylation were significantly reduced, by 40-75%, after 24 hr of treatment with RA or 4HPR; these decreases were either transient, e.g., only at 24 hr for cdk4, or sustained for 72 hr. In general, more pronounced decreases were seen in the 4HPR-treated cells. Evidence for 4HPR-induced apoptosis comes from (1) cleavage of the enzyme poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) to an 89-kDa truncated product, (2) appearance of DNA ladders on agarose gel electrophoresis, and (3) higher incorporation in situ of digoxigenin nucleotides into the free 3'-ends of DNA. Overnight pretreatment with 0.5-5.0 microM of the CPP32 inhibitor DEVD, but not the ICE inhibitor YVAD, significantly reduced the specific processing of PARP, suggesting that CPP32 is involved in the mechanism of action of 4HPR. Analysis of 2 lipid-derived second messengers, ceramide and diacylglycerol (DAG), as a function of time of treatment with RA or 4HPR, showed ceramide but not DAG to be significantly albeit transiently increased 2-fold at 3 hr, by 4HPR. To test further whether ceramide may be involved in the signaling cascade that culminates in the induction of apoptosis in 4HPR-treated HL-60 cells, the effects of fumonisin B1, an inhibitor of ceramide synthase, were studied. Simultaneous treatment of cells with 4HPR and 25-100 microM fumonisin B1 resulted in a dose-dependent reduction in the elevation in ceramide, the extent of PARP cleavage, and induction of apoptosis. Pretreatment with DEVD or YVAD, on the other hand, had no effect on the 4HPR-induced increase in ceramide.
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PMID:Regulation of G1/S transition and induction of apoptosis in HL-60 leukemia cells by fenretinide (4HPR). 972 94

A tumor-suppressor gene, p16(INK4), which is deleted or mutated in tumors, regulates cell-cycle progression through a G(1)-S restriction point by inhibiting CDK4(CDK6)/cyclin-D-mediated phosphorylation of pRb. We have found that ectopic p16(INK4) expression increased cellular sensitivity of human non-small-cell-lung-cancer (NSCLC) A549 cells to a selective growth-inhibitory effect induced by the topoisomerase-I inhibitor 11, 7-ethyl-10-[4-(1-piperidino)-1-piperidino] carbonyloxy camptothecin (CPT-11) in vitro. In this study, we observed enhanced apoptosis characterized by DNA fragmentation in A549 cells transfected with p16(INK4) cDNA (A549/p16-1) and treated with CPT-11. This apoptosis was suppressed by the inhibitor of interleukin-1beta-converting enzyme (ICE/caspase-1) or ICE-like proteases, Z-Asp-CH2-DCB, as determined by DNA fragmentation and proteolytic cleavage of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase, a natural substrate for CPP32/caspase-3. In A549/p16-1 cells, cytosolic peptidase activities that cleaved Z-DEVD-7-amino-4-trifluoromethylcoumarin increased during CPT-11-induced apoptosis and were suppressed by a highly specific caspase-3 and caspase-3-like inhibitor, Z-DEVD-fluoromethylketone. These findings indicate that p16(INK) is positively involved in the activation pathway of the caspase-3 induced by CPT-11. The increased delay in S-phase progression and subsequent induction of apoptosis were observed in CPT-11-treated A549/p16-1 cells on the basis of DNA histograms. Specific down-regulation of the cyclin-A protein level in A549/p16-1 cells was observed after CPT-11-treatment, whereas cyclin B, cdk2, and cdc2 protein levels were unaffected. These results suggest that ectopic p16(INK4) expression inappropriately decreases cyclin A and thereby terminates CPT-11-induced G(2)/M accumulation, which is followed by increased apoptosis in p16(INK4)-expressing A549 cells.
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PMID:Ectopic p16(ink4) expression enhances CPT-11-induced apoptosis through increased delay in S-phase progression in human non-small-cell-lung-cancer cells. 1073 46

For hormone resistant prostate cancer (HRPC), chemotherapy is used but the mortality is 100% with a mean survival time of 7-8 months. Our previous studies have shown the chemotherapeutic effect of ciprofloxacin in bladder cancer. At doses 50-400 micro g/ml ciprofloxacin, the concentrations that are normally achieved at doses currently used for the treatment of anti-bacterial infections, inhibited bladder cancer cell growth and induced S/G2M arrest with modulation of key cell cycle regulatory genes and ultimately activated apoptotic processes. In this study, we investigated the effect of ciprofloxacin on androgen independent prostate carcinoma, PC3 cells and compared our results with non-tumorigenic prostate epithelial cells. The main advantage of this fluroquinolone antibiotic is its relative non-toxicity as compared to current chemotherapy, which is not very effective, for the treatment of advanced hormone resistant prostate cancer. PC3 cells as well as normal prostate epithelial cells (MLC8891) were treated with 25-400 micro g/ml ciprofloxacin, and cell counting was done during 3 days of treatment. The cell death was determined using DAPI staining of cell nuclei, 7AAD-staining followed by flow cytometric analysis as well as by activation of caspase-3, a member of the ICE family of enzymes involved in the apoptotic cascade. The cell lysates were analyzed by immunoblotting techniques for the expression of key genes targeted by ciprofloxacin (p21WAF1, Bax and Bcl-2). Translocation of bax was visualized using a fluorescence staining procedure followed by laser confocal microscopic imaging. Treatment of prostate cancer cells with ciprofloxacin resulted in a dose- and time-dependent inhibition of cell growth (70-100% with 50-400 micro g/ml of the drug). There was a concomitant induction of cell cycle arrest at the S and G2/M phases of the cell cycle as well as induction of apoptosis. The CDK inhibitor p21WAF1 was down-regulated as early as 12 h following ciprofloxacin treatment (100-200 micro g/ml for 12-24 h). There was a significant increase in the Bax/Bcl-2 ratio with translocation of Bax, a pro-apoptotic protein, to mitochondria with concomitant activation of caspase 3. These results suggest the potential usefulness of the fluroquinolone, ciprofloxacin as a chemotherapeutic agent for advanced prostate cancer. The fluroquinolone ciprofloxacin showed anti-proliferative and apoptosis inducing activity on prostate cancer cells but not on non-tumorigenic prostate epithelial cells. These effects of ciprofloxacin were mediated by cell cycle arrest at S-G2/M phase of the cell cycle, Bax translocation to mitochondrial membrane and by increasing the Bax/Bcl-2 ratio in PC3 prostate cancer cells. Based on our in vitro results, further in-depth in vivo animal or human investigations are warranted.
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PMID:Suppression of human prostate cancer cell growth by ciprofloxacin is associated with cell cycle arrest and apoptosis. 1263 69