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)

The sequential transcriptional activation of cyclins, the regulatory subunits of cell cycle specific kinases, regulates progress through the cell cycle. In mitogen-stimulated cells cyclin D1 induction in early G1 is followed by induction of cyclin E, activation of the cyclin-dependent kinase Cdk2, and hyperphosphorylation of the retinoblastoma gene product (pRB) in mid-to-late G1 phase. T-47D breast cancer cells expressing cyclin D1 under the control of a metal-responsive metallothionein promoter were used to determine whether Cdk2 activation and pRB hyperphosphorylation are consequences of cyclin D1 induction. A 4-5-fold increase in cyclin D1 protein abundance was followed by approximately 2-fold increases in cyclin E protein abundance and Cdk2 activity and by hyperphosphorylation of pRB. These responses were apparent approximately 3 h after the increase in cyclin D1 protein, and approximately 3 h prior to the entry of cyclin D1-stimulated cells into S phase 12 h after zinc treatment. Cyclin D1 immunoprecipitates contained Cdk4 but no detectable Cdk2 and displayed pRb but not histone H1 kinase activity. Cdk2 activation was therefore likely to be due to increased abundance of cyclin E/Cdk2 complexes rather than formation of active cyclin D1/Cdk2 complexes. The sequence of events following zinc induction of cyclin D1 thus mimicked that following mitogen induction of cyclin D1. These data show that cyclin D1 induction is sufficient for Cdk2 activation and pRB hyperphosphorylation in T-47D human breast cancer cells, providing evidence that cyclin D1 induction is a critical event in G1 phase progression.
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PMID:Inducible expression of cyclin D1 in T-47D human breast cancer cells is sufficient for Cdk2 activation and pRB hyperphosphorylation. 886 12

Transforming growth factor beta (TGF beta) inhibits cell proliferation by inducing a G1 cell-cycle arrest. Cyclin/CDK complexes have been implicated in this arrest, because TGF beta treatment leads to inhibition of cyclin/CDK activity. We have investigated the role of the retinoblastoma protein (pRb) in TGF beta-induced growth arrest by using RB+/+ and RB-/- primary mouse embryo fibroblasts. In both of these cell types, TGF beta inhibits CDK4-associated kinase activity. However, whereas CDK2-associated kinase activity was completely inhibited by TGF beta in the wild-type cells, it was reduced only slightly in the RB mutant cells. In addition, at high-cell density the growth-inhibitory effects of TGF beta are no longer observed in the RB-/- cells; on the contrary, TGF beta treatment promotes the growth of these mutant fibroblasts. Thus, under certain cellular growth conditions, elimination of pRb transforms the growth-inhibitory effects of TGF beta into growth-stimulatory effects. These observations could help to explain why TGF beta is often found to enhance tumorigenicity in vivo and why inactivation of the RB gene leads to tumorigenesis.
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PMID:TGF beta-induced growth inhibition in primary fibroblasts requires the retinoblastoma protein. 888 30

Overexpression of mouse E2F1 full-length but not truncated forms results in neoplastic transformation of astrocytes in vitro. This neoplastic transformation is accompanied with changes in cell morphology and expression of cell cycle regulators. Transformed astrocytes have higher expression of cdk2, pRb, and p107 than control astrocytes. However, expression of glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) and p130 is reduced in transformed astrocytes.
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PMID:Overexpression of E2F1 in astrocytes leads to neoplastic transformation and changes in expression of retinoblastoma family members. 889 11

An understanding of the biological significance of the multiple genetic alterations identified in clinical bladder cancers to the stepwise pathogenesis of the disease is evolving. Alterations in p53 and pRb, products of the chromosomes 17p13 TP53 and 13q14 RB tumor suppressor genes, occur in approximately 50% and approximately 33% of bladder cancers respectively, and are associated with later stage, higher grade disease. p53 and pRb alterations are also known to occur in early stage bladder carcinoma in situ where they are thought to represent a poor prognosis for tumor progression. Allelic loss of genes on 9p21 occurs in approximately 50% of bladder cancers, but whether the only critical gene in this region is the CDKN2/p16 cyclin/CDK inhibitor is at present uncertain. Amplification and/or overexpression of the oncogenes epidermal growth factor receptor and erbB2 are associated with later stage disease. Finally, recent findings generated using in vitro transformation systems with human uroepithelial cells provide strong evidence that loss of genes on 3p, which occurs in approximately 20% of bladder cancers, and/or gain of genes on 20q play an important role in blocking HUC cellular senescence. This latter phenotype should represent a critical step in oncogenesis, as cells that do not senesce can survive to accumulate the multiple genetic alterations associated with invasive and metastatic bladder cancers. Further understanding of the biochemical mechanisms underlying these genetic changes will provide the additional information needed to design better strategies for bladder cancer intervention and treatment.
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PMID:A molecular genetic model of human bladder cancer pathogenesis. 889 68

Viral oncoproteins that inactivate the retinoblastoma tumor suppressor protein (pRb) family both block skeletal muscle differentiation and promote cell cycle progression. To clarify the dependence of terminal differentiation on the presence of the different pRb-related proteins, we have studied myogenesis using isogenic primary fibroblasts derived from mouse embryos individually deficient for pRb, p107, or p130. When ectopically expressed in fibroblasts lacking pRb, MyoD induces an aberrant skeletal muscle differentiation program characterized by normal expression of early differentiation markers such as myogenin and p21, but attenuated expression of late differentiation markers such as myosin heavy chain (MHC). Similar defects in MHC expression were not observed in cells lacking either p107 or p130, indicating that the defect is specific to the loss of pRb. In contrast to wild-type, p107-deficient, or p130-deficient differentiated myocytes that are permanently withdrawn from the cell cycle, differentiated myocytes lacking pRb accumulate in S and G2 phases and express extremely high levels of cyclins A and B, cyclin-dependent kinase (Cdk2), and Cdc2, but fail to readily proceed to mitosis. Administration of caffeine, an agent that removes inhibitory phosphorylations on inactive Cdc2/cyclin B complexes, specifically induced mitotic catastrophe in pRb-deficient myocytes, consistent with the observation that the majority of pRb-deficient myocytes arrest in S and G2. Together, these findings indicate that pRb is required for the expression of late skeletal muscle differentiation markers and for the inhibition of DNA synthesis, but that a pRb-independent mechanism restricts entry of differentiated myocytes into mitosis.
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PMID:Skeletal muscle cells lacking the retinoblastoma protein display defects in muscle gene expression and accumulate in S and G2 phases of the cell cycle. 889

Taxol (paclitaxel) induces a microtubule hyperassembled state, and effectively blocks cells in mitosis. Here we report that Taxol also induces a stable late-G1 block in nontransformed REF-52 and WI-38 mammalian fibroblast cells, but not in T antigen-transformed cells of the same parental lineage. G1 arrest is characterized by partially dephosphorylated pRb, and inactive cdk2 kinase. Nontransformed cells recover normally from Taxol arrest. In contrast, T antigen transformed cells continue inappropriately past both G1 and G2-M in the presence of Taxol, and undergo a rapid death upon release. These results demonstrate a microtubule sensitive step in G1 regulation of nontransformed fibroblast cells. Also, Taxol selectively induces death of transformed cells, possibly because they slip the Taxol-dependent G1 arrest, as well as G2/M arrest, which are both specific to nontransformed cells.
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PMID:Differential Taxol-dependent arrest of transformed and nontransformed cells in the G1 phase of the cell cycle, and specific-related mortality of transformed cells. 890 43

Inhibitors of cyclin-dependent kinases provide a major mechanism of negative regulation on cell cycle progression. Defects in the function of the CDK inhibitors may lead to uncontrolled cell proliferation and potentially facilitate tumorigenesis. The p16INK4 family of CDK inhibitors specifically prevent the phosphorylation of the retinoblastoma susceptibility gene product, pRb, by inhibiting the kinase activity of CDK4 and CDK6, thereby keeping pRb in its active form as a growth suppressor. The loss of p16INK4 inhibitory activity would, therefore, have the same consequence as the loss of pRb growth suppressing activity. The p16INK4 family currently includes four members, p15INK4b, pl6INK4a, pl8INK4c and p19INK4d. Two members, p15INK4b and pl6INK4a have been found to be deleted and mutated in a variety of human tumor-derived cell lines and primary tumors. In the present study we have examined the genomic status of the newly isolated p19INK4d gene in 75 tumor-derived cell lines; 13 immortalized, transformed or normal cell lines; 19 ovarian tumors and 18 acute myelogenous leukemias. No deletions or point mutations were observed in the pl9INK4d gene. A genetic polymorphism at codon 30 (CGC-->CGG) in exon 1 of the pl9INK4d gene was observed in 10% of the samples under investigation. In the same set of samples, p16INK4a was found to be homozygously deleted in 32% of the tumor derived cell lines. These results together with our previous data that showed a 22% deletion frequency in p15INK4b and rare alterations in the pl8INK4c gene, indicating that the p16INK4a and pl5INK4b, but not the p18INK4c and pl9INK4d genes, are frequently mutated in human tumors. Hence, members of the p16INK4 CDK inhibitor family, while evolutionary related and biochemically indistinguishable, carry out distinct biological functions.
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PMID:Lack of mutation in the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor, p19INK4d, in tumor-derived cell lines and primary tumors. 893 52

E2F-1 plays a crucial role in the regulation of cell-cycle progression at the G1-S transition. In keeping with the fact that, when overproduced, it is both an oncoprotein and a potent inducer of apoptosis, its transcriptional activity is subject to multiple controls. Among them are binding by the retinoblastoma gene product (pRb), activation by cdk3, and S-phase-dependent down-regulation of DNA-binding capacity by cyclin A-dependent kinase. Here we report that E2F-1 is actively degraded by the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway. Efficient degradation depends on the availability of selected E2F-1 sequences. Unphosphorylated pRb stabilized E2F-1, protecting it from in vivo degradation. pRb-mediated stabilization was not an indirect consequence of G1 arrest, but rather depended on the ability of pRb to interact physically with E2F-1. Thus, in addition to binding E2F-1 and transforming it into a transcriptional repressor, pRb has another function, protection of E2F-1 from efficient degradation during a period when pRb/E2F complex formation is essential to regulating the cell cycle. In addition, there may be a specific mechanism for limiting free E2F-1 levels, failure of which could compromise cell survival and/or homeostasis.
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PMID:The retinoblastoma gene product protects E2F-1 from degradation by the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway. 895 96

Progression through the cell cycle is a complex process that is regulated at many levels by several proteins. We are just beginning to understand how these proteins accomplish this regulation. The p16-cyclin D1.cdk4-pRb pathway is one of the most important pathways, which is altered in a majority of cancers of different types. This review focuses on some of the proteins in this pathway that offer new opportunities for drug discovery. Some guidelines to evaluate the relevance of these proteins as targets for cancer therapy and the importance of developing a combination therapy targeting multiple pathways are also discussed.
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PMID:Targets for cancer therapy in the cell cycle pathway. 897 72

Cyclin E is an important regulator of cell cycle progression that together with cyclin-dependent kinase (cdk) 2 is crucial for the G1/S transition during the mammalian cell cycle. Previously, we showed that severe overexpression of cyclin E protein in tumor cells and tissues results in the appearance of lower molecular weight isoforms of cyclin E, which together with cdk2 can form a kinase complex active throughout the cell cycle. In this study, we report that one of the substrates of this constitutively active cyclin E/cdk2 complex is retinoblastoma susceptibility gene product (pRb) in populations of breast cancer cells and tissues that also overexpress p16. In these tumor cells and tissues, we show that the expression of p16 and pRb is not mutually exclusive. Overexpression of p16 in these cells results in sequestering of cdk4 and cdk6, rendering cyclin D1/cdk complexes inactive. However, pRb appears to be phosphorylated throughout the cell cycle following an initial lag, revealing a time course similar to phosphorylation of glutathione S-transferase retinoblastoma by cyclin E immunoprecipitates prepared from these synchronized cells. Hence, cyclin E kinase complexes can function redundantly and replace the loss of cyclin D-dependent kinase complexes that functionally inactivate pRb. In addition, the constitutively overexpressed cyclin E is also the predominant cyclin found in p107/E2F complexes throughout the tumor, but not the normal, cell cycle. These observations suggest that overexpression of cyclin E in tumor cells, which also overexpress p16, can bypass the cyclin D/cdk4-cdk6/p16/pRb feedback loop, providing yet another mechanism by which tumors can gain a growth advantage.
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PMID:Cyclin E, a redundant cyclin in breast cancer. 898 90


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