Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:5.99.1.3 (topoisomerase)
9,911 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The anthracyclin doxorubicin (DXR) is a major antitumor agent known to cause cellular damage via a number of mechanisms including free radical formation and inhibition of topoisomerase II. It is not clear, however, how the subsequent lesions may lead to the apoptotic death of the cell. We have here examined the effects of DXR on activation of pro-apoptotic members of the Bcl-2 family, all of which are connected to the mitochondrial events of apoptosis. In two human cell lines (lymphoma and myeloma), clinically relevant concentrations of DXR were found to induce apoptosis, first observed after 24 h of treatment. Apoptosis correlated with modulation of Bak and Bax to their active conformations. bax- as well as bak-deficient mouse embryo fibroblasts were resistant to DXR compared with wild-type mouse embryo fibroblasts further supporting a role for these proteins as main DXR-induced apoptosis regulators. Furthermore, using immunocytochemistry as well as chemical blocking of putative apical pathways we could demonstrate that Bak is activated prior to Bax. In the human cell lines, DXR was furthermore found to induce high protein levels of Bik, another BH3-only protein. DXR-induced apoptosis was completely blocked in Bcl-2-overexpressing U266 cells. Interestingly, in Bcl-2-transfected cells Bak activation was also blocked, while Bax was still partially active in agreement with differential regulation of these two proteins. Furthermore, co-incubation of the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)-inhibitor LY294002 potentiated the apoptotic response to DXR. This enhanced apoptosis was preceded by enhanced Bak and Bax activation, and both responses as well as apoptosis were blocked in transfectants overexpressing Bcl-2. In summary, several pieces of evidence suggest that DXR induces apoptosis through a sequential and differential activation of Bak and Bax.
...
PMID:Activation of Bak, Bax, and BH3-only proteins in the apoptotic response to doxorubicin. 1219 97

Doxorubicin is an important component of combination therapy for muscle-invasive urinary bladder cancer. Treatment with this topoisomerase II poison is able to interfere with cell cycle progression and lead to cancer cell death. Using FACS analysis, Western immunoblotting and semi-quantitative RT-PCR, we studied the effects of doxorubicin on cell cycle progression and apoptosis, and also explored the possibility of using groups of genes as biomarkers of prognosis and/or response to doxorubicin treatment in human urinary bladder cancer cells. Doxorubicin induced dose-dependent G2/M and/or G1/S cell cycle arrest, followed by grade- and dose-dependent reduction in the amount of the cytosolic trimeric form of FasL, activation of Caspase-8, Caspase-9, Caspase-3, cleavage of PARP, Lamin A/C, Bcl-XL/S and interestingly Hsp90, and finally cell death. Data presented here also suggest the use of the expression patterns of Cyclin-E2, Cyclin-F, p63, p73, FasL, TRAIL, Tweak, Tweak-R, XAF-1, OPG and Bok genes for identification of the differentiation grade, and Cyclin-B2, GADD45A, p73, FasL, Bik, Bim, TRAIL, Fas, Tweak-R, XAF-1, Bcl-2, Survivin, OPG, DcR2 and Bcl-XL genes for the detection of response to doxorubicin in human bladder cancer cells.
...
PMID:Grade-dependent effects on cell cycle progression and apoptosis in response to doxorubicin in human bladder cancer cell lines. 1908 86