Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0002871 (anemia)
52,094 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Fanconi anemia is a rare autosomal recessive disease characterized by bone marrow failure, developmental anomalies, a high incidence of myelodysplasia and acute nonlymphocytic leukemia, and cellular hypersensitivity to cross linking agents. Five of the seven known Fanconi anemia proteins bind together in a complex and influence the function of a sixth, FANCD2, which colocalizes with BRCA1 in nuclear foci after genotoxic stress. Carboxy-terminal truncating mutations of the seventh Fanconi anemia gene, BRCA2, are hypomorphic and lead to FA-D1 and possibly FA-B. Because the Fanconi anemia alleles of BRCA2 fail to bind to Rad51 in response to genotoxic stress and Rad51 therefore fails to localize to nuclear damage foci, many investigators in the field suspect that the Fanconi anemia pathway supports the integrity of the Rad51 and BRCA1 and BRCA2 pathways as they function in homologous recombination repair. Because these abnormalities are common to all somatic cells, it is unlikely that dysfunction of this particular pathway results in tissue-specific apoptosis of hematopoietic cells. Indeed, at least one of the Fanconi anemia proteins, FANCC, exhibits functions in hematopoietic cells in addition to its role in the complex. Because FANCC protects hematopoietic cells from apoptotic cues in ways that do not require an intact heteromeric Fanconi anemia complex, it is reasonable to expect that the other Fanconi anemia gene products will have independent cytoplasmic and nuclear functions, particularly in hematopoietic and germ cells that seem to rely so substantially on an intact portfolio of Fanconi anemia proteins.
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PMID:Genetic basis of Fanconi anemia. 1248 14

Hematopoietic progenitor cells from children with Fanconi anemia of the C complementation group (FA-C) are excessively apoptotic and hypersensitive to various extracellular cues including Fas-ligand, tumor necrosis factor-alpha and double-stranded RNA. Interferon (IFN)-gamma is known to augment apoptotic responses of these factors. The "priming" effect of IFN-gamma is not fully explained. In view of the strong evidence that FA cells are intolerant of oxidative stress, we tested the notion that IFN-priming involves the induction of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in two FA-C B-lymphocyte cell lines and in peripheral blood neutrophils and mononuclear cells of FA patients. We also investigated whether the combination of IFN-gamma and Fas created an intracellular environment that promoted apoptosis. Significantly lower doses of IFN-gamma induced ROS accumulation in neutrophils and mononuclear cell of FA patients compared to cells of normal individuals. Enhanced ROS accumulation and decreased intracellular glutathione levels were observed in FA-C B-cell lines primed with IFN-gamma and treated with agonistic anti-Fas antibody than in isogenic control cells corrected with FANCC. The above treatment also induced caspase-3 and -8 activation as well as apoptosis. That antioxidants reduced the priming effect of IFN-gamma in Fas and IFN-gamma-treated FA lymphoblast cells, demonstrates that ROS represent a critical effector mechanism for the exaggerated responses to IFN-gamma characteristic of FA-C cells.
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PMID:An oxidative mechanism of interferon induced priming of the Fas pathway in Fanconi anemia cells. 1262 94

Myelodysplastic and leukemic stem cell clones that evolve in children and adults with Fanconi anemia universally bear complex cytogenetic abnormalities. The abnormalities are generally recurring deletions or chromosomal loss and involve precisely the same chromosomes with the same frequency as has been described in marrow cells from patients with secondary acute leukemia induced by alkylating agents. Reasoning that acquired Fanconi anemia protein dysfunction might contribute to cytogenetic instability in secondary acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) cells, we analyzed leukemic cells bearing characteristic complex cytogenetic defects obtained from a 68-year-old man whose lymphoblasts showed no evidence of Fanconi anemia. Unlike the lymphoblasts, this myeloid leukemia cell line (UoC-M1) was hypersensitive to mitomycin-C (MMC) and diepoxybutane (DEB) and exhibited a marked decrease in nuclear FANCA, FANCG, and FANCD2-L. Retroviral transduction of FANCA significantly reduced MMC sensitivity but FANCF, FANCG, and FANCC did not. Overexpression of FANCA restored levels of both FANCA and FANCG, whereas overexpression of FANCG or FANCC did not restore FANCA levels. The molecular mass of cytoplasmic FANCA, FANCG, FANCC, and nuclear FANCD2 were normal. All exons of FANCA and FANCG were sequenced, and no mutations were found. We conclude that perturbations of as yet unidentified factors that govern the binding activity or intracellular localization of FANCA may promote cytogenetic instability and clonal progression in patients with AML who do not have Fanconi anemia.
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PMID:Acquired FANCA dysfunction and cytogenetic instability in adult acute myelogenous leukemia. 1263 30

Fanconi anemia (FA) is an autosomal recessive syndrome characterized by progressive bone marrow failure and cancer predisposition. Eight FA complementation groups have been identified. The FANCA, FANCC, FANCE, FANCF, and FANCG proteins form a nuclear complex required for the monoubiquination of the FANCD2 protein. To investigate the architecture of the FA protein complex, the yeast 2-hybrid system was used to map contact points of the FANCA/FANCG, FANCC/FANCE, and FANCF/FANCG interactions. FANCG was shown to interact with both the amino-terminus of FANCA and the carboxyl-terminal region of FANCF. A FANCG mutant truncated at the carboxyl-terminus retained the ability to interact with FANCA. The interaction between FANCG and FANCF was ablated by a Leu71Pro mutant of FANCG. A central region of FANCE was sufficient for FANCC binding. A Leu554Pro mutant of FANCC failed to interact with FANCE. To further examine complex assembly, the yeast 3-hybrid system was used to investigate the ability of FANCG to act as a molecular bridge in mediating interaction between other FA proteins. FANCG was able to mediate interaction between FANCA and FANCF, as well as between monomers of FANCA. Direct interaction between FANCE and FANCD2 was also demonstrated in the yeast 2-hybrid system. This interaction involving an amino-terminal region of FANCD2 may provide a link between the FA protein complex and its downstream targets.
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PMID:Fanconi anemia protein complex: mapping protein interactions in the yeast 2- and 3-hybrid systems. 1264 60

Ovarian tumor cells are often genomically unstable and hypersensitive to cisplatin. To understand the molecular basis for this phenotype, we examined the integrity of the Fanconi anemia-BRCA (FANC-BRCA) pathway in those cells. This pathway regulates cisplatin sensitivity and is governed by the coordinate activity of six genes associated with Fanconi anemia (FANCA, FANCC, FANCD2, FANCE, FANCF and FANCG) as well as BRCA1 and BRCA2 (FANCD1). Here we show that the FANC-BRCA pathway is disrupted in a subset of ovarian tumor lines. Mono-ubiquitination of FANCD2, a measure of the function of this pathway, and cisplatin resistance were restored by functional complementation with FANCF, a gene that is upstream in this pathway. FANCF inactivation in ovarian tumors resulted from methylation of its CpG island, and acquired cisplatin resistance correlated with demethylation of FANCF. We propose a model for ovarian tumor progression in which the initial methylation of FANCF is followed by FANCF demethylation and ultimately results in cisplatin resistance.
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PMID:Disruption of the Fanconi anemia-BRCA pathway in cisplatin-sensitive ovarian tumors. 1272 61

Fanconi anemia (FA) is a genetically and phenotypically heterogenous autosomal recessive disease associated with chromosomal instability and hypersensitivity to DNA crosslinkers. Prognosis is poor due to progressive bone marrow failure and increased risk of neoplasia, but revertant mosaicism may improve survival. Mechanisms of reversion include back mutation, intragenic crossover, gene conversion and compensating deletions/insertions. We describe the types of reversions found in five mosaic FA patients who are compound heterozygotes for single base mutations in FANCA or FANCC. Intragenic crossover could be shown as the mechanism of self-correction in the FANCC patient. Restoration to wildtype via back mutation or gene conversion of either the paternal or maternal allele was observed in the FANCA patients. The sequence environments of these mutations/reversions were indicative of high mutability, and selective advantage of bone marrow precursor cells carrying a completely restored FANCA allele might explain the surprisingly uniform pattern of these reversions. We also describe a first example of in vitro phenotypic reversion via the emergence of a compensating missense mutation 15 amino acids downstream of the constitutional mutation, which explains the reversion to MMC resistance of the respective lymphoblastoid cell line. With one exception, our mosaic patients showed improvement of their hematological status during a three- to six-year observation period, indicating a proliferative advantage of the reverted cell lineages. In patients with Fanconi anemia, genetic instability due to defective caretaker genes sharply increases the risk of neoplasia, but at the same time increases the chance for revertant mosaicism leading to improved bone marrow function.
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PMID:Reverse mosaicism in Fanconi anemia: natural gene therapy via molecular self-correction. 1269 94

Fibroblasts from patients with Fanconi anemia (FA) display genomic instability, hypersensitivity to DNA cross-linking agents, and deficient DNA end joining. Fibroblasts from two FA patients of unidentified complementation group also had significantly increased cellular homologous recombination (HR) activity. Results described herein show that HR activity levels in patient-derived FA fibroblasts of groups A, C, and G were 10-fold greater than those seen in normal fibroblasts. In contrast, HR activity in group D2 fibroblasts was identical to that in normal cells. Western blot analysis revealed that the RAD51 protein was elevated 10-fold above normal levels in group A, C, and G fibroblasts, but was not altered in group D2 fibroblasts. HR activity levels in these former cells could be restored to near-normal levels by electroporation with anti-RAD51 antibody, whereas similar treatment of normal and complementation group D2 fibroblasts had no effect. These findings are consistent with a model in which FA proteins function to coordinate DNA double-strand break repair activity by regulating both recombinational and non-recombinational DNA repair. Interestingly, whereas positive regulation of DNA end joining requires the combined presence of all FA proteins thus far tested, suppression of HR, which is minimally dependent on the FANCA, FANCC, and FANCG proteins, does not require FANCD2.
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PMID:Deficient regulation of DNA double-strand break repair in Fanconi anemia fibroblasts. 1274 86

Cells derived from Fanconi anemia (FA) patients are hypersensitive for cross-linking agents, such as cisplatin, that are potent inducers of programmed cell death (PCD). Here, we studied cisplatin hypersensitivity in FA in relation to the mechanism of PCD in lymphoblastoid cells representing FA groups A and C. In FA cells, a low concentration of cisplatin caused chromatin condensation, phosphatidylserine (PS) externalization, and the expression of an 18-kDa variant of Bax, all indicators of apoptotic cell death, and the latter suggesting the involvement of a mitochondrial route. However, procaspases-3, -8, and -9, and PARP were not cleaved, although small increases in caspase activity could be detected. At a high concentration of cisplatin, both FA and corrected cells showed a robust cleavage of procaspases and PARP. DNA fragmentation was clearly visible under high cisplatin conditions and to some extent at a low concentration in FA-A cells, but not in the FA-C cell line regardless of the presence of functional FANCC, suggesting an unknown deficiency in these cells. We conclude that hypersensitivity in FA cells is associated with a mixture of necrotic and apoptotic features that is best described as apoptotic-like cell death, and that a defective FA pathway does not interfere with the proper activation of caspase-mediated cell death.
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PMID:Cisplatin triggers apoptotic or nonapoptotic cell death in Fanconi anemia lymphoblasts in a concentration-dependent manner. 1274 65

Genes of the Fanconi complementation groups [Fanconi anemia (FA) genes] are suggested to be involved in homologous DNA recombination and produce FA when two allelic mutations are inherited. BRCA2 is an FA gene and additionally conveys an inherited risk for breast, ovarian, and pancreatic cancer for individuals carrying a single mutated allele [N. G. Howlett et al., Science (Wash. DC), 297: 606-609, 2002]. Here we report inherited and somatic mutations of FANCC and FANCG present in young-onset pancreatic cancer. This may imply a general involvement of Fanconi genes with an inherited risk of cancer. The known hypersensitivity of Fanconi cells to mitomycin and other therapeutic agents [M. S. Sasaki, Nature (Lond.), 257: 501-503, 1975] suggests a therapeutic utility for a more complete characterization of the DNA repair defects and their causative genetic mutations in pancreatic cancer.
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PMID:Fanconi anemia gene mutations in young-onset pancreatic cancer. 1275 Feb 83

Fanconi anaemia (FA) is a cancer-prone genetic disorder that is characterised by cytogenetic instability and redox abnormalities. Although rare subtypes of FA (B, D1 and D2) have been implicated in DNA repair through links with BRCA1 and BRCA2, such a role has yet to be demonstrated for gene products of the common subtypes. Instead, these products have been strongly implicated in xenobiotic metabolism and redox homeostasis through interactions of FANCC with cytochrome P-450 reductase and with glutathione S-transferase, and of FANCG with cytochrome P-450 2E1, as well as redox-dependent signalling through an interaction between FANCA and Akt kinase. We hypothesise that FA proteins act directly (via FANCC and FANCG) and indirectly (via FANCA, BRCA2 and FANCD2) with the machinery of cellular defence to modulate oxidative stress. The latter interactions may co-ordinate the link between the response to DNA damage and oxidative stress parameters (3, 6-12).
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PMID:Fanconi anaemia proteins: major roles in cell protection against oxidative damage. 1276 48


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