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Query: EC:5.99.1.2 (
topoisomerase
)
9,166
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The Fas/
Fas ligand
(
FasL
) pathway is widely involved in apoptotic cell death in lymphoid and nonlymphoid cells. It has recently been postulated that many chemotherapeutic agents also induce cell death by activating the Fas/
FasL
pathway. In the present study we compared apoptotic pathways induced by anti-Fas or chemotherapeutic agents in the Jurkat human T-cell leukemia line. Immunoblotting showed that treatment of wild-type Jurkat cells with anti-Fas or the
topoisomerase
II-directed agent etoposide resulted in proteolytic cleavage of precursors for the cysteine-dependent aspartate-directed proteases caspase-3 and caspase-7 and degradation of the caspase substrates poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) and lamin B1. Likewise, affinity labeling with N-(N(alpha)-benzyloxycarbonylglutamyl-N(epsilon)-biotinyllysyl+ ++)aspartic acid [(2,6-dimethyl-benzoyl)oxy]methyl ketone [Z-EK(bio)D-amok] labeled the same five active caspase species after each treatment, suggesting that the same downstream apoptotic pathways have been activated by anti-Fas and etoposide. Treatment with ZB4, an antibody that inhibits Fas-mediated cell death, failed to block etoposide-induced apoptosis, raising the possibility that etoposide does not initiate apoptosis through Fas/
FasL
interactions. To further explore the relationship between Fas- and chemotherapy-induced apoptosis, Fas-resistant Jurkat cells were treated with various chemotherapeutic agents. Multiple independently derived Fas-resistant Jurkat lines underwent apoptosis that was indistinguishable from that of the Fas-sensitive parental cells after treatment with etoposide, doxorubicin, topotecan, cisplatin, methotrexate, staurosporine, or gamma-irradiation. These results indicate that antineoplastic treatments induce apoptosis through a Fas-independent pathway even though Fas- and chemotherapy-induced pathways converge on common downstream apoptotic effector molecules.
...
PMID:Comparison of apoptosis in wild-type and Fas-resistant cells: chemotherapy-induced apoptosis is not dependent on Fas/Fas ligand interactions. 924 21
Many anticancer agents exert their cytotoxicity through DNA damage and induction of apoptosis.
Fas ligand
(
FasL
), a key component of T lymphocytes, has been shown to be induced by some of those agents. To address what is an early signal for this induction, we constructed a
FasL
promoter-luciferase reporter gene to investigate effects of
DNA topoisomerase
(Topo) II inhibitors on
FasL
promoter activity. Transient transfection assays in HeLa and other tumor cell lines demonstrated that induction of
FasL
promoter activity in response to Topo II inhibitors such as VM-26 mimicked endogenous
FasL
expression under the same conditions. The ability of these agents to induce
FasL
expression correlated with their ability to cause DNA damage. For instance, complex-stabilizing Topo II inhibitors such as etoposide, teniposide, and doxorubicin, which cause DNA damage, strongly induce
FasL
expression; by contrast, non-DNA-damaging catalytic Topo II inhibitors such as ICRF-187 and merbarone do not do this. In support of the notion that DNA damage triggers
FasL
induction, we found that DNA-damaging irradiation also induced
FasL
promoter activity in a dose-dependent manner. Finally, the catalytic Topo II inhibitor ICRF-187 suppressed VM-26-induced-
FasL
expression. This suppression correlated with the ability of this drug to inhibit VM-26-induced DNA strand breaks. Together, our results suggest that DNA damage in response to agents such as etoposide and teniposide might serve as an early signal to induce
FasL
expression.
...
PMID:DNA damage signals induction of fas ligand in tumor cells. 992 11
The main objective of this study to analyze which of 31 cellular factors (resistance proteins, proliferative factors, apoptotic factors, angiogenic factors, proto-oncogenes) most accurately predict the resistance of non-small cell lung carcinomas. To this purpose, we used a short-term in vitro test that measures changes in the rate at which radioactive nucleic acid precursors are incorporated into tumor cells after the addition of doxorubicin to determine the response to doxorubicin in 94 non-small cell lung carcinomas. The results obtained by the short-term test were related to the various cellular factors which were in turn determined by immunohistochemistry and flow cytometry. A significant correlation was found between the data obtained by the short-term test and the expression of P-glycoprotein 170 (P = 0.00004), glutathione-S-transferase-pi (P = 0.0002), metallothionein (P = 0.0008), thymidylate synthase (P = 0.002), O6-methylguanine-DNA-methyltransferase (P = 0.008) and lung resistance-related protein (LRP, P = 0.03). There was only a weak correlation between heat shock proteins (HSP70) and no correlation between the expression of
topoisomerase
II or catalase and the short-term test results. To measure the proliferative activity, the following were determined: PCNA, cyclin A, cyclin D and cdk2. Only a weak relationship was found between the expression of cdk2 (P = 0.04) and PCNA (P = 0.05) and the doxorubicin response in vitro. Of the investigated pro-apoptotic factors (Fas/CD95,
Fas ligand
, caspase-3), only Fas/CD95 is significantly associated with the drug response (P = 0.007). The apoptotic index also reveals a significant correlation (P = 0.03). Angiogenesis, as measured by the microvessel density and the angiogenic factors, is inversely correlated to the resistance of non-small cell lung cancer. Platelet-derived endothelial cell growth factor (PD-ECGF) and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) exhibit a significant relationship to the drug resistance (P = 0.0006 and P = 0.004, respectively). Of the investigated proto-oncogenes (Fos, Jun, ErbB-1, ErbB-2, Myc, Ras), only ErbB-2 is weakly associated with the in vitro short term test. In order to determine whether combining factors can result in improved predictive information, combinations of the factors (pairs, triplets) were analyzed. The systematic investigation of these combinations yields an improvement in the predictive information. With one factor up to 76.6% of the tumors, with two factors up to 85.4% and with three factors up to 89.5% of the tumors could be correctly diagnosed.
...
PMID:Cellular predictive factors for the drug response of lung cancer. 1113 47
The cytokine hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor (HGF/SF) has been found to protect a variety of epithelial and cancer cell types against cytotoxicity and apoptosis induced by DNA damage, but the specific apoptotic signaling events and the levels at which they are blocked by HGF/SF have not been identified. We found that treatment of MDA-MB-453 human breast cancer cells with adriamycin (also known as doxorubicin, a
DNA topoisomerase
IIalpha inhibitor) induced a series of time-dependent events, including the mitochondrial release of cytochrome c and apoptosis-inducing factor, mitochondrial membrane depolarization, activation of a set of caspases (caspase-9, -3, -7, -2, and -8), cleavage of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP), and up-regulation of expression of the
Fas ligand
. All of these events were blocked by preincubation of the cells with HGF/SF. In contrast, the pan-caspase inhibitor benzyloxycarbonyl-VAD-fluoromethylketone blocked some of these events (e.g. caspase-3 activation and PARP cleavage) but did not block cytochrome c release or mitochondrial depolarization. These findings suggest that HGF/SF functions, in part, upstream of the mitochondria to block mitochondrial apoptosis signaling, prevent activation of multiple caspases, and protect breast cancer cells against apoptosis.
...
PMID:Hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor blocks the mitochondrial pathway of apoptosis signaling in breast cancer cells. 1157 Dec 97
Fas (APO-1/CD95/TNFRSF6) is a member of the tumor necrosis/nerve growth factor receptor family that signals apoptotic cell death in sensitive cells. Expression of Fas and its agonistic ligand (FasL/
TNFSF6
) was investigated in ex vivo pediatric brain tumor specimens of various histologic types. Fas expression was identified in all of the 18 tumors analyzed by flow cytometry and immunohistochemistry. FasL expression was identified in most of the 13 tumors analyzed by both Western analysis and immunohistochemistry. Nine of these tumor specimens were treated with either the agonistic anti-Fas antibody (APO-1) in combination with protein A or FasL in short-term cytotoxicity assays. Sensitivity to apoptosis induced by the
topoisomerase
II inhibitor, etoposide, was also assessed. Despite the presence of Fas, all the specimens analyzed demonstrated a high degree of resistance to Fas-mediated apoptosis. These 9 specimens also showed a high degree of resistance to etoposide. Only 2 of the 9 specimens were susceptible to etoposide-induced cell death, whereas only 3 were sensitive to Fas-mediated apoptosis. One brain tumor was sensitive to both Fas ligation and etoposide treatment. This contrasted with the high degree of susceptibility to both etoposide- and Fas-induced apoptosis observed in the reference Jurkat cell line. The results suggest that Fas expression may be a general feature of tumors of the CNS and that a significant degree of resistance to Fas-mediated apoptosis may exist in ex vivo pediatric brain tumor specimens.
...
PMID:Ex vivo pediatric brain tumors express Fas (CD95) and FasL (CD95L) and are resistant to apoptosis induction. 1158 92
DNA topoisomerase
(topo) II inhibitors either stabilize DNA-topo II complexes by blocking DNA religation (e.g. etoposide) or block the enzyme's catalytic activity (e.g. dexrazoxane). The former class of drugs causes direct DNA damage through topo II, while the latter class does not, but both classes cause apoptosis. We cloned the
Fas ligand
(
FasL
) promoter and coupled it to the luciferase gene. Treatment of cells transfected with this construct revealed that complex-stabilizing (DNA-damaging) agents induce
FasL
expression, but the catalytic inhibitors do not, suggesting that the
FasL
pathway may not be involved in all cases of
topoisomerase
-mediated apoptosis. Some topo II inhibitors activate a pathway involving stress-activated protein kinases, which include c-Jun N-terminal kinase-1 (JNK-1). We will discuss the effects of these agents on components of this pathway. Our earlier work revealed that topo IIalpha interacts with the cell cycle regulatory protein, retinoblastoma protein (Rb). This interaction and the subcellular distribution of these proteins are altered by topo II inhibitory drugs and lead to apoptosis. In addition, agents that affect Rb, such as E1A and E2F1/DP-1, when transfected into cells, also alter topo IIalpha-Rb localization, activate jun kinase pathways and cause apoptosis. This paper discusses current studies that are designed to determine the contributions of these signalling events to the alterations in subcellular protein distribution and apoptosis. We suggest that protein-protein interactions are important for mediation of cytotoxic signalling by anticancer drugs.
...
PMID:Cytotoxic signalling by inhibitors of DNA topoisomerase II. 1170 58
We have previously reported that XK469 inhibited
topoisomerase
(topo) IIbeta, in Waldenstrom's macroglobulinemia cell line (WSU-WM) however the inhibition alone is not sufficient to induce apoptosis. In this study, the apoptotic potential of XK469 and its mechanism in WSU-WM cell line was investigated. Exposure of WSU-WM cells to XK469 caused a decrease in viable cell number in a dose-dependent manner. In addition, XK469 caused the activation of caspase 3 resulting in subsequent cleavage of PARP. These events were preceded by the release of cytochrome c from the mitochondria to the cytosol. Simultaneous exposure of cells to cyclosporin A prevented the release of cytochrome c to cytosol and reduced the loss of viability. XK469 caused the activation of p53 with up-regulation of p53-dependent proteins such as Bax, p21, Gadd 45 and cyclin B1 in association with G2M arrest. The addition of ubiquitin carboxyl terminal hydrolase (UCH-L1) inhibitor (NaBH4) inhibited up-regulation of p53 and p53 related molecules by XK469 and reduced the loss of viability. Pre-incubation with NOK-1, a monoclonal antibody that prevents Fas-
Fas ligand
interaction and is inhibitory to Fas signaling interfered with XK469 induced activation of caspase 8 and also reduced the loss of viability. Simultaneous exposure of all three inhibitors (cyclosporin A, NaBH4 and NOK-1) abrogated the toxicity of XK469 by 95%. These data define multiple sequences of biochemical events that mediate cell death induced by XK469. Our study suggests a complex mechanistic cascade of XK469-mediated apoptosis that involves Fas signaling pathway, ubiquitination, p53 activation and cytochrome c release.
...
PMID:XK469, a topo IIbeta inhibitor, induces apoptosis in Waldenstrom's macroglobulinemia through multiple pathways. 1461 35
Ellipticine, a cytotoxic plant alkaloid, is known to inhibit
topoisomerase
II. Here, we first report the molecular mechanism of ellipticine's apoptotic action in human breast MCF-7 cancer cells. Treatment of cells with ellipticine resulted in inhibition of growth, and G2/M phase arrest of the cell cycle. This effect was associated with a marked increase in the protein expression of p53 and, p21/WAF1 and KIP1/p27, but not of WAF1/p21. Ellipticine treatment increased the expression of Fas/APO-1 and its ligands, mFas ligand and sFas ligand, and subsequent activation of caspase-8. The mitochondrial apoptotic pathway amplified the Fas/
Fas ligand
death receptor pathway by Bid interaction. This effect was found to result in a significant increase in activation of caspase-9. Taken together, we have concluded that the molecular mechanisms during ellipticine-mediated growth inhibition and induction of apoptosis in MCF-7 cells were due to (1) cell cycle arrest and induction of apoptosis, (2) induction of p53 and KIP1/p27 expression, (3) triggering of Fas/
Fas ligand
pathway, (4) disruption of mitochondrial function, and (5) the apoptotic signaling was amplified by cross-talk between Fas death receptor and mitochondrial apoptotic pathway.
...
PMID:The mechanism of ellipticine-induced apoptosis and cell cycle arrest in human breast MCF-7 cancer cells. 1589 64