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)

Most breast cancers arise from luminal epithelial cells and 25-30% of these tumours overexpress the ErbB-2 receptor. Herein, a non-transformed, immortalized cell system was used to investigate the effects of ErbB-2 overexpression in luminal epithelial cells. The phenotypic consequence of ErbB-2 overexpression is a shortening of the G1 phase of the cell cycle and early S phase entry, which leads to hyperproliferation. We show that this effect was mediated through the up-regulation of cdk6 and cyclins D1 and E, and enhanced degradation and relocalization of p27(Kip1). These changes were effected predominantly through enhanced MAPK signalling, resulting in cdk2 hyperactivation. PI3K signalling also participated in cell cycle progression, since PI3K and MAPK coordinately regulated changes in cyclin D1 and cdk6 expression. Cdk4 activity was not required for cell cycle progression in these cells, and was constitutively inhibited through its association with p16(INK4A). MAPK-dependent induction of p21(Cip1) was also necessary for G1 phase progression, although its degradation by the proteasome was required for S phase entry. These data provide new insights into the complex molecular mechanisms underlying mitogenic cell cycle control in luminal epithelial cells, the cell type relevant to primary breast cancer, and show how ErbB-2 overexpression subverts this normal control.
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PMID:Effects of ErbB-2 overexpression on mitogenic signalling and cell cycle progression in human breast luminal epithelial cells. 1224 55

In this study, we present evidence for the critical role of proteinase-3 (PR3) in the proliferation of myeloid cells via the proteolytic regulation of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21(waf1). Expression of recombinant PR3 in rat (RBL) or human (HMC1) mast cell lines increased bromodeoxyuridine incorporation and CDK2 activity compared with RBL and HMC1 cells transfected with an enzymatically inactive PR3 mutant (PR3(S203A)) or with human neutrophil elastase. Western blot analysis of p21(waf1) showed an absence of detectable protein, despite normal levels of p21 mRNA. Ectopic overexpression of p21 restored normal levels of p21 in the RBL/PR3/p21 double transfectants and reverted the proliferative effect of PR3. Inhibition of the 26 S proteasome by lactacystin or of caspases by benzyloxycarbonyl-Val-Ala-Asp-fluoromethyl ketone did not inhibit p21 proteolysis. p21 cleavage correlated with PR3 expression in HMC1 cells infected with recombinant adenoviral vector Ad/PR3. During in vitro studies, purified p21 was cleaved by PR3, resulting in a 10-kDa p21 fragment. Employing double immunofluorescence confocal microscopy, subcellular fractionation, and co-immunoprecipitation, we found that PR3 and p21 colocalized in the cytosol. In human neutrophils treated with tumor necrosis factor-alpha, which induces PR3 re-expression, we observed that p21 disappeared and was reversed by Pefabloc, a serine proteinase inhibitor. The physiopathological implications of the cleavage of p21 by PR3 have to be determined.
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PMID:Cleavage of p21waf1 by proteinase-3, a myeloid-specific serine protease, potentiates cell proliferation. 1235 76

GATA-2 is considered to be essential for the development, maintenance, and function of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). However, it was also reported that GATA-2 inhibits the growth of HSCs. To examine the role of GATA-2 in the growth of hematopoietic cells, we introduced an estradiol-inducible form of GATA-2 (GATA-2/estrogen receptor [ER]) into interleukin 3 (IL-3)-dependent cell lines, Ba/F3, 32D, and FDC-P1. Estradiol-induced GATA-2 suppressed c-myc mRNA expression and inhibited IL-3-dependent growth in these clones. As for this mechanism, GATA-2 was found to inhibit ubiquitin/proteasome-dependent degradation of p21(WAF1) and p27(Kip1) and to induce their accumulation by repressing the expression of Skp2 and Cul1, both of which are components of the ubiquitin ligase for p21(WAF1) and p27(Kip1). Overexpression of c-myc restored the expression of Skp2 and Cul1 mRNA, reduced the amounts of p21(WAF1) and p27(Kip1) proteins, and canceled GATA-2-induced growth suppression, suggesting that down-regulation of c-myc expression may be primarily responsible for GATA-2-induced growth suppression. Next, we transduced retrovirus containing GATA-2/ER into murine bone marrow mononuclear cells (MNCs) and stem/progenitor (Sca-1(+)Lin(-)) cells. GATA-2/ER suppressed cytokine-dependent growth of MNCs and Sca-1(+)Lin(-) cells by about 70%, which was also accompanied by the reduced expression of c-myc, Skp2, and Cul1 mRNA and the accumulation of p21(WAF1) and p27(Kip1) proteins. In addition, the amount of GATA-2 protein was found to decline in hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells that were promoted to enter cell cycle by the stimulation with cytokines. These results suggest that GATA-2 may regulate expression levels of p21(WAF1) and p27(Kip1), thereby contributing to the quiescence of hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells.
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PMID:GATA-2/estrogen receptor chimera regulates cytokine-dependent growth of hematopoietic cells through accumulation of p21(WAF1) and p27(Kip1) proteins. 1239 44

After hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) treatment, the p21 (p21(Waf1/Cip1)) protein level in GM00637 fibroblast cells was rapidly decreased, reaching its nadir around 3 h. However, it rebounded within 5 hours to a level higher than that before treatment. Fluorescence microscopic analyses revealed that nuclear p21 was downregulated during the initial oxidative stress. H(2)O(2)-induced downregulation of p21 protein was accompanied by a gradual increase in p21 mRNA levels. Other inducers of genotoxic stress, such as treatment with adriamycin, a DNA damage compound, did not cause a significant decrease in p21 protein levels. Pretreatment of GM00637 cells with the proteasome inhibitors, lactacystin or MG132, completely blocked H(2)O(2)-induced p21 downregulation, suggesting that H(2)O(2) treatment accelerated p21 degradation. Conversely, cotreatment of cells with a protein synthesis inhibitor, cycloheximide, and H(2)O(2) drastically shortened the half-life of p21. Moreover, p21 mRNA levels were not downregulated by treatment with proteasome or protein synthesis inhibitors. Taken together, our studies indicate that oxidative stress induces rapid, but reversible, downregulation of functional p21 by accelerating its protein turnover.
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PMID:Proteasome-dependent downregulation of p21(Waf1/Cip1) induced by reactive oxygen species. 1239 17

Mirk/dyrk1B is an arginine-directed protein kinase, which functions as a transcriptional activator and mediates serum-free growth of colon carcinoma cells by an unknown mechanism. We now report that turnover of the cdk inhibitor p27(kip1) and the G(1)-phase cyclin cyclin D1 is enhanced in each of 4 Mirk stable transfectants compared to vector control transfectants and Mirk kinase-inactive mutant transfectants. This enhanced turnover is proteasome-dependent and leads to lower protein levels of both p27(kip1) and cyclin D1. Lower protein levels of the cdk inhibitor p21(cip1) were also observed in the 4 Mirk stable transfectants. Mirk did not alter the activity of a p27(kip1) promoter construct or p27(kip1) mRNA levels by stable expression, indicating that the decrease in p27(kip1) protein levels was due to a posttranscriptional mechanism. These data are consistent with mirk enhancing the expression of some component common to the proteolysis of both p27(kip1) and cyclin D1.
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PMID:Rapid turnover of cell-cycle regulators found in Mirk/dyrk1B transfectants. 1245 49

Ritonavir is an HIV protease inhibitor used in the therapy of HIV infection. Ritonavir has also been shown to inhibit the chymotrypsin-like activity of isolated 20S proteasomes. Here, we demonstrate that ritonavir, like classical proteasome inhibitors, has antitumoral activities. In vitro, ritonavir strongly reduced the rate of proliferation of several tumor cell lines and induced their apoptosis. Nontransformed cell lines and terminally differentiated bone-marrow macrophages were comparatively resistant to the apoptosis-inducing effect. In vivo, ritonavir, administered p.o. for a week at doses of 6-8.8 mg/mouse/day, caused significant growth inhibition (76-79% after 7 days of treatment) of established EL4-T cell thymomas growing s.c. in syngeneic C57BL/6 mice. Unexpectedly, we found that ritonavir activates the chymotrypsin-like activity of isolated 26S proteasomes, in strong contrast to its effect on isolated 20S proteasomes. The net effect of low micromolar concentrations of ritonavir on the chymotrypsin-like activity in cells and cell lysates was a weak inhibition, consistent with marginal alterations of polyubiquitinated proteins, marginal alterations in acid-soluble proteolytic peptide levels, and a small accumulation of the tumor suppressor protein p53, in cells treated with ritonavir. In contrast, we found a relatively strong accumulation of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21(WAF-1), a sign of deregulation of cell-cycle progression typical for apoptosis induction in transformed cells by classical proteasome inhibitors. We demonstrate that p21 accumulation in the presence of ritonavir is attributable to the inhibition of proteolytic degradation. Accumulation of p21 most likely reflects a selective inhibition of proteasomes, in line with the atypical degradation of p21, which does not require ubiquitination. These findings suggest that selective perturbation of proteasomal protein degradation may play a role in the antitumoral activities of ritonavir.
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PMID:Antitumor effect of the human immunodeficiency virus protease inhibitor ritonavir: induction of tumor-cell apoptosis associated with perturbation of proteasomal proteolysis. 1246 Sep 5

p21(WAF1/CIP1) Contributes to positive and negative growth control on multiple levels. We previously mapped phosphorylation sites within the C-terminal domain of p21 that regulate proliferating cell nuclear antigen binding. In the current study, a kinase has been fractionated from mammalian cells that stoichiometrically phosphorylates p21 at the Ser146 site, and the enzyme has been identified as an insulin-responsive atypical protein kinase C (aPKC). Expression of PKCzeta or activation of the endogenous kinase by 3-phosphoinositide dependent protein kinase-1 (PDK1) decreased the half-life of p21. Conversely, dnPKCzeta or dnPDK1 increased p21 protein half-life, and a PDK1-dependent increase in the rate of p21 degradation was mediated by aPKC. Insulin stimulation gave a biphasic response with a rapid transient decrease in p21 protein levels during the initial signalling phase that was dependent on phosphatidylinositol 3- kinase, PKC and proteasome activity. Thus, aPKC provides a physiological signal for the degradation of p21. The rapid degradation of p21 protein during the signalling phase of insulin stimulation identifies a novel link between energy metabolism and a key modulator of cell cycle progression.
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PMID:PDK1-dependent activation of atypical PKC leads to degradation of the p21 tumour modifier protein. 1248 98

Cellular CCAAT/enhancer binding protein alpha (C/EBPalpha) promotes cellular differentiation and has antimitotic activities involving cell cycle arrest at G(1)/S through stabilization of p21(CIP-1)/WAF1 and through transcriptional activation of the p21 promoter. The Epstein-Barr virus lytic-cycle transactivator protein ZTA is known to arrest the host cell cycle at G(1)/S via a p53-independent p21 pathway, but the detailed molecular mechanisms involved have not been defined. To further evaluate the role of ZTA in cell cycle arrest, we constructed a recombinant adenovirus vector expressing ZTA (Ad-ZTA), whose level of expression at a low multiplicity of infection in normal human diploid fibroblast (HF) cells was lower than or equal to the physiological level seen in Akata cells lytically induced by EBV (EBV-Akata cells). Fluorescence-activated cell sorting analysis of HF cells infected with Ad-ZTA confirmed that G(1)/S cell cycle arrest occurred in the majority of ZTA-positive cells, but not with an adenovirus vector expressing green fluorescent protein. Double-label immunofluorescence assays (IFA) performed with Ad-ZTA-infected HF cells revealed that only ZTA-positive cells induced the expression of both endogenous C/EBPalpha and p21 and blocked the progression into S phase, as detected by a lack of incorporation of bromodeoxyuridine. The stimulation of endogenous ZTA protein expression either through treatment with tetradecanoyl phorbol acetate in D98/HR1 cells or through B-cell receptor cross-linking with anti-immunoglobulin G antibody in EBV-Akata cells also coincided with the induction of both C/EBPalpha and p21 and their mRNAs, as assayed by Northern blot, Western blot, and IFA experiments. Mechanistically, the ZTA protein proved to directly interact with C/EBPalpha by coimmunoprecipitation in EBV-Akata cells and with DNA-bound C/EBPalpha in electrophoretic mobility shift assay experiments, and the in vitro interaction domain encompassed the basic leucine zipper domain of ZTA. ZTA also specifically protected C/EBPalpha from degradation in a protein stability assay with a non-EBV-induced Akata cell proteasome extract. Furthermore, both C/EBPalpha and ZTA were found to specifically associate with the C/EBPalpha promoter in chromatin immunoprecipitation assays, but the interaction with ZTA appeared to be mediated by C/EBPalpha because it was abolished by clearing with anti-C/EBPalpha antibody. ZTA did not bind to or activate the C/EBPalpha promoter directly but cooperatively enhanced the positive autoregulation of the C/EBPalpha promoter by cotransfected C/EBPalpha in transient luciferase reporter gene assays with Vero and HeLa cells as well as with DG75 B lymphocytes. Similarly, ZTA alone had little effect on the p21 promoter in transient reporter gene assays, but in the presence of cotransfected C/EBPalpha, ZTA enhanced the level of C/EBPalpha activation. This effect proved to require a previously unrecognized region in the proximal p21 promoter that contains three high-affinity C/EBPalpha binding sites. Finally, in C/EBPalpha-deficient mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEF), Ad-ZTA was unable to induce either p21 or G(1) arrest, whereas it was able to induce both in wild-type MEF. Overall, we conclude that C/EBPalpha is essential for at least one pathway of ZTA-induced G(1) arrest during EBV lytic-cycle DNA replication and that this process involves a physical piggyback interaction between ZTA and C/EBPalpha leading to greatly enhanced C/EBPalpha and p21 levels through both transcriptional and posttranslational mechanisms.
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PMID:CCAAT/enhancer binding protein alpha interacts with ZTA and mediates ZTA-induced p21(CIP-1) accumulation and G(1) cell cycle arrest during the Epstein-Barr virus lytic cycle. 1250 63

Cell cycle withdrawal associated with terminal differentiation is responsible for the incapability of many organs to regenerate after injury. Here, we employed a cell-free system to analyze the molecular mechanisms underlying cell cycle arrest in cardiomyocytes. In this assay, incubation of S phase nuclei mixed with cytoplasmic extract of S phase cells and adult primary cardiomyocytes results in a dramatic reduction of proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) protein levels. This effect was blocked by the proteasome inhibitors MG132 and lactacystin, whereas actinomycin D and cycloheximide had no effect. Immunodepletion and addback experiments revealed that the effect of cardiomyocyte extract on PCNA protein levels is maintained by p21 but not p27. In serum-stimulated cardiomyocytes PCNA expression was reconstituted, whereas the protein level of p21 but not that of p27 was reduced. Cytoplasmic extract of serum-stimulated cardiomyocytes did not influence the PCNA protein level in S phase nuclei. Moreover, the hypertrophic effect of serum stimulation was blocked by ectopic expression of p21 and the PCNA protein level was found to be upregulated in adult cardiomyocytes derived from p21 knockout mice. Our data provide evidence that p21 regulates the PCNA protein level in adult cardiomyocytes, which has implications for cardiomyocyte growth control.
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PMID:p21(CIP1) Controls proliferating cell nuclear antigen level in adult cardiomyocytes. 1250 54

The naturally occurring cyclic tetrapeptide chlamydocin is a very potent inhibitor of cell proliferation. Here we show that chlamydocin is a highly potent histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitor, inhibiting HDAC activity in vitro with an IC(50) of 1.3 nM. Like other HDAC inhibitors, chlamydocin induces the accumulation of hyperacetylated histones H3 and H4 in A2780 ovarian cancer cells, increases the expression of p21(cip1/waf1), and causes an accumulation of cells in G(2)/M phase of the cell cycle. In addition, chlamydocin induces apoptosis by activating caspase-3, which in turn leads to the cleavage of p21(cip1/waf1) into a 15-kDa breakdown product and drives cells from growth arrest into apoptosis. Concomitant with the activation of caspase-3 and cleavage of p21(cip1/waf1), chlamydocin decreases the protein level of survivin, a member of the inhibitor of apoptosis protein family that is selectively expressed in tumors. Although our data indicate a potential link between degradation of survivin and activation of the apoptotic pathway induced by HDAC inhibitors, stable overexpression of survivin does not suppress the activation of caspase-3 or cleavage of p21(cip1/waf1) induced by chlamydocin treatment. The decrease of survivin protein level is mediated by degradation via proteasomes since it can be inhibited by specific proteasome inhibitors. Taken together, our results show that induction of apoptosis by chlamydocin involves caspase-dependent cleavage of p21(cip1/waf1), which is strikingly associated with proteasome-mediated degradation of survivin.
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PMID:Inhibition of histone deacetylases by chlamydocin induces apoptosis and proteasome-mediated degradation of survivin. 1253 46


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