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Query: EC:5.99.1.3 (
topoisomerase
)
9,911
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Deoxynybomycin was identified as an inducer of p21the/WAF1 gene following screening using a reporter,
p21
/luciferase. The present study examined its anti-proliferative effect on human tumor cell lines. Deoxynybomycin selectively inhibited growth of human osteoblastic sarcoma Saos-2, gastric cancer TMK-1, and monocytic leukemia THP-1 cells, but did not affect survival of normal human fibroblasts at doses up to 5 microg/ml. Results from an assay system using a panel of 39 human cancer cell lines indicated that deoxynybomycin has selective cytotoxic activity against lung carcinoma cell lines. Deoxynybomycin induced apoptosis in Saos-2, TMK-1, and THP-1 cells as revealed by DNA fragmentation and TUNEL assays. It inhibited topoisomerase I but not
topoisomerase
II. These results suggest that deoxynybomycin may be useful in cancer chemotherapy.
...
PMID:Deoxynybomycin is a selective anti-tumor agent inducing apoptosis and inhibiting topoisomerase I. 1099
Molecular analysis of hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal carcinomas (HNPCC) has identified DNA mismatch repair deficiencies with resulting microsatellite instability (MSI) as a pathway of carcinogenesis that appears to be relevant for prognosis, treatment, and possibly prevention. In this study, expression of cell cycle proteins and other known prognostic markers is correlated with the microsatellite status of colorectal cancers (CRC). One hundred consecutive cases from the CRC Registry at Thomas Jefferson University were analyzed for MSI. Immunohistochemistry was performed for the mismatch repair proteins hMLH1 and hMSH2, tumor suppressor p53, apoptosis inhibitor bcl-2, cell cycle proteins
p21
(WAF1/CIP1), and p27 and the proliferation markers Ki-67 and
topoisomerase
II. High MSI (MSI-H) is significantly correlated with loss of either hMLH1 or hMSH2, presence of bcl-2, and absence of p53.
p21
(WAF1/CIP1) is positive in all tumors with MSI-H. Previous findings of a lower proliferation rate were confirmed with a
topoisomerase
II stain. Microsatellite stable (MSS) tumors generally express both MSH2 and MLH1. Other highly significant differences are positive p53 in 56% of MSS cases and negative bcl-2 in 98% of MSS cases. p27 expression is found in approximately 50% of all CRCs irrespective of the microsatellite status. MSI-H tumors follow the mutator pathway, with loss of expression of one mismatch repair protein, wild-type p53, lower proliferation, and positivity for
p21
(WAF1/CIP1). MSS tumors follow the suppressor pathway, characterized by p53 overexpression, higher proliferation, and absence of bcl-2 expression;
p21
(WAF1/CIP1) expression can be variable. These data provide a molecular basis for the clinical observation that patients with HNPCC appear to have a more favorable prognosis. HUM PATHOL 31:1506-1514.
...
PMID:Colorectal carcinomas with high microsatellite instability: defining a distinct immunologic and molecular entity with respect to prognostic markers. 1115 Mar 76
Recurrent respiratory papillomatosis (RRP) has a juvenile aggressive form and an adult more indolent form. Most cases of RRP are cytologically benign; however, some undergo malignant transformation. At present, there are no known markers that help identify patients at risk for aggressive disease. We investigated by immunohistochemistry expressions of
topoisomerase
alpha II, MIB-1, p53,
p21
, E-cadherin, retinoblastoma (RB) gene protein product, HER-2/neu, and steroid hormone receptors in a case of juvenile respiratory papillomatosis with malignant transformation to determine whether these markers are associated with malignant transformation. Histologic examination of the pulmonary lobectomy specimen revealed well-differentiated squamous carcinoma and invasive papillomatosis. Increased staining was found in areas of invasive papillomatosis for
topoisomerase
alpha II, p53, and MIB-1, with highest labeling indices in areas of squamous carcinoma. Staining intensity for RB gene protein product showed gradual decline from benign papilloma (3+) and invasive papillomatosis (2+) to squamous carcinoma (0-1+). Expression of
p21
was similar in benign papilloma and invasive papillomatosis but showed reduction in squamous carcinoma. Expressions of E-cadherin, HER-2/neu, and steroid hormone receptors did not appear to correlate with biologic behavior. Increased
topoisomerase
alpha II and p53 expression along with reduced RB gene protein product and
p21
expression may serve as markers of transformation to invasive papillomatosis and squamous carcinoma.
...
PMID:Topoisomerase alpha II, retinoblastoma gene product, and p53: potential relationships with aggressive behavior and malignant transformation in recurrent respiratory papillomatosis. 1127 21
p53 protects mammals from neoplasia by inducing apoptosis, DNA repair and cell cycle arrest in response to a variety of stresses. p53-dependent arrest of cells in the G1 phase of the cell cycle is an important component of the cellular response to stress. Here we review recent evidence that implicates p53 in controlling entry into mitosis when cells enter G2 with damaged DNA or when they are arrested in S phase due to depletion of the substrates required for DNA synthesis. Part of the mechanism by which p53 blocks cells at the G2 checkpoint involves inhibition of Cdc2, the cyclin-dependent kinase required to enter mitosis. Cdc2 is inhibited simultaneously by three transcriptional targets of p53, Gadd45,
p21
, and 14-3-3 sigma. Binding of Cdc2 to Cyclin B1 is required for its activity, and repression of the cyclin B1 gene by p53 also contributes to blocking entry into mitosis. p53 also represses the cdc2 gene, to help ensure that cells do not escape the initial block. Genotoxic stress also activates p53-independent pathways that inhibit Cdc2 activity, activation of the protein kinases Chk1 and Chk2 by the protein kinases Atm and Atr. Chk1 and Chk2 inhibit Cdc2 by inactivating Cdc25, the phosphatase that normally activates Cdc2. Chk1, Chk2, Atm and Atr also contribute to the activation of p53 in response to genotoxic stress and therefore play multiple roles. p53 induces transcription of the reprimo, B99, and mcg10 genes, all of which contribute to the arrest of cells in G2, but the mechanisms of cell cycle arrest by these genes is not known. Repression of the
topoisomerase
II gene by p53 helps to block entry into mitosis and strengthens the G2 arrest. In summary, multiple overlapping p53-dependent and p53-independent pathways regulate the G2/M transition in response to genotoxic stress.
...
PMID:Regulation of the G2/M transition by p53. 1131 28
To determine whether cell cycle regulation or alteration plays a role in oncogenesis and cytodifferentiation of odontogenic epithelium, cell cycle-related factors, including cyclin D1, p16INK4a,
p21
(WAF1/Cip1) and p27Kip1 proteins,
DNA topoisomerase
IIalpha and histone H3 mRNA, were examined in 8 tooth germs and 31 ameloblastomas. Cyclin D1 was expressed in epithelial cells near the basement membrane in tooth germs and ameloblastomas, suggesting that this protein participates in cell proliferation in odontogenic epithelium. Immunoreactivity for p16 protein was observed in most epithelial cells in tooth germs and ameloblastomas. Expression of p21 protein was detected in most epithelial cells in tooth germs and ameloblastomas, but not in keratinizing or granular cells in variants of ameloblastomas. Expression of p27 protein was chiefly found in central polyhedral cells and keratinizing cells in tooth germs and ameloblastomas. These cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors were well preserved in ameloblastomas as compared with tooth germs, suggesting that the odontogenic epithelium is strictly regulated by these factors. The cell cycle phase/cellular proliferation markers,
DNA topoisomerase
IIalpha and histone H3 mRNA, were localized in scattered epithelial cells attached to the basement membrane in tooth germs and ameloblastomas.
...
PMID:Detection of cell cycle-related factors in ameloblastomas. 1133 68
Topoisomerases constitute a family of highly conserved essential enzymes, which exist in all investigated living pro- and eukaryotic cells. They are indispensable for the control of DNA topology. Humans possess 4 types of topoisomerases, i. e.
topoisomerase
(topo) I, II, III and V. Topo I, a 100-kDa protein, is a member of the type-I enzyme group (type IB). Functionally, it is an ATP-independent DNA single-strand endonuclease and ligase that functions mainly during transcription but also during DNA replication. Topo II belongs to the type-II enzymes and is represented in humans by 2 highly homologous isoforms, alpha (170 kDa) and beta (180 kDa). Contrary to topo I, the 2 topo II isoforms are ATP-dependent double-strand endonucleases and ligases. Topo I and the beta-form of topo II are expressed in a proliferation-independent manner, whereas topo IIalpha is cell-cycle-regulated. Because of the crucial role of topoisomerases for the maintenance and replication of DNA during proliferation, cells become highly vulnerable when these functions are lost. Consequently, a wide range of drugs with cytostatic effects are topo inhibitors. Topo I inhibitors in clinical use belong to the camptothecin family, e. g. topotecan and irinotecan. Topo IIalpha inhibitors are constituents of most chemotherapeutic protocols and form a large heterogeneous group. It includes clinically used compounds such as the podophyllotoxin analogues etoposide and teniposide, the anthracyclines daunorubicin, doxorubicin and idarubicin, the anthracenedione mitoxantrone and amsacrine. Recently, substances with dual specificity that inhibit both topo I and topo IIalpha have been found. The clinical relevance of these new compounds remains to be established. Specific inhibitors of topo IIbeta have not been described yet. The majority of topo inhibitors interfere with the religation step in the normal action of the enzymes, which leads to a stabilisation of the so-called cleavable complex. This results in DNA single-strand breaks in the case of topo I or double-strand breaks in the case of topo II. DNA single-strand breaks due to topo I inhibition are converted into double-strand breaks in the course of DNA replication. Such topo-mediated DNA strand breaks likely induce repair or apoptosis mechanisms via p53 and/or
p21
(WAF1/Clip1). As a consequence, while topoisomerases are required for proliferation, proliferation is also essential for efficacious topo inhibition. The cell-cycle-dependent expression of topo IIwas also successfully used for prognostic evaluations of survival in patients with cancer. Copyright 2000 S. Karger GmbH, Freiburg
...
PMID:Human DNA-Topoisomerases - Diagnostic and Therapeutic Implications for Cancer. 1144 Dec 36
Gastric cancer is poorly-responsive to widely used antitumour drugs, the efficacy of which is thought to be related to the capacity of triggering apoptosis. This process requires a series of gene products including a functional p53 protein. We tested the effects of two
DNA topoisomerase II
poisons, etoposide and doxorubicin, on gastric cancer cell lines with different genetic lesions. We characterised MKN74 and MKN28 cells for p53 gene status and for the expression of p53 and
p21
proteins, as well as of topoisomerase II alpha and beta isoforms. After drug treatments, the cells were analysed for drug cytotoxicity, colony forming ability, cell cycle distribution and presence of apoptotic features. Our findings demonstrated that both etoposide and doxorubicin have a potent anti-proliferative effect on gastric cancer cells. Cell death kinetics was different in the two cell lines, MKN74 cells being more sensitive than MKN28 to the drugs. MKN74 cells, although harboring a wt p53 gene, were unable to undergo a massive apoptosis following etoposide treatment. The response of this cell line might be related to the topoisomerase II beta isozyme, the expression of which proved to be undetectable.
...
PMID:Effects of topoisomerase II inhibitors on gastric cancer cells characterized by different genetic lesions. 1172 58
Melanoma has proven to be resistant to conventional chemotherapy; however,the mechanism of chemoresistance is still unclear. Recent reports show that the transcription factor, E2F-1, may play a role in mediating cytotoxicity of certain chemotherapeutic agents. We have shown in a previous study that adenovirus-mediated overexpression of E2F-1 can efficiently induce apoptosis in melanoma cells. In the present study, the effect of E2F-1 expression on drug sensitivity of melanoma cells was evaluated. Two human melanoma cell lines, SK-MEL-28 and SK-MEL-2, were treated with drugs (etoposide, Adriamycin, roscovitine, cisplatin, 5-fluorouracil, or cycloheximide), alone or in combination with adenoviral vectors expressing beta-galactosidase (Ad-LacZ) or E2F-1 (Ad-E2F-1) at a multiplicity of infection of 1 in vitro. E2F-1 expression was confirmed by Western blot analysis. Sublethal concentrations of each drug alone or infection with Ad-E2F-1 alone produced <5% apoptosis by 3 days posttreatment. Conversely, cotreatment with Ad-E2F-1 and low concentrations of etoposide or Adriamycin markedly sensitized melanoma cells to apoptotic cell death. A slight enhancement of the cytotoxicity of roscovitine was demonstrated in combination with E2F-1 overexpression, but not to cisplatin, 5-fluorouracil, or cycloheximide. Ad-LacZ infection showed no obvious effects on drug sensitivity. Overexpression of
p21
can block apoptosis induced by the combination chemogene therapy of Ad-E2F-1 and
topoisomerase
II poisons and does not require its proliferating cell nuclear antigen-binding ability. The protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide also has a cytotoxicity-protective effect against
topoisomerase
II inhibitor/E2F-1-induced apoptosis and suggests that new protein synthesis is required for this process. Topoisomerase II inhibitors also cooperated with Ad-E2F-1 to enhance antitumor activity in an in vivo model using xenografts in nude mice. When combined with Adriamycin or etoposide, E2F-1 adenovirus therapy resulted in an 87% or 91% decrease in tumor size, respectively, compared with controls (P < 0.002). Our results show that adenovirus-mediated E2F-1 gene transfer can sensitize melanoma cells to some chemotherapeutic agents, particularly
topoisomerase
II poisons, in vitro and in vivo. These results suggest a new chemosensitization strategy for melanoma gene therapy.
...
PMID:Adenovirus-mediated E2F-1 gene transfer sensitizes melanoma cells to apoptosis induced by topoisomerase II inhibitors. 1191 54
Apo2L/TRAIL exhibits enhanced apoptotic activity in tumor xenograft models when used in combination with the
topoisomerase
1 inhibitor CPT-11. To investigate the cellular mechanisms involved in this increased tumor-killing activity, a series of in vitro experiments were conducted using the human colon carcinoma cell line (HCT116). Apo2L/TRAIL induced a transient upregulation of DR5 mRNA, while CPT-11 increased both death and decoy receptor expression. Upregulation of decoy receptors by CPT-11 was partially inhibited by co-administration of Apo2L/TRAIL. CPT-11 treatment resulted in accumulation of cells at G(2)M-phase and correlated with a substantial increase in the protein levels of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor
p21
. However, cells co-treated with CPT-11 and Apo2L/TRAIL, or pretreated with CPT-11 for up to 24 h followed by 2 h Apo2L/TRAIL, resulted in a caspase-dependent degradation of
p21
, reversal of G(2)-M phase arrest with a concomitant increase in apoptosis. The sequential treatment produced the greatest induction of DR5 and DR4, caspase-3-like cleavage/activation and
p21
degradation, as well as increased apoptosis. These data indicate that the up-regulation of Apo2L/TRAIL ligand and its death receptors as well as cleavage of p21 protein in the Apo2L/TRAIL plus CPT-11 treatment contributes to the positive cooperation between these agents in enhancing tumor cell apoptosis.
...
PMID:Enhanced tumor killing by Apo2L/TRAIL and CPT-11 co-treatment is associated with p21 cleavage and differential regulation of Apo2L/TRAIL ligand and its receptors. 1203 63
Although they are known to be effective antidiabetic agents, little is published about the toxic effects of carnitine palmitoyltransferase-1 (CPT-1) inhibitors, such as etomoxir (ET). These compounds inhibit mitochondrial fatty acid beta-oxidation by irreversibly binding to CPT-1 and preventing entry of long chain fatty acids into the mitochondrial matrix. Treatment of HepG2 cells with 1 mM etomoxir for 6 h caused significant modulations in the expression of several redox-related and cell cycle mRNAs as measured by microarray analysis. Upregulated mRNAs included heme oxygenase 1 (HO1), 8-oxoguanine DNA glycosylase 1 (OGG1), glutathione reductase (GSR), cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor 1A (CDKN1 [
p21
(waf1)]) and Mn+ superoxide dismutase precursor (SOD2); while cytochrome P450 1A1 (CYP1A1) and heat shock 70kD protein 1 (HSPA1A) were downregulated. Real time quantitative PCR (RT-PCR) confirmed the significant changes in 4 of 4 mRNAs assayed (CYP1A1, HO1, GSR, CDKN1), and identified 3 additional mRNA changes; 2 redox-related genes, gamma-glutamate-cysteine ligase modifier subunit (GCLM) and thioredoxin reductase (TXNRD1) and 1 DNA replication gene,
topoisomerase
IIalpha (TOP2A). Temporal changes in selected mRNA levels were examined by RT-PCR over 11 time points from 15 min to 24 h postdosing. CYP1A1 exhibited a 38-fold decrease by 4 h, which rebounded to a 39-fold increase by 20 h. GCLM and TXNRD1 exhibited 13- and 9-fold increases, respectively at 24 h. Etomoxir-induced oxidative stress and impaired mitochondrial energy metabolism were confirmed by a significant decrease in reduced glutathione (GSH), reduced/oxidized glutathione ratio (GSH/GSSG), mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP), and ATP levels, and by concurrent increase in oxidized glutathione (GSSG) and superoxide generation. This is the first report of oxidative stress caused by etomoxir.
...
PMID:Etomoxir-induced oxidative stress in HepG2 cells detected by differential gene expression is confirmed biochemically. 1207 14
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