Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.21.69 (APC)
16,337 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The purpose of the study was to test whether APC: alpha 1AT complex is a useful clinical marker of the activation of coagulation. The rationale for this is that activated protein C may appear in circulation at an early stage of blood coagulation, when subcoagulant amounts of thrombin are formed. Given the relatively higher half-life of APC: alpha 1AT as compared to that of thrombin:AT-III (TAT) complexes, we hypothesized that APC:alpha 1AT could represent an amplification of the thrombin generated in the first events of coagulation. Using sandwich ELISA's we measured APC: alpha 1AT and TAT complexes as well as complexes of AT-III with its target proteases in normal subjects and in several clinical groups of patients prone to thrombotic episodes, including pregnancy, preeclampsia, hemodialysis, gynecological tumors, diabetes and oral contraceptives. APC: alpha 1AT complex was significantly increased in all clinical groups as compared to normal subjects and showed relatively higher increases than did TAT and ATM complexes in the majority of the groups studied. There was a significant and positive correlation between APC: alpha 1AT and TAT complex levels in the majority of the groups, as well as between TAT and ATM and between APC: alpha 1AT and ATM complex levels. We conclude that APC: alpha 1AT complex can be used as a sensitive marker of prethrombotic states.
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PMID:Activated protein C: alpha 1-antitrypsin (APC: alpha 1 AT) complex as a marker for in vitro diagnosis of prethrombotic states. 152 6

The generation of transgenic mice overexpressing activated forms of oncogenes has greatly advanced our understanding into their roles in mammary tumor initiation, promotion and progression. However, targeted disruption of tumor suppressor genes often results in lethality at stages prior to mammary tumor formation. This obstacle can now be overcome using several approaches including conditional knockouts that delete genes of interest in a spatial and temporal manner. This review summarizes recent studies on tumor suppressor genes, including APC, ATM, BRCA1, BRCA2, PTEN and p53, in knockout mouse models and our understanding of the possible mechanisms underlying mammary tumorigenesis.
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PMID:Knockout mouse models and mammary tumorigenesis. 1156 81

In the present study, we used 22 microsatellite markers flanking to or within 13 known or candidate tumor suppressor genes (TSGs) to detect loss of heterozygosity (LOH) in these chromosomal regions among 41 cases of non-small cell lung cancer, including 28 squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) and 13 adenocarcinoma (ADC). The studied TSGs comprised FHIT, VHL, APC, PRLTS, p16, IFNA, PTEN, p57, ATM, p53, BRCA1, DPC4 and DCC. Our data demonstrated frequent allelic losses of FHIT, p53, IFNA, VHL and p16 in both SCC and ADC. PTEN and ATM showed the least frequency of LOH, while no deletion of BRCA1 was detected in all tumor samples. LOH analysis of PRLTS was extended to 26 cases of ADC, which demonstrated significantly higher frequency of LOH than SCC. Our data indicated a possible correlation between specific TSG(s) and either histological type of lung cancer, and more attention should be paid to the PRLTS gene, which might play an important role in the development of ADC.
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PMID:Deletion of tumor suppressor genes in Chinese non-small cell lung cancer. 1212 91

In eukaryotic cells, control mechanisms of cell-cycle progression have evolved to accurately monitor the integrity of genetic information to be transferred to the progeny. Cdc25A phosphatase is an essential activator of cell-cycle progression and is targeted by checkpoint signals. Ubiquitylation regulates Cdc25A activity through fine tuning of its protein levels. Two different ubiquitin ligases (APC/C and SCF complex) are involved in Cdc25A turnover. While APC/C is involved in regulating Cdc25A at the exit of mitosis, SCF regulates the abundance of Cdc25A in S phase and G2. In response to DNA damage or to stalled replication, the activation of the ATM and ATR protein kinases leads to Chk1 and Chk2 activation and to Cdc25A hyperphosphorylation. These events stimulate SCF-mediated ubiquitylation of Cdc25A and its proteolysis. This contributes to delaying cell-cycle progression, thereby preventing genomic instability. Based on recent findings, we discuss the role of Cdc25A ubiquitylation and degradation in cell-cycle progression and in response to DNA damage. Moreover, we discuss the role of phosphorylation at multiple sites in triggering ubiquitylation signals.
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PMID:Cdc25A phosphatase: combinatorial phosphorylation, ubiquitylation and proteolysis. 1502 92

As many as 5% of human cancers appear to be of hereditable etiology. Of the more than 50 characterized familial cancer syndromes, most involve disease affecting multiple organs and many can be traced to one or more abnormalities in specific genes. Studying these syndromes in humans is a difficult task, especially when it comes to genes that may manifest themselves early in gestation. It has been made somewhat easier with the development of genetically engineered mice (GEM) that phenotypically mimic many of these inheritable human cancers. The past 15 years has seen the establishment of mouse lines heterozygous or homozygous null for genes known or suspected of being involved in human cancer syndromes, including APC, ATM, BLM, BRCA1, BRCA2, LKB1, MEN1, MLH, MSH, NF1, TP53, PTEN, RB1, TSC1, TSC2, VHL, and XPA. These lines not only provide models for clinical disease and pathology, but also provide avenues to investigate molecular pathology, gene-gene and protein-tissue interaction, and, ultimately, therapeutic intervention. Possibly of even greater importance, they provide a means of looking at placental and fetal tissues, where genetic abnormalities are often first detected and where they may be most easily corrected. We will review these mouse models, examine their usefulness in medical research, and furnish sources of animals and references.
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PMID:Mouse models of human familial cancer syndromes. 1520 8

Gene promoter hypermethylation is increasingly recognized to play an important role in cancer development through silencing of gene transcription. This study determined the methylation profiles of primary colorectal cancers and adenomas to elucidate the role of epigenetic changes in different stages of colorectal carcinogenesis. We examined the methylation profiles of 47 sporadic colorectal cancers, 36 colonic adenomas from patients without cancer and 34 colonic biopsies from patients without colonic lesions. Paired adjacent dysplasia tissues obtained from 17 cancer patients were also examined. Promoter hypermethylation in 10 tumor-related genes (APC, ATM, GSTP1, HLTF, MGMT, hMLH1, p14, p15, SOCS-1 and TIMP-3) were studied by methylation-specific PCR. Promoter hypermethylation was frequently detected in more than 40% of colonic cancers and adenomas in APC, ATM, HLTF, MGMT and hMLH1 genes (p < 0.0001 vs. normal). While low level of methylation was detected in p14, p15 and TIMP-3, there was no methylation detected in GSTP1 and SOCS-1. The frequencies of methylation were comparable between tumors and adenomas, and advanced and nonadvanced adenoma. In contrast, K-ras mutation was only detected in advanced adenomas and cancers. Concurrent methylation in >/= 3 genes was found in 66.7% adenomas and 68.1% cancers but not in normal colonic tissues. Methylation was associated with reduced protein expressions in colorectal adenomas and cancers. Moreover, methylation in ATM was more common in older cancer patients (p = 0.002), but there was no significant association between promoter hypermethylation and other clinicopathologic characteristics of cancer. Our study demonstrated the early and specific involvement of promoter hypermethylation in the colorectal adenoma-carcinoma sequence.
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PMID:Promoter hypermethylation of tumor-related genes in the progression of colorectal neoplasia. 1538 72

The DNA replication checkpoint maintains replication fork integrity and prevents chromosome segregation during replication stresses. Mec1 and Rad53 (human ATM/ATR- and Chk2-like kinases, respectively) are critical effectors of this pathway in yeast. When treated with replication inhibitors, checkpoint-deficient mec1 or rad53 mutant fails to maintain replication fork integrity and proceeds to partition unreplicated chromosomes. We show that this unnatural chromosome segregation requires neither the onset of mitosis nor APC activation, cohesin cleavage, or biorientation of kinetochores. Instead, the checkpoint deficiency leads to deregulation of microtubule-associated proteins Cin8 and Stu2, which, in the absence of both chromosome cohesion and bipolar attachment of kinetochores to microtubules, induce untimely spindle elongation, causing premature chromosome separation. The checkpoint's ability to prevent nuclear division is abolished by combined deficiency of microtubule-destabilizing motor Kip3 and Mad2 functions. Thus, the DNA replication checkpoint prevents precocious chromosome segregation, not by inhibiting entry into mitosis as widely believed, but by directly regulating spindle dynamics.
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PMID:DNA replication checkpoint prevents precocious chromosome segregation by regulating spindle behavior. 1557 25

Expression of the anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C) inhibitor Emi1 is required for the accumulation of APC/C substrates crucial for DNA synthesis and mitotic entry. We show that in vivo Emi1 expression correlates with the proliferative status of the cellular compartment and that cells lacking Emi1 undergo cellular senescence. Emi1 depletion leads to strong decreases in E2F target mRNA and APC/C substrate protein abundances. However, cyclin E mRNA and cyclin E protein levels and associated kinase activities are increased. Cells lacking Emi1 undergo DNA damage, likely explained by replication stress upon deregulated cyclin E- and A-associated kinase activities. Inhibition of ATM kinase prevents induction of senescence, implying that senescence is a consequence of DNA damage. Surprisingly, no senescence or no extensive amount of senescence is evident upon depletion of the Emi1-stabilizing factor Evi5 or Pin1, respectively. Our data suggest that maintenance of a protein stabilization/mRNA expression positive-feedback circuit fueled by Emi1 is required for accurate cell cycle progression, maintenance of DNA integrity, and prevention of cellular senescence.
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PMID:Loss of Emi1-dependent anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome inhibition deregulates E2F target expression and elicits DNA damage-induced senescence. 1787 40

The average length of linkage disequilibrium (LD) blocks in European populations is about 22 kb. In this study, we have selected 20 genes with LD blocks larger than 60 kb (with a median length of 88 kb) from a total of 121 cancer-related genes. We observed limited haplotype diversity, with an average of three haplotypes per gene accounting for more than 90% of the diversity, two of these being a Yin-Yang pair in 95% of the LD blocks. The mean frequency of the most common haplotype in the Spanish population was just below 50%, similar to those for the HapMap CEU and African samples, but lower than the 60% observed in Asian samples. Genes involved in the regulation of nucleobases and nucleic acid metabolism were overrepresented among these 20 genes with long LD blocks (eight genes ATM, BRCA1, BRCA2, ERCC6, MLH1, MSH3, RAD54B and XRCC4) relative to the other 101 cancer-related genes studied (P=1.23 x 10(-6)). The ancestral haplotype was observed at a frequency greater than 3 in 67% of the genes either in the Spanish or one of the HapMap sampled populations. When observed, the ancestral haplotype had an average 15% frequency in the Spanish sample, less than half that observed in Asian and African samples. The Spanish Yin-Yang haplotype pair represented over 35% of haplotypes in African samples and over 65% in non-African samples. We detected differences in SNP frequencies between populations for five genes (ALDH2, APC, PIK3CB, RB1 and XRCC4, all with Fst>0.4); however, these genes did not show evidence of positive selection. Finally, we found no evidence that the haplotypes formed by SNPs in the 20 genes are associated with breast cancer.
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PMID:Haplotype patterns in cancer-related genes with long-range linkage disequilibrium: no evidence of association with breast cancer or positive selection. 1800 May 25

In both yeast and mammals, uncapped telomeres activate the DNA damage response (DDR) and undergo end-to-end fusion. Previous work has shown that the Drosophila HOAP protein, encoded by the caravaggio (cav) gene, is required to prevent telomeric fusions. Here we show that HOAP-depleted telomeres activate both the DDR and the spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC). The cell cycle arrest elicited by the DDR was alleviated by mutations in mei-41 (encoding ATR), mus304 (ATRIP), grp (Chk1) and rad50 but not by mutations in tefu (ATM). The SAC was partially overridden by mutations in zw10 (also known as mit(1)15) and bubR1, and also by mutations in mei-41, mus304, rad50, grp and tefu. As expected from SAC activation, the SAC proteins Zw10, Zwilch, BubR1 and Cenp-meta (Cenp-E) accumulated at the kinetochores of cav mutant cells. Notably, BubR1 also accumulated at cav mutant telomeres in a mei-41-, mus304-, rad50-, grp- and tefu-dependent manner. Our results collectively suggest that recruitment of BubR1 by dysfunctional telomeres inhibits Cdc20-APC function, preventing the metaphase-to-anaphase transition.
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PMID:Unprotected Drosophila melanogaster telomeres activate the spindle assembly checkpoint. 1824 67


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