Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.2.1.23 (beta-galactosidase)
14,648 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Esophagitis is a major toxicity of radiation therapy for nonsmall-cell lung cancer. Intraesophageal injection of manganese superoxide dismutase (MnSOD) plasmid/liposome complexes (1 mg of the pRK5-MnSOD plasmid containing the human MnSOD transgene in a 0.15 ml volume of lipofectin) before irradiation was carried out to attempt to prevent irradiation esophagitis. In control noninjected male C3H/HeNsd mice, esophagitis was induced by single fraction 3,500 cGy irradiation. Histopathology at 4 days revealed vacuole formation in squamous lining cells, separation of the squamous layer from the underlying muscle layer, ulceration at 7 days, and dehydration and death by 30 days. MnSOD plasmid/liposome complex-injected mice showed transcription of the human MnSOD transgene message in esophageal squamous lining cells by nested reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) increased MnSOD biochemical activity 24 h after injection, decreased vacuole formation at day 4 (P < 0.001) after 3,500 cGy thoracic irradiation, and improved survival (P = 0.0009). In contrast, groups of mice receiving LacZ (bacterial beta-galactosidase gene) plasmid/liposome complexes or liposomes containing no DNA before 3,500 cGy irradiation showed an unaltered irradiation histopathology and decreased survival. Mice receiving intraesophageal MnSOD plasmid/liposomes followed 8 h later by human equivalent doses of Taxol (1.4 mg/kg) and carboplatin (2.5 mg/kg), then 15 h later 3,300 cGy irradiation, showed increased survival, compared with irradiated control or LacZ plasmid/liposome groups. Thus, overexpression of the human MnSOD transgene in the esophagus can prevent irradiation-induced esophagitis in the mouse model.
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PMID:Prevention of irradiation-induced esophagitis by plasmid/liposome delivery of the human manganese superoxide dismutase transgene. 1049 61

Discodermolide is a microtubule stabilizing agent that suppresses dynamic instability and blocks cells in mitosis. Selection of A549 nonsmall cell lung carcinoma cells with increasing concentrations of discodermolide yielded a clone that proliferated in 8 nM. When these cells were exposed to any concentration greater than 8 nM, replication ceased and the cells developed a flattened, enlarged, granular morphology. Accelerated senescence was demonstrated by a functional beta-galactosidase activity at pH 6. When parental A549 cells were treated with IC50-concentrations of doxorubicin, Taxol or discodermolide, the latter two drugs quickly produced aberrant mitosis. However, discodermolide, but not Taxol, also produced a large increase in senescence-associated beta-galactosidase activity and altered levels of known senescence markers. Although some of these differences between Taxol and discodermolide were dose dependent, only discodermolide produced a doxorubicin-like induction of a senescence phenotype, including a senescence-associated beta-galactosidase activity, up-regulation of PAI-1 and p66Shc, and a strong, sustained, Erk1/2 activation. This research provides insights into the mechanism of action of discodermolide and provides the first demonstration of a microtubule stabilizing agent that inhibits tumor cell growth with a powerful induction of accelerated senescence.
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PMID:The microtubule stabilizing agent discodermolide is a potent inducer of accelerated cell senescence. 1571 Nov 27