Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:6.5.1.2 (DNA ligase)
2,749 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Intracellularly, the anticancer drug taxol induces tubulin polymerization and mitotic arrest, followed by apoptosis. The DNA repair enzyme poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) and lamins are known to be degraded during apoptosis. PARP is a substrate for the Yama protease, which is encoded by the CPP32 beta/ Yama gene, whereas lamins are degraded by the Yama and lamin proteases. In the present studies, we determined the effects of enforced overexpression of the antiapoptosis Bcl-xL protein on taxol-mediated microtubule and cell cycle perturbations, as well as on taxol-induced apoptosis and associated Yama protease activity in human myeloid leukemia HL-60 cells. Our data demonstrate that high Bcl-xL levels do not affect the microtubular bundling or mitotic arrest due to taxol but significantly inhibit the morphological, flow cytometric, and DNA fragmentation features associated with taxol-induced apoptosis. This resulted in a significant improvement in the survival of taxol-treated cells that possess high Bcl-xL levels. In the control HL-60 cells, following taxol treatment, whereas the mRNA of Yama was not induced, taxol-induced apoptosis was associated with Yama activation and PARP as well as lamin B1 degradation. These features were blocked by coculture of these cells with the cysteine protease inhibitor YVAD-cmk as well as in cells with overexpression of Bcl-xL. These results suggest that Bcl-xL antagonizes taxol-induced apoptosis by a mechanism that interferes with the activation of a key protease involved in the execution of apoptosis.
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PMID:Bcl-xL overexpression inhibits taxol-induced Yama protease activity and apoptosis. 885 5

The human DNA repair enzyme apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease (APE/ref-1) is a multifunctional protein in the DNA base excision repair (BER) pathway that is responsible for repair of apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) sites in DNA. DNA repair and programmed cell death both function using different mechanisms to protect the organism from the consequences of extensive cellular damage; however, little is known about the relationship of the DNA BER repair pathway to apoptosis. We have determined the relationship of a BER DNA repair enzyme, APE, to apoptosis using the myeloid leukemia cell line HL-60, which can be induced to differentiate down the granulocytic or monocytic/ macrophage pathway. Treatment of HL-60 cells with retinoic acid/DMSO (granulocytic) or phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (monocytic) results in apoptosis and in down-regulation of APE expression at both the RNA and protein levels. Moreover, double-labeling experiments using APE immunohistochemistry and the terminal deoxyribonucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP-fluorescein nick end labeling assay for apoptosis demonstrate that individual cells undergoing apoptosis lose expression of APE regardless of their state of differentiation. Blocking apoptosis by overexpression of the bcl-2 proto-oncogene in HL-60 cells or by a bcr-abl-related mechanism in K562 cells and subsequent differentiation results in morphological differentiation but no loss of APE expression. These studies establish that down-regulation of APE expression is associated with programmed cell death in cells of the myeloid lineage.
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PMID:Down-regulation of apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease expression is associated with the induction of apoptosis in differentiating myeloid leukemia cells. 910 Oct 90