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Query: EC:2.7.11.22 (
cdc2
)
8,319
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Immunohistochemistry was used to analyze samples of 40 newly diagnosed childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemias (ALL) for their expression of cyclins (D1, E, A), cyclin-dependent kinases (
cdk2
,
cdk4
) and tumor-suppressor genes (pRb,
p16INK4A
), in order to discover whether or not the expression of these various proteins may be of prognostic relevance for the survival of children with ALL. Patients with ALL who were strongly positive for cyclin D1 had a lower probability of remaining in first continuous remission than ALL patients who were negative or weakly positive for this trait. There was also a significant correlation between expression of cyclin D1 and frequency of recurrence. For cyclin E and cyclin A, in contrast, there was no difference in the duration of relapse-free-intervals or the frequency of recurrence in patients. Children with
cdk4
-positive ALL had a lower probability of remaining in first continuous remission than children with
cdk4
-negative ALL. No prognostic relevance was found for
cdk2
. Patients with ALL who expressed pRb had a higher probability and patients who expressed p16 a lower probability of remaining in first continuous remission, but the results were not statistically significant. This investigation demonstrated that cyclin D1 and
cdk4
were the most important prognostic factors for children with ALL, and that the combination of them showed the strongest prognostic relevance.
...
PMID:Prognostic implications of cyclins (D1, E, A), cyclin-dependent kinases (CDK2, CDK4) and tumor-suppressor genes (pRB, p16INK4A) in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia. 935 72
In situ hybridization of mouse embryo sections demonstrated expression of mRNAs encoding two polypeptide inhibitors (p18INK4c and p19INK4d) of
cyclin D-dependent kinase
(
CDK
) 4 and CDK6 in the central nervous system. No expression of two other INK4 members,
p16INK4a
and p15INK4b, was observed. The p19INK4d and p18INK4c proteins formed complexes with either CDK4 or CDK6 in a temporal pattern consistent with the results of in situ hybridization. Expression of INK4c was observed at embryonic day 13.5 in neuroepithelial zones of the developing brain, being restricted to dividing neuroblasts but absent from differentiating postmitotic neurons. In the neocortex, p18INK4c was expressed precisely at those developmental stages when neuroblasts switch from a symmetric to an asymmetric pattern of cell division with concomitant increases in their G1 interval. INK4d RNA was detected from embryonic day 11.5 onward, at higher levels than INK4c and with a distinctly different spatial and temporal pattern. Marked INK4d expression was seen in dorsal root ganglia, spinal cord, and focally throughout the brain, but primarily in postmitotic neurons. Neural expression of INK4d continued postnatally into adulthood in postmitotic cells of the dentate gyrus, the pyramidal layer of the hippocampus, and in discrete regions of the cerebral cortex, cerebellum, thalamus, and brainstem. Downregulation of p19INK4d in the dentate gyrus after kainic acid-induced seizures indicated that its expression could also be modified in nondividing cells by excitotoxic stress. Therefore, p19INK4d may contribute to maintaining the quiescent state, acting as a buffer to prevent reactivation of cyclin D-dependent kinases in terminally differentiated cells.
...
PMID:Expression of INK4 inhibitors of cyclin D-dependent kinases during mouse brain development. 937 37
Members of the INK4 protein family specifically inhibit cyclin-dependent kinase 4 (cdk4) and
cdk6
-mediated phosphorylation of the retinoblastoma susceptibility gene product (Rb).
p16INK4A
, a prototypic INK4 protein, has been identified as a tumor suppressor in many human cancers. Inactivation of
p16INK4A
in tumors expressing wild-type Rb is thought to be required in order for many malignant cell types to enter S phase efficiently or to escape senescence. Here, we demonstrate another mechanism of tumor suppression by implicating
p16INK4A
in a G1 arrest checkpoint in response to DNA damage. Calu-1 non-small cell lung cancer cells, which retain Rb and lack p53, do not arrest in G1 following DNA damage. However, engineered expression of
p16INK4A
at levels compatible with cell proliferation restores a G1 arrest checkpoint in response to treatment with gamma-irradiation, topoisomerase I and II inhibitors, and cisplatin. A similar checkpoint can be demonstrated in p53-/- fibroblasts that express
p16INK4A
. DNA damage-induced G1 arrest, which requires the expression of pocket proteins such as Rb, can be abrogated by overexpression of cdk4, kinase-inactive cdk4 variants capable of sequestering
p16INK4A
, or a cdk4 variant incapable of binding
p16INK4A
. After exposure to DNA-damaging agents, there was no change either in overall levels of
p16INK4A
or in amounts of
p16INK4A
found in complex with cdks 4 and 6. Nonetheless,
p16INK4A
expression is required for the reduction in cdk4- and
cdk6
-mediated Rb kinase activity observed in response to DNA damage. During tumor progression, loss of
p16INK4A
expression may be necessary for cells with wild-type Rb to bypass this G1 arrest checkpoint and attain a fully transformed phenotype.
...
PMID:p16INK4A participates in a G1 arrest checkpoint in response to DNA damage. 941 85
The aim of this study was to demonstrate that the induction of growth arrest in human glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) cell lines by retrovirus-mediated transduction of growth control genes was dependent upon the integrity of specific endogenous control pathways. We assessed the status of the endogenous
p16INK4A
, p21CIP1, pRb, or p53 genes in eight GBM lines. As expected, we found varied combinations of gene defects. The outcome of transducing five of these cell lines with
p16INK4A
, p21CIP1, pRb, or p53 genes was not entirely predictable. The growth-inhibitory effects mediated by the transfer of the gene encoding p16 was dependent on the presence of the pRb protein, but was independent of p53 status. p21, a broadly active
CDK
inhibitor and a strong inducer of growth arrest, was not a universal growth suppressor in the group of glioblastoma cell lines analyzed. The suppression of GBM cell proliferation by viruses encoding pRb or p53 was generally predictable and appeared to be independent of the status of either p16 or p21. Suppression of cell growth was assessed by a colony formation assay, by observance of alterations in morphology, and by cell viability staining for trypan blue exclusion. Our findings suggest that to accomplish the suppression of GBM cell proliferation by the transduction of these cell-cycle control genes, the status of endogenous cell-cycle control genes must be taken into account.
...
PMID:Restoration of growth arrest by p16INK4, p21WAF1, pRB, and p53 is dependent on the integrity of the endogenous cell-cycle control pathways in human glioblastoma cell lines. 945 56
Deletion of antigen-activated T cells after an immune response and during peripheral negative selection after strong T cell receptor (TCR) engagement of cycling T cells occurs by an apoptotic process termed TCR antigen-induced cell death (AID). By analyzing the timing of death, cell cycle markers, BrdU-labeled S phase cells, and phase-specific centrifugally elutriated cultures from stimulated Jurkat T cells and peripheral blood lymphocytes, we found that AID occurs from a late G1 check point prior to activation of cyclin E:
Cdk2
complexes. T cells stimulated to undergo AID can be rescued by effecting an early G1 block by direct transduction of
p16INK4a
tumor suppressor protein or by inactivation of the retinoblastoma tumor suppressor protein (pRb) by transduced HPV E7 protein. These results suggest that AID occurs from a late G1 death check point in a pRb-dependent fashion.
...
PMID:TCR antigen-induced cell death occurs from a late G1 phase cell cycle check point. 946 11
Chromosome 9p21 is frequently deleted in malignant melanoma, and one familial malignant melanoma gene has been linked to 9p21-22. Recently, the
cyclin D-dependent kinase
inhibitors (CDKIs)
p16INK4a
and p15INK4b have been localized within chromosome 9p21, and the presence of
p16INK4a
point mutations has been demonstrated in familial melanoma and melanoma cell lines in vitro. To analyse the role of these CDKIs in sporadic human cutaneous non-metastatic malignant melanoma, we examined 36 primary tumour specimens representing different stages of melanoma progression and their corresponding normal skin samples for the three mechanisms of CDKI inactivation described so far. Homozygous codeletion of the
p16INK4a
and the p15INK4b gene was detected by Southern blot analysis in two tumour samples. By direct sequencing of polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-amplified microdissected genomic DNA; no somatic or germline
p16INK4a
point mutations or small deletions were detected in the remaining 34 tumour samples; one individual exhibited the previously described germline codon 148 (Ala-->Thr) polymorphism. In these tumour specimens, comparative semiquantitative reverse PCR analysis of
p16INK4a
transcript levels revealed no evidence for repression of
p16INK4a
gene transcription and thus for
p16INK4a
promoter inactivation by DNA methylation. These results indicate homozygous
p16INK4a
and p15INK4b loss to occur in a subset of cutaneous melanomas and suggest, in view of the frequent loss of heterozygosity on chromosome 9p21, the presence of another tumour suppressor gene within this chromosomal region.
...
PMID:Homozygous deletion of the p16INK4a and the p15INK4b tumour suppressor genes in a subset of human sporadic cutaneous malignant melanoma. 953 18
During the three last years, the so-called p16 locus on human chromosome band 9p21 has been increasingly implicated in different cancers by a variety of alterations abolishing both copies of the
p16INK4a
/MTS1/CDKN2 gene and the adjacent p15INK4b gene, two members of a family of specific inhibitors of the cyclin D 1-3-CDK4/6 complexes that control cell cycle progression of the G1 to S phase. While these properties are characteristic of tumor suppressor genes, abundant experimental data have clearly identified a link between the loss of function of
p16INK4a
and tumorigenic processes. The role of p15INK4b alterations in the onset of natural and experimental tumors is less obvious. New light may be shed on the role of the p16 locus in tumor development by the recent finding that an alternative transcript from the
p16INK4a
gene encodes p19ARF, a negative regulator of cell cycle progression which is unrelated to p16 and p15 and does not act by binding any
CDK
. Hence, this protein appears to be an element of a novel negative cell cycle control mechanism, whose impairing might be involved in tumorigenesis.
...
PMID:Contribution of the dual coding capacity of the p16INK4a/MTS1/CDKN2 locus to human malignancies. 955 10
To explore the regulation and function of D-type cyclins in breast cancer cells, the mouse mammary hyperplastic epithelial cell line TM2H was treated with 5 mM hexamethylenebisacetamide (HMBA), a polar differentiation factor. The resulting growth-inhibitory effect of HMBA was completely reversible and was analyzed in terms of percent cells in G1; association of D-type cyclins with cyclin-dependent kinase (cdk) 4 and
cdk6
; G1 kinase activity; association of retinoblastoma protein (pRb) and phosphorylated pRb with D-type cyclins; and association of
p16INK4a
, p15INK4b, and p27Kip1 with
cdk4
and
cdk6
. Synchronized TM2H cells were examined at 0, 3, 5, 9, 12, and 24 h after exposure to 5 mM HMBA. Inhibition of DNA synthesis, as measured by thymidine uptake, was first observed at 5 h (40%) and peaked at 24 h (80%). Flow cytometry at 9 h showed treated cells to be in G1 arrest. Western blot analysis showed weakly detectable cyclin D1 but readily detectable cyclin D2 and D3 proteins at 0 h; thereafter, cyclin D2 and D3 protein levels remained higher while cyclin D1 levels declined significantly in treated versus untreated cells. By 5 h (early G1), HMBA had markedly inhibited
cdk4
and
cdk6
kinase activity (67% and 75%, respectively) in treated versus untreated cells. By 9 and 12 h, pRb levels had increased 3.4-fold in treated versus untreated cells. At 5 h, cyclin D-associated pRb was totally hypophosphorylated in treated cells and hyperphosphorylated in untreated cells. The levels of pRb associated with cyclin D2 and D3 increased 2.89-fold and 4.6-fold, respectively, in treated versus untreated cells. At 5 h, treated cells showed a fivefold increase in
cdk4
-associated p27Kip1 and, at 9 h, a fourfold increase in
cdk6
-associated p27Kip1 over control levels. In confirmation of these data, HMBA was found to inhibit the growth of Rb-positive Du/145Rb cells but not their Rb-negative parental Du/145 cells. The data suggest that HMBA-induced growth inhibition is due to multifactorial mechanisms involving decreases in total cyclin D1 and inhibition of
cdk4
and
cdk6
kinase activities through elevation of levels of
cdk4
- and
cdk6
-associated p27Kip1 and concomitant increases in hypophosphorylated pRb and stable cyclin D2/pRb and cyclin D3/pRb complexes that help maintain pRb in a functional state.
...
PMID:Interaction of retinoblastoma protein and D cyclins during cell-growth inhibition by hexamethylenebisacetamide in TM2H mouse epithelial cells. 965 57
Cyclin D1 dysregulation and differential inactivation of
p16INK4a
and Rb have been observed in human lung cancer. In chemically induced mouse lung tumors, the
p16INK4a
gene is a target of inactivation, and Rb is reduced at the mRNA level (Northern blot) although similar at the protein level (Western blot) when compared to normal lung tissues. The expression of cyclin D1,
cdk4
,
p16INK4a
, and Rb protein was examined by immunohistochemistry in 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone (NNK)-induced mouse lung tumors. Immunohistochemical staining revealed exclusive nuclear staining of both cyclin D1 and
cdk4
that was light to moderate in normal mouse lung tissues, but intense in lung adenomas and adenocarcinomas. Western blot analysis confirmed the increased expression of cyclin D1 and
cdk4
in lung tumors compared to normal lung. Immunohistochemical analyses of lung tumors showed focal areas which lacked
p16INK4a
staining. Expression of
p16INK4a
, as determined by RT-PCR, was variable in lung tumors. Mutations in
p16INK4a
were not found by SSCP analysis. Immunohistochemical analyses of normal lung tissues showed intense staining for Rb protein in alveolar epithelial cells and in other lung cell types; however, in the lung tumors the staining intensity was reduced and the distribution was altered. Expression of Rb was detected in normal lung tissues but was barely detectable by Northern blot hybridization in lung tumors. Western blot analysis indicated the presence of both hypophosphorylated and hyperphosphorylated Rb protein in lung tumors and in normal lung tissues. These results suggest that alterations in the cell cycle proteins, cyclin D1,
cdk4
,
p16INK4a
, and Rb, may play a role in the acquisition of autonomous growth by adenomas. Furthermore, they demonstrate the importance of immunohistochemical studies to examine expression in tissues that contain multiple cell types, such as the lung, and in tumors that by nature are heterogeneous.
...
PMID:Expression of cell cycle proteins in 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone-induced mouse lung tumors. 965 80
The solution structure of the tumor suppressor
p16INK4A
has been determined by NMR, and important recognition regions of both
cdk4
and
p16INK4A
have been identified. The tertiary structure of
p16INK4A
contains four helix-turn-helix motifs linked by three loops. Twelve tumorigenic mutants of
p16INK4A
have been constructed and analyzed for their structure and activity, and new mutants have been designed rationally. A fragment of 58 residues at the N terminus of
cdk4
important for
p16INK4A
binding has been identified. The importance of this region was further verified by mutational analysis of
cdk4
. These results and docking experiments have been used to assess possible modes of binding between
p16INK4A
and
cdk4
.
...
PMID:Tumor suppressor p16INK4A: determination of solution structure and analyses of its interaction with cyclin-dependent kinase 4. 966 Sep 26
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