Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0001486 (Adenovirus)
3,125 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Bax (a death-promoting member of the bcl-2 gene family), the tumor suppressor gene product p53, and the ICE/ced-3-related proteases (caspases) have all been implicated in programmed cell death in a wide variety of cell types. However, their roles in radiation-induced neuronal cell death are poorly understood. In order to further elucidate the molecular mechanisms underlying radiation-induced neuronal cell death, we have examined the ability of ionizing radiation to induce cell death in primary cultured hippocampal neurons obtained from wild-type, p53-deficient and Bax-deficient newborn mice. Survival in neuronal cultures derived from wild-type mice decreased in a dose-dependent manner 24 hr after a single 10 Gy to 30 Gy dose of ionizing radiation. In contrast, neuronal survival in irradiated cultures derived from p53-deficient or Bax-deficient mice was equivalent to that observed in control, nonirradiated cultures. Western blot analyses indicated that neuronal p53 protein levels increased after irradiation in wild-type cells. However, Bax protein levels did not change, indicating that other mechanisms exist for regulating Bax activity. Adenovirus-mediated overexpression of p53 also caused neuronal cell death without increasing Bax protein levels. Irradiation resulted in a significant induction in caspase activity, as measured by increased cleavage of fluorogenic caspase substrates. However, specific inhibitors of caspase activity (zVAD-fmk, zDEVD-fmk and BAF) failed to protect postnatal hippocampal neurons from radiation-induced cell death. Staurosporine (a potent inducer of apoptosis in many cell types) effectively induced neuronal cell death in wild-type, p53-deficient and Bax-deficient hippocampal neurons, indicating that all were competent to undergo programmed cell death. These results demonstrate that both p53 and Bax are necessary for radiation-induced cell death in postnatal cultured hippocampal neurons. The fact that cell death occurred despite caspase inhibition suggests that radiation-induced neuronal cell death may occur in a caspase-independent manner.
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PMID:Evidence for involvement of Bax and p53, but not caspases, in radiation-induced cell death of cultured postnatal hippocampal neurons. 985 57

Melanoma cells rarely contain mutant p53 and hardly undergo apoptosis by wild-type p53. By using recombinant adenoviruses that express p53 or p53-related p51A or p73beta, we tested their apoptotic activities in melanoma cells. Yeast functional assay revealed a mutation of p53 at the 258th codon (AAA [K] instead of GAA [E]) in one cell line, 70W, out of six human melanoma cell lines analyzed (SK-mel-23, SK-mel-24, SK-mel-118, TXM18, 70W, and G361). Adenovirus-mediated transfer of p53, p51A, and/or p73beta suppressed growth and induced apoptotic DNA fragmentation of SK-mel-23, SK-mel-118, and 70W cells. Interestingly, p51A induced DNA fragmentation in them more significantly than p53 and p73beta. By Western blotting we analyzed levels of apoptosis-related proteins in cells expressing p53 family members. Apoptotic Bax and antiapoptotic Bcl-2 were not significantly upregulated or downregulated by expression of p53, p51A, or p73beta, except for p53-expressing 70W cells, which contained a larger amount of Bax protein than LacZ-expressing cells. Activation of caspase-3 was demonstrated only in p51A-expressing SK-mel-118 cells. We show here that p51A can mediate apoptosis in both wild-type and mutant p53-expressing melanoma cells more significantly than p53 and p73beta. It is also suggested that in melanoma cells (i) cellular target protein(s) other than Bcl-2 and Bax might be responsible for induction of p51A-mediated apoptosis and (ii) caspase-3 is not always involved in the apoptosis by p53 family members.
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PMID:Induction of apoptosis in melanoma cell lines by p53 and its related proteins. 1167 32