Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:4.1.1.6 (
CAD
)
4,420
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The aim of this study was to investigate the changes in expression pattern of the most important genes connected with apoptosis in proliferative apoptotic lesions (hyperplasia, adenoma), applying cDNA microarray technique, in order to promote the possible diagnostic or therapeutic utilisation of any difference in gene expression compared to the healthy (normal) parathyroid gland. Samples were taken from surgically removed 2 hyperplasias, 2 adenomas and 2 normal parathyroid glands. The Apoptosis Gene Array (Superarray) was used. This contains 112 genes, in tetraspot arrangement. The probes measured 250-600 base pairs. Streptavidin was bound to the array. CDP Star TM chemiluminescent substrate was used for detection. The samples deriving from hyperplasia or adenoma were compared to samples from normal parathyroid glands. The following genes were overexpressed in both hyperplasia and adenoma: CHEK1, ATM, BCL-XL, FAS, TNF,
cIAP1
, TRAIL, FADD, CASP 4,5,6,8, CD120b, CD137, LTA, TANK, TARF2,
CAD
, LIGHTR, DR3LG. CASP1,10, BFAR, BOD, BCL2L2, TRANCE were underexpressed in both hyperplasia and adenoma. Genes overexpressed only in hyperplasia were: MDM2, MCL1, BCL2A1, BLK, RIPK2, CD40LG, TRAF5, HUS1, BNIP3. Underexpressed only in hyperplasia: BOK, CIDEA, TRAF1, TRIP. Overexpressed only in adenoma: APOLLON, RIPK1, LTB, LTBR, CASP2,13, cIAP2, CIDEB. Underexpressed only in adenoma: TRAF4 and FASLG. Overexpresion or underexpression meant 1.5-fold difference from normal average values. As a result of this study, both pro-apoptotic and antiapoptotic genes were identified in hyperplasia and adenoma of the parathyroid gland. It seems that increased proliferation is connected also with increased apoptotic activity, but tumor cell candidates are able to survive, by activation of signal pathways resulting in overexpresion of anti-apoptotic genes.
...
PMID:[Changes in gene expression in the course of proliferative processes in the parathyroid gland]. 1688 77
DNA damaging therapies can spur the formation of therapy-related cancers, due to mis-repair of lesions they create in non-cancerous cells. This risk may be amplified in patients with impaired DNA damage responses. We disabled key DNA damage response pathways using genetic and pharmacological approaches, and assessed the impact of these deficiencies on the mutagenicity of chemotherapy drugs or the "Smac mimetic" GDC-0152, which kills tumor cells by targeting XIAP,
cIAP1
and 2. Doxorubicin and cisplatin provoked mutations in more surviving cells deficient in ATM, p53 or the homologous recombination effector RAD51 than in wild type cells, but suppressing non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) by disabling DNA-PKcs prevented chemotherapy-induced mutagenesis. Vincristine-induced mutagenesis required p53 and DNA-PKcs but was not affected by ATM status, consistent with it provoking ATM-independent p53-mediated activation of caspases and
CAD
, which creates DNA lesions in surviving cells that could be mis-repaired by NHEJ. Encouragingly, GDC-0152 failed to stimulate mutations in cells with proficient or defective DNA damage response pathways. This study highlights the elevated oncogenic risk associated with treating DNA repair-deficient patients with genotoxic anti-cancer therapies, and suggests a potential advantage for Smac mimetic drugs over traditional therapies: a reduced risk of therapy-related cancers.
...
PMID:Mutagenic assessment of chemotherapy and Smac mimetic drugs in cells with defective DNA damage response pathways. 3025 62