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Query: UMLS:C0017638 (
glioma
)
30,880
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A trypsin-degradable nerve growth factor (NGF) receptor associated with the phospholipid component of the surface membrane has been detected on F98 anaplastic
glioma
cells. NGF also bound to the nucleus of F98 cells. Bound NGF was not displaceable by insulin, cytochrome C, growth hormone, or bovine serum albumin. Specific binding of NGF occurred with a Kd of 8.79 X 10(-12) M as determined by Scatchard analysis with approximately 34,000 receptors per cell. Specific NGF binding was also evident to C6 rat
glioma
cells and IMR-32 human neuroblastoma cells, but not to 3T3 mouse fibroblasts. These observations coupled with previous findings suggest that the NGF receptor may be a marker found on cells of neural derivation. As little as 1 ng/ml NGF caused an increase in the adhesiveness of F98 cells to culture flasks. Increased adhesiveness could be observed in as little as 5 min and was apparent for at least 45 min. At 25 min in NGF-containing medium, 24 +/- 3% of the cells adhered to the flasks compared to 13 +/- 1% of control cells. The NGF-induced increase in adhesiveness was not duplicated by epidermal growth factor, insulin,
cytochrome c
, bovine serum albumin, dibutyryl cyclic AMP, or sodium butyrate. Oxidized NGF blocked the effect of native NGF, but had little or no adhesion-promoting activity itself. Pretreatment of the cells with NGF was also effective in promoting adhesion, even though nerve growth factor was not added to the binding medium. The effect of this pretreatment was reversible; when NGF-pretreated cells were grown in medium without supplemental NGF, the adhesiveness of the cells returned to control levels or lower.
...
PMID:Increased adhesion response of anaplastic glioma cells to nerve growth factor and the presence of specific receptors. 631 24
The proteasome inhibitors lactacystin and AcLLNal induced p53-independent apoptosis in two human
glioma
cell lines, and the apoptosis was accompanied by up-regulation of immunoreactive wild-type p53, p21Waf1, Mdm2, and p27Kip1. Pretreatment with cycloheximide decreased the induction of cell death independently of p53 protein status, suggesting that the up-regulation of short-lived proteins is associated with proteasome inhibitor-induced apoptosis. Caspase-3-like proteases were activated in the proteasome inhibitor-mediated apoptosis, and the induction of cell death was inhibited more effectively in the presence of z-VAD.fmk than in the presence of Ac-DEVD.fmk, suggesting that caspases other than caspase-3 are involved. Nonetheless, there were no significant alterations in levels of immunoreactive Bcl-2, Bcl-X(L), Bax, Bad, and Bak, nor any evidence of
cytochrome c
release into cytosol and dissipation of delta(psi)m. Thus, the proteasome inhibitor-induced apoptosis is mediated by a mitochondria-independent mechanism, and the once activated caspase-3 does not cause the
cytochrome c
release and the delta(psi)m disruption.
...
PMID:Proteasome inhibitors induce mitochondria-independent apoptosis in human glioma cells. 998 1
Glucocorticoids are known to influence the ability of cells to undergo apoptosis, directly inducing apoptosis in thymocytes while inhibiting it in hepatoma and carcinoma cells. Dexamethasone, a synthetic glucocorticoid, is reported to induce partial resistance to certain anticancer drugs in
glioma
cell lines. In the present study, the effect of dexamethasone on apoptosis of
glioma
and astrocytoma cell lines was investigated. Exposure of D384 human astrocytoma and C6 rat
glioma
cells to staurosporine induced apoptosis as judged by the formation of condensed nuclei and caspase activation. Pre-treatment of cells with dexamethasone caused a reduction in staurosporine-induced apoptosis. In addition, dexamethasone also conferred protection against the induction of apoptosis by anticancer agents including camptothecin and etoposide. The protective effect of dexamethasone was dose and time dependent, with maximal protection obtained with concentrations equal to or greater than 100 nM and a pre-incubation period of at least 24h. The earliest significant inhibition was seen with a pre-incubation period of 8h. Co-treatment with the glucocorticoid receptor antagonist RU38486 abolished the effect of dexamethasone, indicating that the protection due to dexamethasone is mediated via this receptor. Dexamethasone was found to induce a time-dependent up-regulation of Bcl-x(L) protein expression. However, the ability of
cytochrome c
/dATP to activate the caspase cascade in cytosolic extracts of D384 cells was unaffected by prior exposure of the cells to dexamethasone (1 microM) for 48 h. In conclusion, dexamethasone inhibits the induction of apoptosis in astrocytoma cells, probably via an up-regulation of Bcl-x(L), which could prevent
cytochrome c
release from mitochondria and subsequent caspase activation. Since glucocorticoids are often used in the treatment of gliomas to relieve cerebral oedema, the inhibition of apoptosis by these compounds could potentially interfere with the efficacy of chemotherapeutic drugs.
...
PMID:Dexamethasone pre-treatment interferes with apoptotic death in glioma cells. 1068 82
Calphostin C-mediated apoptosis in
glioma
cells was reported previously to be associated with down-regulation of Bcl-2 and Bcl-xL. In this study, we report that 100 nM calphostin C also induces translocation and integration of monomeric Bax into mitochondrial membrane, followed by
cytochrome c
release into cytosol and subsequent decrease of mitochondrial inner membrane potential (DeltaPsim) before activation of caspase-3. The integration of monomeric Bax was associated with acquirement of alkali-resistance. The translocated monomeric Bax was partly homodimerized after
cytochrome c
release and decrease of DeltaPsim. The translocation and homodimerization of Bax,
cytochrome c
release, and decrease of DeltaPsim were not blocked by 100 microM z-VAD.fmk, a pan-caspase inhibitor, but the homodimerization of Bax and decrease of DeltaPsim were inhibited by 10 microM oligomycin, a mitochondrial F0F1-ATPase inhibitor. Therefore, it would be assumed that mitochondrial release of
cytochrome c
results from translocation and integration of Bax and is independent of permeability transition of mitochondria and caspase activation, representing a critical step in calphostin C-induced cell death.
...
PMID:Calphostin C-mediated translocation and integration of Bax into mitochondria induces cytochrome c release before mitochondrial dysfunction. 1082 74
CD95L-induced apoptosis involves caspase activation and is facilitated when RNA and protein synthesis are inhibited. Here, we report that hyperthermia sensitizes malignant
glioma
cells to CD95L- and APO2L-induced apoptosis in the absence, but not in the presence, of inhibitors of RNA and protein synthesis. Hyperthermia does not alter CD95 expression at the cell surface and does not modulate the morphology of CD95-mediated cell death on electron microscopy. Bcl-2 gene transfer inhibits apoptosis and abrogates the sensitization mediated by hyperthermia. Hyperthermia does not overcome resistance to apoptosis conferred by the viral caspase inhibitor, crm-A, indicating the absolute requirement for the activation of crm-A-sensitive caspases, probably caspase 8, for apoptosis. CD95L-evoked DEVD-amc-cleaving caspase activity is enhanced by hyperthermia, suggesting that hyperthermia operates upstream of caspase processing to promote apoptosis. There is no uniformly enhanced processing of three caspase 3 substrates, poly-ADP ribose polymerase (PARP), protein kinase C (PKC) delta and DNA fragmentation factor (DFF) 45. Yet, hyperthermia promotes CD95L-evoked DNA fragmentation. Interestingly, hyperthermia enhances the CD95L-evoked release of
cytochrome c
in the absence, but not in the presence, of CHX. In contrast, the reduction of the mitochondrial membrane potential is enhanced by hyperthermia both in the absence and presence of CHX, and enhanced
cytochrome c
release is not associated with significantly enhanced caspase 9 processing. The potentiation of
cytochrome c
release at hyperthermic conditions in the absence of CHX is abrogated by Bcl-2. Thus, either hyperthermia or inhibition of protein synthesis by CHX potentiate cytotoxic cytokine-induced apoptosis. These pathways show no synergy, but rather redundance, indicating that CHX may function to promote apoptosis in response to cytotoxic cytokines by inhibiting the synthesis of specific proteins whose synthesis, function or degradation is temperature-sensitive.
...
PMID:Sensitization to CD95 ligand-induced apoptosis in human glioma cells by hyperthermia involves enhanced cytochrome c release. 1082 85
Ceramide has recently been regarded as a potential mediator of apoptosis. In the present study, the effects of Bcl-2 and Bax on the ceramide-mediated apoptotic pathways were examined in
glioma
cells overexpressing Bcl-2 or Bax. Etoposide, cisplatin and tumor necrosis factor-alpha induced apoptosis of C6 rat
glioma
cells which was associated with ceramide formation due to activation of neutral sphingomyelinase, followed by release of mitochondrial
cytochrome c
into the cytosol and activation of caspases-9 and -3. The growth of C6 cells stably overexpressing either Bcl-2 or Bax was almost equal to that of the vector-transfected cells. Bax overexpression enhanced etoposide-induced apoptosis through acceleration of
cytochrome c
release and caspases activation. However, Bax had no effect on ceramide formation. Similar findings were obtained in C6 cells and U87-MG human glioblastoma cells which were transiently overexpressed with Bax. In contrast, Bcl-2 overexpression resulted in a retardation of the apoptotic process via prevention of
cytochrome c
release and caspases activation, and ceramide formation was also blocked when Bcl-2 was highly overexpressed in
glioma
cells. In addition, transient overexpression of Bcl-xL also exerted inhibitory effects on ceramide formation and apoptotic cell death induced by etoposide. These results indicate that Bax promotes apoptosis regardless of ceramide formation and that Bcl-2 or Bcl-xL prevents ceramide formation by repressing neutral sphingomyelinase as well as ceramide-induced
cytochrome c
release. Oncogene (2000) 19, 3508 - 3520
...
PMID:Influence of Bax or Bcl-2 overexpression on the ceramide-dependent apoptotic pathway in glioma cells. 1091 9
Etoposide (VP-16) a topoisomerase II inhibitor induces apoptosis of tumor cells. The present study was designed to elucidate the mechanisms of etoposide-induced apoptosis in C6
glioma
cells. Etoposide induced increased formation of ceramide from sphingomyelin and release of mitochondrial
cytochrome c
followed by activation of caspase-9 and caspase-3, but not caspase-1. In addition, exposure of cells to etoposide resulted in decreased expression of Bcl-2 with reciprocal increase in Bax protein. z-VAD.FMK, a broad spectrum caspase inhibitor, failed to suppress the etoposide-induced ceramide formation and change of the Bax/Bcl-2 ratio, although it did inhibit etoposide-induced death of C6 cells. Reduced glutathione or N-acetylcysteine, which could reduce ceramide formation by inhibiting sphingomyelinase activity, prevented C6 cells from etoposide-induced apoptosis through blockage of caspase-3 activation and change of the Bax/Bcl-2 ratio. In contrast, the increase in ceramide level by an inhibitor of ceramide glucosyltransferase-1, D-threo-1-phenyl-2-decanoylamino-3-morpholino-1-propanol caused elevation of the Bax/Bcl-2 ratio and potentiation of caspase-3 activation, thereby resulting in enhancement of etoposide-induced apoptosis. Furthermore, cell-permeable exogenous ceramides (C2- and C6-ceramide) induced downregulation of Bcl-2, leading to an increase in the Bax/Bcl-2 ratio and subsequent activation of caspases-9 and -3. Taken together, these results suggest that ceramide may function as a mediator of etoposide-induced apoptosis of C6
glioma
cells, which induces increase in the Bax/Bcl-2 ratio followed by release of
cytochrome c
leading to caspases-9 and -3 activation.
...
PMID:Ordering of ceramide formation, caspase activation, and Bax/Bcl-2 expression during etoposide-induced apoptosis in C6 glioma cells. 1104 71
The proteasome is a multiprotein complex that is involved in the intracellular protein degradation in eukaryotes. Here, we show that human malignant
glioma
cells are susceptible to apoptotic cell death induced by the proteasome inhibitors, MG132 and lactacystin. The execution of the apoptotic death program involves the processing of caspases 2, 3, 7, 8, and 9. Apoptosis is inhibited by ectopic expression of X-linked inhibitor of apoptosis (XIAP) and by coexposure to the broad-spectrum caspase inhibitor, benzoyl-VAD-fluoromethyl ketone (zVAD-fmk), but not by the preferential caspase 8 inhibitor, crm-A. It is interesting that specific morphological alterations induced by proteasome inhibition, such as dilated rough endoplasmic reticulum and the formation of cytoplasmic vacuoles and dense mitochondrial deposits, are unaffected by zVAD-fmk. Apoptosis is also inhibited by ectopic expression of Bcl-2 or by an inhibitor of protein synthesis, cycloheximide. Further,
cytochrome c
release and disruption of mitochondrial membrane potential are prominent features of apoptosis triggered by proteasome inhibition. Bcl-2 is a stronger inhibitor of
cytochrome c
release than zVAD-fmk. XIAP and crm-A fail to modulate
cytochrome c
release. These data place
cytochrome c
release downstream of Bcl-2 activity but upstream of XIAP- and crm-A-sensitive caspases. The partial inhibition of
cytochrome c
release by zVAD-fmk indicates a positive feedback loop that may involve
cytochrome c
release and zVAD-fmk-sensitive caspases. Finally, death ligand/receptor interactions, including the CD95/CD95 ligand system, do not mediate apoptosis induced by proteasome inhibition in human malignant
glioma
cells.
...
PMID:Proteasome inhibitor-induced apoptosis of glioma cells involves the processing of multiple caspases and cytochrome c release. 1108 Jan 80
Chemotherapeutic drug-induced apoptosis of human malignant
glioma
cells involves the death receptor-independent activation of caspases other than caspases 3 or 8 (Glaser et al., Oncogene 18, 5044-5053, 1999). Here, we report that caspases 1, 2, 3, 7, 8, and 9 are constitutively expressed in most human malignant
glioma
cell lines. Cytotoxic drug-induced apoptosisinvolves delayed activation of caspases 2, 7, and 9, but not 8 and 3, and is blocked by a broad spectrum caspase inhibitor, zVAD-fmk. Cytochrome c release from mitochondria precedes caspase activation during drug-induced apoptosis and is unaffected by zVAD-fmk or ectopic expression of the viral caspase inhibitor, crm-A. In contrast, ectopic expression of BCL-X(L) prevents drug-induced
cytochrome c
release, caspase activation and cell death. Thus, cancer chemotherapy targets the mitochondrial, caspase-dependent death pathway in human malignant
glioma
cells.
...
PMID:Caspase-dependent chemotherapy-induced death of glioma cells requires mitochondrial cytochrome c release. 1118 Oct 49
During aerobic metabolism, a small amount of partially reduced oxygen is produced, yielding reactive oxygen species (ROS). Peroxisomes and mitochondria are major contributors to cellular ROS production, which is normally balanced by consumption by antioxidants. The fatty acid analogue tetradecylthioacetic acid (TTA) promotes mitochondrial and peroxisomal proliferation, and may induce oxidative stress and change the growth potential of cancer cells. In the present study, we found that TTA reduced [(3)H]thymidine incorporation in the
glioma
cell lines BT4Cn (rat), D54Mg (human), and GaMg (human) in a dose- and time-dependent manner. The 50% inhibitory TTA doses were approximately 125 microM for BT4Cn and D54Mg cells and 40 microM for GaMg cells after 4 days. alpha-Tochopherol counteracted this inhibition in GaMg cells. TTA enhanced the oxidation of [1-(14)C]palmitic acid, which could be explained by stimulation of enzymes involved in peroxisomal (fatty acyl-CoA oxidase) and/or mitochondrial (carnitine palmitoyltransferase) fatty acid oxidation. The glutathione content and the activities of glutathione peroxidase, glutathione reductase, and glutathione S-transferase were differentially affected. Increased malondialdehyde (MDA) production was seen in TTA-treated GaMg and D54Mg cells, but not in BT4Cn cells, in vitro. In BT4Cn tumor tissue from TTA-treated rats, MDA was increased while the alpha-tocopherol content tended to decrease. TTA increased the level of cytosolic
cytochrome c
in BT4Cn cells, which suggests induction of apoptotic cascades. Although several mechanisms are likely to be involved in the TTA-mediated effects on growth, we propose that modulation of cellular redox conditions caused by changes in fatty acid metabolism may be of vital importance.
...
PMID:Growth reduction in glioma cells after treatment with tetradecylthioacetic acid: changes in fatty acid metabolism and oxidative status. 1126 48
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