Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.25.1 (proteasome)
28,817 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Rituximab (chimeric anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody) is the first Food and Drug Administration approved antitumor antibody and is used in the treatment of B-non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (B-NHL). It is used as single monotherapy or in combination with chemotherapy and has improved the treatment outcome of patients with B-NHL. The in vivo mechanisms of rituximab-mediated antitumor effects include antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC), complement-dependent cell cytotoxicity (CDC), growth-inhibition and apoptosis. A subset of patients does not initially respond to rituximab and several responsive patients develop resistance to further rituximab treatment. The mechanism of rituximab unresponsiveness is not known. Besides the above-postulated mechanisms, rituximab has been shown to trigger the cells via CD-20. Studies performed with B-NHL cell lines as model systems revealed several novel mechanisms of rituximab-mediated effects that are involved in chemo/immunosensitization and the development of resistance to rituximab. Rituximab has been shown to inhibit the p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase, nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB), extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2 (ERK 1/2) and AKT antiapoptotic survival pathways, all of which result in upregulation of phosphatase and tensin homolog deleted on chromosome ten and Raf kinase inhibitor protein and in the downregulation of antiapoptotic gene products (particularly Bcl-2, Bcl-(xL) and Mcl-1), and resulting in chemo/immunosensitization. Further, rituximab treatment inhibits the overexpressed transcription repressor Yin Yang 1 (YY1), which negatively regulates Fas and DR5 expression and its inhibition leads to sensitization to Fas ligand and tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand-induced apoptosis. Rituximab-resistant clones were generated as model to examine the mechanism of in vivo rituximab unresponsiveness. These clones showed reduced expression of CD20 and hyperactivation of the above antiapoptotic signaling pathways and failure of rituximab to trigger the cells leading to inhibition of ADCC, CDC and chemo/immunosensitization. Interference with the hyperactivated pathways with various pharmacological and proteasome inhibitors reversed resistance. Furthermore, the above findings have identified several gene products that can serve as new prognostic/diagnostic biomarkers as well as targets for therapeutic intervention in B-NHL.
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PMID:Rituximab-induced inhibition of antiapoptotic cell survival pathways: implications in chemo/immunoresistance, rituximab unresponsiveness, prognostic and novel therapeutic interventions. 1753 16

Curcumin possesses anti-inflammatory activity and is a potent inhibitor of reactive-oxygen-generating enzymes such as lipoxygenase/cyclooxygenase, xanthine dehydrogenase/oxidase, and inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS); it is an effective inducer of heme oxygenase-1. Curcumin is also a potent inhibitor of protein kinase C (PKC), EGF-receptor tyrosine kinase, and IkappaB kinase. Subsequently, curcumin inhibits the activation of NF-KB and the expressions of oncogenes including c-jun, c-fos, c-myc, NIK, MAPKs, ERK, ELK, PI3K, Akt, CDKs, and iNOS. It is considered that PKC, mTOR, and EGFR tyrosine kinase are the major upstream molecular targest for curcumin intervention, whereas the nuclear oncogenes such as c-jun, c-fos, c-myc, CDKs, FAS, and iNOS might act as downstream molecular targets for curcumin actions. It is proposed that curcumin might suppress tumor promotion through blocking signal transduction pathways in the target cells. The oxidant tumor promoter TPA activates PKC by reacting with zinc thiolates present within the regulatory domain, whereas the oxidized form of cancer chemopreventive agent such as curcumin can inactivate PKC by oxidizing the vicinal thiols present within the catalytic domain. Recent studies indicated that proteasome-mediated degradation of cell proteins play a pivotal role in the regulation of several basic cellular processes, including differentiation, proliferation, cell cycling, and apoptosis. It has been demonstrated that curcumin-induced apoptosis is mediated through the impairment of the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway.
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PMID:Molecular targets of curcumin. 1756 14

The last decade has witnessed the introduction of a large number of novel, molecularly targeted agents into the therapeutic armamentarium against diverse forms of cancer, including leukemia. Such agents include signal transduction, cell cycle, histone deacetylase, Hsp90, proteasome, and Bcl-2 family member inhibitors, among others. While most of these agents have been or are currently being evaluated in adult patients with acute leukemia, experience in childhood leukemia is very limited. Although the use of such targeted agents as potentiators of conventional cytotoxic agent activity represents a logical approach, an emerging body of evidence suggests that neoplastic cells in general, and leukemic cells in particular, are highly susceptible to a therapeutic strategy in which survival signaling and cell cycle regulatory pathways are simultaneously disrupted. In in vitro studies, highly synergistic antileukemic interactions have been reported between CDK and HDAC inhibitors; HDAC and proteasome inhibitors; Bcl-2 antagonists and CDK inhibitors; MEK/ERK and Chk1 inhibitors, and proteasome and CDK inhibitors, among other combinations. Some of these strategies, including combinations of HDAC and CDK inhibitors, and CDK and proteasome inhibitors, have now entered the clinical arena in patients with leukemia and other hematologic malignancies. Based upon preclinical results to date, there is reason to suspect that such strategies might prove to be active against several types of childhood leukemia. Thus, over the next decade, the introduction of molecularly targeted agents, alone and in combination, into the therapeutic armamentarium against childhood leukemia may have significant implications for children with this disease.
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PMID:Simultaneous interruption of signal transduction and cell cycle regulatory pathways: implications for new approaches to the treatment of childhood leukemias. 1758 30

Tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) is a central mediator of inflammation. TNF-alpha expression is regulated by transcriptional and post-transcriptional mechanisms, including mRNA stability and translation. Post-transcriptional control operates through cis-elements in the 3' Untranslated-Region of the TNF-alpha mRNA to which trans-acting proteins bind. One of the best characterized trans-acting proteins is Tristetraprolin (TTP), which regulates TNF-alpha message stability. However, the precise mechanisms controlling TNF-alpha message stability are unclear, with data supporting a role for the proteasome, the exosome, and the RNA processing-body (P-body), as well as the involvement of the microRNAs. We examined the effect of proteasome inhibition on endogenous TNF-alpha mRNA stability, TNF-alpha 3'UTR reporter expression and TTP function in the RAW264.7 cells. These data establish that proteasome inhibition stabilized endogenous TNF-alpha mRNA, increased TTP protein levels but inhibited TTP mediated TNF-alpha mRNA decay. Importantly, proteasome inhibition stabilized the TNF-alpha message to the same degree as LPS stimulation. To further characterize the control of TTP function, we examined the combinatorial effect of p38, ERK and JNK activation on TNF-alpha post-transcriptional expression and TTP function. These data establish that TTP mediated TNF-alpha mRNA decay is inhibited by the combined activation of ERK and p38 and not by p38 activation alone. The combined activation of ERK/p38 was sufficient to stabilize endogenous TNF-alpha mRNA to the same degree as LPS stimulation. Together these data indicate that the proteasome is a critical control point for TTP mediated TNF-alpha mRNA decay and activation of both ERK and p38 is required to inhibit TTP function and stabilize TNF-alpha mRNA.
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PMID:Tristetraprolin regulates TNF TNF-alpha mRNA stability via a proteasome dependent mechanism involving the combined action of the ERK and p38 pathways. 1760 94

T(4) activation into T(3) is catalyzed by type 2 deiodinase (D2) in the brain. The rapid induction of D2 in astrocytes by transient brain ischemia has prompted us to explore the effects of hypoxia on D2 in cultures of astrocytes. Hypoxia (2.5% O(2)) of cultured astrocytes increased D2 activity, alone or in association with agents stimulating the cAMP pathway. Hypoxia had no effect on D2 mRNA accumulation. Cycloheximide did not block the effect of hypoxia on D2 activity and D2 half-life was enhanced under hypoxia demonstrating a posttranslational action of hypoxia. Furthermore, the D2 activity increase by hypoxia was not additive with the increase promoted by the proteasome inhibitor carbobenzoxy-L-leucyl-L-leucyl-L-leucinal (MG132). This strongly suggests that hypoxia leads to stabilization of D2 by slowing its degradation by the proteasome pathway. Hypoxia, in contrast to MG132, did not block the T(4)-induced D2 inactivation. A contribution of prolyl hydroxylase to the hypoxia effects on D2 was also suggested on the basis of increased D2 activity after addition of different prolyl hydroxylase inhibitors (cobalt chloride, desferrioxamine, dimethyloxalylglycine, dimethylsuccinate). Specific inhibitors of ERK, p38 MAPK, or phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase pathways were without any effect on hypoxia-increased D2 activity, eliminating their role in the effects of hypoxia. Interestingly, diphenyleneiodonium, an inhibitor of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate oxidase inhibited the hypoxia-increased D2 indicating a role for some reactive oxygen species in the mechanism of D2 increase. Further studies are required to clarify the precise molecular mechanisms involved in the D2 stabilization by hypoxia.
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PMID:Hypoxia stabilizes type 2 deiodinase activity in rat astrocytes. 1761 50

In Parkinson's and other neurodegenerative diseases, a therapeutic strategy has been proposed to halt progressive cell death. Propargylamine derivatives, rasagiline and (-)deprenyl (selegiline), have been confirmed to protect neurons against cell death induced by various insults in cellular and animal models of neurodegenerative disorders. In this paper, the mechanism and the markers of the neuroprotection are reviewed. Propargylamines prevent the mitochondrial permeabilization, membrane potential decline, cytochrome c release, caspase activation and nuclear translocation of glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase. At the same time, rasagiline induces anti-apoptotic pro-survival proteins, Bcl-2 and glial cell-line derived neurotrophic factor, which is mediated by activated ERK-NF-kappaB signal pathway. DNA array studies indicate that rasagiline increases the expression of the genes coding mitochondrial energy synthesis, inhibitors of apoptosis, transcription factors, kinases and ubiquitin-proteasome system, sequentially in a time-dependent way. Products of cell survival-related gene induced by propargylamines may be applied as markers of neuroprotection in clinical samples.
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PMID:Neuroprotection by propargylamines in Parkinson's disease: intracellular mechanism underlying the anti-apoptotic function and search for clinical markers. 1798 85

Determining the underlying mechanisms of macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF)-mediated osteoclast survival may be important in identifying novel approaches for treating excessive bone loss. This study investigates M-CSF-mediated MEK/ERK activation and identifies a downstream effector of this pathway. M-CSF activates MEK/ERK and induces MEK-dependent expression of the immediate early gene Egr2. Inhibition of either MEK1/2 or inhibition of Egr2 increases osteoclast apoptosis. In contrast, wild-type Egr2 or an Egr2 point mutant unable to bind the endogenous repressors Nab1/2 (caEgr2) suppresses basal osteoclast apoptosis and rescues osteoclasts from apoptosis induced by MEK1/2 or Egr2 inhibition. Mechanistically, Egr2 induces pro-survival Blc2 family member Mcl1 while stimulating proteasome-mediated degradation of pro-apoptotic Bim. In addition, Egr2 increased the expression of c-Cbl, the E3 ubiquitin ligase that catalyzes Bim ubiquitination. M-CSF, therefore, promotes osteoclast survival through MEK/ERK-dependent induction of Egr2 to control the Mcl1/Bim ratio, documenting a novel function of Egr2 in promoting survival.
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PMID:Novel pro-survival functions of the Kruppel-like transcription factor Egr2 in promotion of macrophage colony-stimulating factor-mediated osteoclast survival downstream of the MEK/ERK pathway. 1819 76

The RAS-ERK pathway is known to play a pivotal role in differentiation, proliferation and tumour progression. Here, we show that Erk downregulates Forkhead box O 3a (FOXO3a) by directly interacting with and phosphorylating FOXO3a at Ser 294, Ser 344 and Ser 425, which consequently promotes cell proliferation and tumorigenesis. The ERK-phosphorylated FOXO3a degrades via an MDM2-mediated ubiquitin-proteasome pathway. However, the non-phosphorylated FOXO3a mutant is resistant to the interaction and degradation by murine double minute 2 (MDM2), thereby resulting in a strong inhibition of cell proliferation and tumorigenicity. Taken together, our study elucidates a novel pathway in cell growth and tumorigenesis through negative regulation of FOXO3a by RAS-ERK and MDM2.
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PMID:ERK promotes tumorigenesis by inhibiting FOXO3a via MDM2-mediated degradation. 1824 39

Calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) regulates numerous physiological functions. Inhibition of CaMKII activity, mostly by synthetic reagents, has been proved to suppress cell growth in many cases. So far there are no reports about the physiological functions and underlying mechanisms of endogenous CaMKII inhibitory proteins in cell cycle progression. Here we report the characterization of a novel human endogenous CaMKII inhibitor, human CaMKII inhibitory protein alpha (hCaMKIINalpha), which directly interacts with activated CaMKII and effectively inhibits CaMKII activity. hCaMKIINalpha expression is negatively correlated with the severity of human colon adenocarcinoma. Overexpression of hCaMKIINalpha inhibits colon adenocarcinoma growth in vitro and in vivo by arresting the cell cycle at the S phase through its conserved inhibitory region (27CIR), whereas silencing the hCaMKIINalpha expression accelerates tumor growth and cell cycle progression. We found that the effect of hCaMKIINalpha on cell cycle is correlated with up-regulation of p27 expression, which may be due to the inhibition of proteasome degradation, but not transcriptional regulation, of p27. Moreover, hCaMKIINalpha deactivated MEK/ERK, which is prerequisite to the inhibition of Thr-187 phosphorylation and subsequent proteasomal degradation of p27, causing the inhibition of S-phase progression of cell cycle. The findings underscore a link between hCaMKIINalpha-mediated inhibition of CaMKII activity and p27-dependent pathways in controlling tumor cell growth and cell cycle and imply a potential application of hCaMKIINalpha in the therapeutics of colon cancers.
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PMID:A novel endogenous human CaMKII inhibitory protein suppresses tumor growth by inducing cell cycle arrest via p27 stabilization. 3259 54

The nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB) path-way has been implicated in tumor B-cell survival, growth, and resistance to therapy. Because tumor cells overcome single-agent antitumor activity, we hypothesized that combination of agents that target differentially NF-kappaB pathway will induce significant cytotoxicity. Therapeutic agents that target proteasome and Akt pathways should induce significant activity in B-cell malignancies as both pathways impact NF-kappaB activity. We demonstrated that perifosine and bortezomib both targeted NF-kappaB through its recruitment to the promoter of its target gene IkappaB using chromatin immunoprecipitation assay. This combination led to synergistic cytotoxicity in Waldenstrom macroglobulinemia (WM) cells that was mediated through a combined reduction of the PI3K/Akt and ERK signaling pathways, found to be critical for survival of WM cells. Moreover, a combination of these drugs with the CD20 monoclonal antibody rituximab further increased their cytotoxic activity. Thus, effective WM therapy may require combination regimens targeting the NF-kappaB pathway.
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PMID:Targeting NF-kappaB in Waldenstrom macroglobulinemia. 1833 73


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