Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0006826 (cancer)
1,092,456 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Pancreatic cancer cells are usually resistant to apoptosis induced by cytotoxic drugs, by activation of surface receptors such as Fas and TNF receptor or by serum or growth factor withdrawal. Actinomycin D (actD) is an inhibitor of RNA synthesis and acts as a potent inducer of apoptosis in several cell lines. In the present study, we investigated the effects of actD on PANC-1 pancreatic cancer cells. ActD caused apoptosis in PANC-1 cells in a dose-dependent manner, as determined by cell growth assays, DNA laddering and TUNEL assays. Induction of apoptosis correlated with activation of the JNK/SAPK pathway and increased expression of Bax but not Bad or p53. PANC-1 cells were completely resistant to Fas antibody and TNF-alpha. In contrast, TRAIL decreased the growth of PANC-1 cells by 22%. Low concentrations of actD (10 ng/ml) enhanced the cytotoxic effects of all 3 cytokines. EGF, FGF-2 and IGF-I did not protect PANC-1 cells from actD-mediated apoptosis. ActD (10 ng/ml) also inhibited the growth of CAPAN-1 and T3M4 pancreatic cancer cells but not MiaPaCa-2 cells. Our observations suggest that actD may act via JNK/SAPK and Bax to promote apoptosis in PANC-1 cells and that it may inhibit the growth of other pancreatic cancer cell lines.
Int J Cancer 2000 May 01
PMID:Actinomycin D induces apoptosis and inhibits growth of pancreatic cancer cells. 1076 Aug 29

To search for the intracellular signaling pathway critical for the secretion of matrix metalloproteinases (MMP), we studied the effects of dominant negative Ras (S17N Ras) and dominant negative MEK1 (MEK1AA) expression in v-crk-transformed 3Y1. Expression of either S17N Ras or MEK1AA dramatically suppressed the augmented secretion of MMP-2 and MMP-9 in v-crk-transfected 3Y1. Similarly, a Ras farnesyltransferase inhibitor, manumycin A, and a MEK1 inhibitor, U0126, suppressed MMP secretion in a dose-dependent manner, whereas a PI3 kinase inhibitor, wortmannin, could not. In addition, the suppression of MMP secretion by S17N Ras showed good correlation with the inhibition of in vitro invasiveness of the cells. In contrast, expression of dominant negative C3G did not suppress MMP secretion, although it substantially blocked the c-Jun N-terminal kinase activation. Taken together, the Ras-MEK1 pathway, but not the C3G-JNK pathway, seems to play a key role in the activation of MMP secretion and, hence, the invasiveness of v-crk-transformed cells.
Cancer Res 2000 May 01
PMID:The Ras-mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway is critical for the activation of matrix metalloproteinase secretion and the invasiveness in v-crk-transformed 3Y1. 1081 Nov 9

Tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) has been reported to induce cell death in a variety of transformed cells but spared the normal cells. In this study, we examined its potential against advanced prostate cancer cells. Treatment of PC-3 and DU145 cells with TRAIL caused a rapid apoptotic cell death, whereas tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) is ineffective unless in the presence of the protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide. The induction of apoptosis by TRAIL in PC-3 cells was mediated by a death receptor, DR 4, and the downstream caspases. Treatment of PC-3 cells with TRAIL also activated c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase 1 (JNK1); however, inhibition of JNK1 activation by its dominant-negative mutant had little effect on TRAIL-induced apoptosis. Furthermore, TRAIL weakly stimulated nuclear factor kappaB activity in PC-3 cells. Interestingly, activation of nuclear factor kappaB pathway by pretreatment with TNF-alpha did not prevent the induction of apoptosis by TRAIL. These data indicate that TRAIL triggers apoptosis in advanced prostate cancer cells through the activation of caspase cascades, which appears to be independent of TNF-alpha- and JNK-mediated mechanisms.
Cancer Res 2000 May 01
PMID:Tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand-mediated apoptosis in androgen-independent prostate cancer cells. 1081 Nov 14

We found that SAPK/JNK was phosphorylated during X-ray-induced rapid cell death of MOLT-4 cells and that acid Sphingomyelinase inhibitor D609 suppressed the rapid cell death as well as phosphorylation of SAPK/JNK. Also C2-ceramide caused phosphorylation of SAPK/JNK, followed by rapid cell death. Further we isolated X-ray-resistant radiation-hybrid clones from MOLT-4 and 50 Gy irradiated mouse FM3A cells by repeated selections with 3 Gy irradiation. One of them named Rh-1a was found resistant to X-ray- as well as C2-ceramide-induced rapid cell death. Rh-1a cells had mouse DNA but no increase in either mouse or human Bcl-2 determined by Western blotting. Accumulation of p53 after X-irradiation was similarly observed in both parental MOLT-4 and Rh-1a cells. However, contrasting to prolonged and prominent phosphorylated status of SAPK/JNK in MOLT-4 cells, Rh-1a cells exhibited short transient increase and FM3A cells showed no increase of phosphorylated status SAPK/JNK after X-irradiation. Therefore, SAPK/JNK activation is considered important in X-ray-induced rapid cell death or apoptosis of MOLT-4 cells.
Cancer Lett 2000 Jul 31
PMID:Involvement of SAPK/JNK pathway in X-ray-induced rapid cell death of human T-cell leukemia cell line MOLT-4. 1082 28

We have previously shown that the androgen-independent prostate cancer cells DU145, despite expressing Fas and FasL, were resistant to anti-Fas-induced apoptosis, and that this resistance could be overcome by pretreating the cells with sublethal doses of camptothecin. Here, we provide evidence that SAPK/JNK activity is required for camptothecin sensitization to anti-Fas-induced apoptosis. Camptothecin, but not Fas ligation, was shown to activate SAPK/JNK in a time-dependent manner, and to induce c-Jun expression. The effects were more prominent in cells treated with both camptothecin and anti-Fas. The expression levels of MKP-1, a phosphatase which regulates SAPK/JNK and which has been implicated in prostate cancer resistance to apoptosis, remained unchanged. Inhibition of caspases had no effect on the SAPK/JNK activation, suggesting that this activation is an upstream event in the Fas-signalling pathway, and is independent of caspase activity. Antisense oligonucleotides targeted to JNK1 and JNK2 reversed the effect of camptothecin. These results suggest that stress kinase activation can significantly influence the fate of androgen-independent prostate cancer cells following Fas receptor ligation.
Br J Cancer 2000 Jun
PMID:Activation of SAPK/JNK by camptothecin sensitizes androgen-independent prostate cancer cells to Fas-induced apoptosis. 1083 98

Recently, glucose deprivation-induced oxidative stress has been shown to cause cytotoxicity, activation of signal transduction (i.e., ERK1, ERK2, JNK, and Lyn kinase), and increased expression of genes associated with malignancy (i.e., bFGF and c-Myc) in MCF-7/ADR human breast cancer cells. These results have led to the proposal that intracellular oxidation/reduction reactions involving hydroperoxides and thiols may provide a mechanistic link between metabolism, signal transduction, and gene expression in these human tumor cells. The current study shows that several other transformed human cell types appear to be more susceptible to glucose deprivation-induced cytotoxicity and oxidative stress than untransformed human cell types. In a matched pair of normal and SV40-transformed human fibroblasts the cytotoxic process is shown to be dependent upon ambient O2 concentration. A theoretical model to explain the results is presented and implications to unifying modern theories of cancer are discussed.
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PMID:Glucose deprivation-induced oxidative stress in human tumor cells. A fundamental defect in metabolism? 1086 52

Cycloprodigiosin hydrochloride (cPrG * HCl), a novel H(+)/Cl(-) symporter, induces acidification of the cytosol and leads to apoptosis in rat and human liver cancer cells. In the present study, the effect of cPrG * HCl on a promyelocytic leukemia cell line (HL-60) was examined. cPrG * HCl lowered intracellular pH and induced apoptosis through up-regulation of Fas ligand, activation of stress-activated protein kinase (SAPK/JNK) and caspase. Apoptosis induced by cPrG * HCl was strongly suppressed when a cell-permeable weak base, imidazole, was present, indicating that cytosol acidification introduced by cPrG * HCl triggered caspase activation, leading to apoptosis. Concomitantly, cell differentiation into monocyte was also induced by cPrG * HCl both morphologically and functionally. However, the cPrG * HCl-induced differentiation was not suppressed by addition of imidazole, indicating that the differentiation process is unrelated to cytosol acidification. Further, the differentiation induced by cPrG * HCl was blocked by tyrosine kinase inhibitors (lavendustin A and HMA) but unaffected by the inhibitors of A-kinase (H-89) or C-kinase (H-7). Taken together, these findings suggest that cPrG * HCl, through apoptosis and differentiation induction, may be useful in leukemia treatment.
Int J Cancer 2000 Oct 01
PMID:Cycloprodigiosin hydrochloride, H(+)/CL(-) symporter, induces apoptosis and differentiation in HL-60 cells. 1096 49

The anti-cancer drug paclitaxel (Taxol) alters microtubule assembly and activates pro-apoptotic signaling pathways. Previously, we and others found that paclitaxel activates endogenous JNK in tumor cells, and the activation of JNK contributes to tumor cell apoptosis. Here we find that paclitaxel activates the prosurvival MEK/ERK pathway, which conversely may compromise the efficacy of paclitaxel. Hence, a combination treatment of paclitaxel and MEK inhibitors was pursued to determine whether this treatment could lead to enhanced apoptosis. The inhibition of MEK/ERK with a pharmacologic inhibitor, U0126, together with paclitaxel resulted in a dramatic enhancement of apoptosis that is four times more than the additive value of the two drugs alone. Enhanced apoptosis was verified by the terminal transferase-mediated dUTP nick end labeling assay, by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for histone-associated DNA fragments, and by flow cytometric analysis for DNA content. Specificity of the pharmacologic inhibitor was confirmed by the use of (a) a second MEK/ERK inhibitor and (b) a transdominant-negative MEK. Enhanced apoptosis was verified in breast, ovarian, and lung tumor cell lines, suggesting this effect is not cell type-specific. This is the first report of enhanced apoptosis detected in the presence of paclitaxel and MEK inhibition and suggests a new anticancer strategy.
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PMID:MEK inhibition enhances paclitaxel-induced tumor apoptosis. 1103 47

Sulindac sulfone (Exisulind) induces apoptosis and exhibits cancer chemopreventive activity, but in contrast to sulindac, it does not inhibit cyclooxygenases 1 or 2. We found that sulindac sulfone and two potent derivatives, CP248 and CP461, inhibited the cyclic GMP (cGMP) phosphodiesterases (PDE) 2 and 5 in human colon cells, and these compounds caused rapid and sustained activation of the c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase 1 (JNK1). Rapid activation of stress-activated protein/ERK kinase 1 (SEK1) and mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase (MEKK1), which are upstream of JNK1, was also observed. Other compounds that increase cellular levels of cGMP also activated JNK1, and an inhibitor of protein kinase G (PKG), Rp-8-pCPT-cGMPS, inhibited JNK1 activation by the sulindac sulfone derivatives. Expression of a dominant-negative JNK1 protein inhibited CP248-induced cleavage of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase, a marker of apoptosis. Thus, it appears that sulindac sulfone and related compounds induce apoptosis, at least in part, through activation of PKG, which then activates the MEKK1-SEK1-JNK1 cascade. These studies also indicate a role for cGMP and PKG in the JNK pathway.
Clin Cancer Res 2000 Oct
PMID:Cyclic GMP mediates apoptosis induced by sulindac derivatives via activation of c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase 1. 1105 Dec 67

The mitogen activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway is a paradigm for regulation of growth factor signaling and cellular proliferation. The MAPK pathway is a major target for signaling by growth factor receptor kinases. The MAPK pathway consists of a series of protein kinases which is activated by phosphorylation of specific amino acid residues in their regulatory domains. The MAPK family can be divided into three subgroups: the extracellular signal regulated kinases (ERKs), the stress activated protein kinase/jun N terminal kinase (SAPK/JNK), and the p38 MAPK. These kinase cascades phosphorylate transcription factor targets such as ets, c-jun, and ATF-2. Of these, little is known about the role of ATF-2 in regulation of MAPK signaling and cellular proliferation. To begin to understand this role, we overexpressed ATF-2 in a human cancer cell line. ATF-2 inhibited the G1/S phase transition of the cell cycle and decreased the proliferation rate of these cells. Decreased proliferation correlated with cell cycle independent inhibition of ERK1 expression in ATF-2 clones. Genetic and pharmacologic inhibition of ERK1 activity was sufficient to reproduce the effects of ATF-2 on cell cycle progression and proliferation. These results indicate a novel role for ATF-2 in cancer cell proliferation and suggest a potential feedback mechanism that regulates MAPK signaling.
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PMID:The transcription factor ATF-2 inhibits extracellular signal regulated kinase expression and proliferation of human cancer cells. 1106 5


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