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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (
leukemia
)
93,477
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Treatment of human myeloid leukemia K562 cells with the serine/threonine protein phosphatases inhibitor okadaic acid induced mitotic arrest followed by apoptosis in a synchronized manner. The effect was observed at drug concentrations that inhibited the
protein phosphatase
type 2A but not type 1. We investigated whether apoptosis was a consequence of the preceding mitosis arrest or was induced independently by okadaic acid. We found that (1) apoptosis, but not mitotic arrest, was inhibited in cells with constitutive expression of Bcl-2; (2) pretreatment of cells with the DNA synthesis inhibitor hydroxyurea blocked the mitotic arrest but not the apoptosis mediated by okadaic acid; (3) down-regulation of c-myc gene was associated with apoptosis, but not with mitotic arrest; and (4) inhibition of protein synthesis abrogated mitotic arrest, but not apoptosis. The results suggest that inhibition of protein phosphatase 2A by okadaic acid provokes mitotic arrest and apoptosis of
leukemia
cells by independent mechanisms.
...
PMID:Apoptosis and mitotic arrest are two independent effects of the protein phosphatases inhibitor okadaic acid in K562 leukemia cells. 1038 76
Protein kinase C activators and microtubule-damaging drugs stimulate BCL2 phosphorylation, which has been associated with either enhancement or inhibition of cell viability. In a Burkitt lymphoma cell line, both types of agents likewise stimulated phosphorylation of myeloid cell
leukemia
1 (MCL1), another viability-promoting BCL2 family member. However, while MCL1 phosphorylation induced by the protein kinase C activator, 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA), did not affect its electrophoretic mobility, microtubule-damaging agents, such as taxol, induced MCL1 phosphorylation associated with a band shift to decreased mobility. Inhibitors of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) activation blocked TPA-induced MCL1 phosphorylation but not the taxol-induced band shift. TPA-induced MCL1 phosphorylation occurred rapidly and was not associated with decreased viability, while the taxol-induced band shift occurred upon extended exposure as cells accumulated in G(2)/M followed by cell death. Protein phosphatase 1/2A inhibitors also induced the MCL1 band shift/phosphorylation. Thus, MCL1 undergoes two distinct types of phosphorylation: (i) TPA-induced, ERK-associated phosphorylation, which does not alter the electrophoretic mobility of MCL1, and (ii) ERK-independent phosphorylation, which results in an MCL1 band shift and is induced by events in G(2)/M or
protein phosphatase
1/2A inhibitors.
...
PMID:Myeloid cell leukemia 1 is phosphorylated through two distinct pathways, one associated with extracellular signal-regulated kinase activation and the other with G2/M accumulation or protein phosphatase 1/2A inhibition. 1077 89
The protozoan parasite Theileria (spp. parva and annulata) infects bovine leukocytes and provokes a
leukaemia
-like disease in vivo. In this study, we have detected a type 1 serine/threonine phosphatase activity with phosphorylase a as a substrate, in protein extracts of parasites purified from infected B lymphocytes. In contrast to this type 1 activity, dose response experiments with okadaic acid (OA), a well characterised inhibitor of type 1 and 2A protein phosphatases, indicated that type 2A is the predominant activity detected in host B cells. Furthermore, consistent with polycation-specific activation of the type 2A phosphatase, protamine failed to activate the parasite-associated phosphorylase a phosphatase activity. Moreover, inhibition of phosphorylase a dephosphorylation by phospho-DARPP-32, a specific type 1 inhibitor, clearly demonstrated that a type 1 phosphatase is specifically associated with the parasite, while the type 2A is predominantly expressed in the host lymphocyte. Since an antibody against bovine catalytic
protein phosphatase
1 (PP1) subunit only recognised the PP1 in B cells, but not in parasite extracts, we conclude that in parasites the PP1 activity is of parasitic origin. Intriguingly, since type 1 OA-sensitive phosphatase activity has been recently described in Plasmodium falciparum, we can conclude that these medically important parasites produce their one PP1.
...
PMID:A Theileria parva type 1 protein phosphatase activity. 1098 53
The sphingolipid ceramide is an important second signal molecule that regulates diverse signaling pathways involving apoptosis, cell senescence, the cell cycle, and differentiation. For the most part, ceramide's effects are antagonistic to growth and survival. Interestingly, ceramide and the pro-growth agonist, diacylglycerol (DAG) appear to be regulated simultaneously but in opposite directions in the sphingomyelin cycle. While ceramide stimulates signal transduction pathways that are associated with cell death or at least are inhibitory to cell growth (eg stress-activated protein kinase, SAPK, pathways), DAG activates the classical and novel isoforms of the protein kinase C (PKC) family. These PKC isoforms are associated with cell growth and cell survival. Furthermore, DAG activation of PKC stimulates other signal transduction pathways that support cell proliferation (eg mitogen-activated protein kinase, MAPK, pathways). Thus, ceramide and DAG generation may serve to monitor cellular homeostasis by inducing pro-death or pro-growth pathways, respectively. The production of ceramide is emerging as a fixture of programmed cell death. Ceramide levels are elevated in response to diverse stress challenges including chemotherapeutic drug treatment, irradiation, or treatment with pro-death ligands such as tumor necrosis factor alpha, TNF alpha. Consistent with this notion, ceramide itself is a potent apoptogenic agent. Ceramide activates stress-activated protein kinases like c-jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) and thus affects transcription pathways involving c-jun. Ceramide activates protein phosphatases such as
protein phosphatase
1 (PP1) and protein phosphatase 2 (PP2A). Ceramide activation of protein phosphatases has been shown to promote inactivation of a number of pro-growth cellular regulators including the kinases PKC alpha and Akt, Bcl2 and the retinoblastoma protein. A new role has recently emerged for ceramide in the regulation of protein synthesis. Ceramide-induced activation of double-stranded RNA-dependent protein kinase (PKR), a protein kinase important in anti-viral host defense mechanisms and recently implicated in cellular stress pathways, results in the inhibition of protein synthesis as a prelude to cell death. Taken together, these properties of ceramide suggest that this important second-signal molecule may have useful properties as an anti-neoplastic agent. Thus, strategies to promote ceramide metabolism or use of ceramide analogs directly may one day become useful in the treatment of diseases like
leukemia
.
Leukemia
2001 Aug
PMID:Ceramide regulates cellular homeostasis via diverse stress signaling pathways. 1148 May 55
Adult T-cell leukemia (ATL) is an aggressive malignancy of CD4(+) T cells caused by the human T-cell
leukemia
virus type 1 (HTLV-1). The viral leukemogenesis is critically dependent on its oncoprotein Tax because the protein as well as the virus can immortalize primary human lymphocytes to permanent growth. As a transcriptional transactivator, Tax can stimulate the expression of distinct cellular genes. Alterations in the expression levels of unknown growth-relevant genes may contribute to the changed growth properties of Tax-immortalized and leukemic cells. To identify genes that are linked to Tax transformation and ATL leukemogenesis, this study systematically compared the gene expression of cultured cells from patients with acute ATL with that of stimulated peripheral blood T lymphocytes. Several overexpressed RNAs that encode signal transduction functions were identified. These include a dual-specific
protein phosphatase
(PAC1), an interferon-inducible factor (ISG15), a basic helix-loop-helix transcription factor (DEC-1), and the secreted antiapoptotic chemokine I-309. The ATL cell culture supernatants contained an antiapoptotic activity that could be specifically inhibited by antibodies directed against I-309. Inhibition of I-309 receptor (CCR8) signaling by pertussis toxin increased the apoptosis rate of ATL cell cultures in the presence and absence of external apoptotic stimuli. Both the I-309--specific antiapoptotic activity and the proapoptotic effect of inhibitors of I-309 signaling suggest the existence of an antiapoptotic autocrine loop in ATL cells. Thus, the overexpression of this chemokine may inhibit apoptosis in ATL cells and could substantially contribute to their growth. (Blood. 2001;98:1150-1159)
...
PMID:Autocrine antiapoptotic stimulation of cultured adult T-cell leukemia cells by overexpression of the chemokine I-309. 1149 64
Salvicine is a novel topoisomerase II inhibitor possessing significant antitumor activity, both in vitro and in vivo. The antitumor effect of salvicine is associated with its ability to induce tumor cell apoptosis. Telomerase plays an important role in the apoptotic pathway. However, little is known about the mechanisms of telomerase regulation during apoptosis induced by anticancer drugs. This study investigated the regulation of telomerase activity in salvicine-induced human
leukemia
HL-60 cell apoptosis. Salvicine treatment resulted in HL-60 cell apoptosis and down-regulation of telomerase activity in a time- and concentration-dependent manner. Repression of telomerase activity preceded a decrease in expression of the telomerase catalytic subunit (hTERT) and telomerase-associated protein (TP1) at the mRNA level, suggesting that the salvicine-induced decrease in telomerase activity may be additionally regulated by mechanisms other than telomerase subunit transcription. We observed that okadaic acid (OA), a
protein phosphatase
inhibitor, prevented the induction of apoptosis and the down-regulation of telomerase activity by salvicine. The significant increase in protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) activity induced by salvicine treatment was blocked completely by OA. Moreover, although salvicine induced HL-60 cell apoptosis in a caspase-3-dependent manner, a specific caspase-3 inhibitor, Z-DEVD-FMK, did not prevent a decrease in telomerase activity or an increase in PP2A activity in apoptotic HL-60 cells, ruling out a role for caspase-3 in PP2A activation by salvicine. The results collectively suggest that the salvicine-induced decline in telomerase activity is not a consequence of HL-60 cell apoptosis and that it may be caused principally by the dephosphorylation of telomerase components mediated by PP2A activation.
...
PMID:Down-regulation of telomerase activity via protein phosphatase 2A activation in salvicine-induced human leukemia HL-60 cell apoptosis. 1244 57
1. Our previous studies revealed that the immunosuppressive agent, FTY720, mainly induces mitochondria-involved apoptosis in some types of cancer cells, since Bcl-2 overexpression prevents the FTY720-induction of apoptotic stimuli. Furthermore, FTY720 induces G0/G1 cell cycle arrest. The present study further examines the correlation between intracellular signaling kinases with FTY720-induced mitochondria-involved apoptosis. 2. Human T cell
leukemia
Jurkat was exposed to FTY720. Dephosphorylation of Akt occurred in a time- and concentration-dependent manner. FTY720 also induced Bad (Ser(136)) and ribosomal p70S6 kinase (p70(S6k)) (Thr(389)) dephosphorylation. 3. FTY720-induced Akt dephosphorylation was not because of Akt upstream phosphatidylinositol 3'-kinase (PI 3-kinase) pathway inhibition. 4. FTY720 also induced Akt dephosphorylation in human B cell
leukemia
BALL-1. BALL-1 cells were resistant to FTY720-induced apoptosis. 5. Okadaic acid (OA) inhibited the FTY720-induced dephosphorylation of Akt and p70(S6k), suggesting that FTY720 promotes Ser/Thr
protein phosphatase
(PP) activity. 6. OA partially inhibited FTY720-induced caspase-3 activation. 7. PP2A or PP2A-like phosphatase was temporarily activated in cells exposed to FTY720. In addition, FTY720 activated purified PP2A (ABC). 8. Overall, the results suggest that FTY720 activated PP2A or PP2A-like phosphatase and dephosphorylated Akt pathway factors resulting in the enhancement of apoptosis via mitochondria.
...
PMID:A novel immunosuppressive agent FTY720 induced Akt dephosphorylation in leukemia cells. 1271 31
Deoxycytidine kinase (dCK) is a key enzyme in the intracellular metabolism of deoxynucleosides and their analogues, phosphorylating a wide range of drugs used in the chemotherapy of
leukaemia
and solid tumours. Previously, we found that activity of dCK can be enhanced by incubating primary cultures of lymphocytes with substrate analogues of the enzyme, as well as with various genotoxic agents. Here we present evidence that exposure of human lymphocytes to 0.5-2 Gy dosage of gamma-radiation as well as incubation of cells with calyculin A, a potent inhibitor of
protein phosphatase
1 and 2A, both elevate dCK activity without changing the level of dCK protein. When cells were gamma-irradiated in the presence of calyculin A, a more pronounced activation of dCK was observed. In contrast, both basal and stimulated dCK activities were reduced by hyperosmotic treatment of the cells. DNA repair determined by the Comet assay and by thymidine incorporation was induced by irradiation. Complete repair of gamma-irradiated DNA was detected within 1 hr following the irradiation along with dCK activation, but the rate of repair was not accelerated by calyculin A. These data provide evidence for the activation of dCK upon DNA damage and repair that seems to be mediated by phosphorylation of the enzyme, suggesting the role of dCK in DNA repair processes.
...
PMID:Activation of deoxycytidine kinase by gamma-irradiation and inactivation by hyperosmotic shock in human lymphocytes. 1278 83
Interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha)-2b is known to have antiproliferative effects on hematological malignant cells, especially chronic myelogenous
leukaemia
(CML). However, it can induce cytogenetical remissions in a very small percentage of the patients. Also during interferon therapy, resistance can emerge in the CML clones. K562 is an in vitro model cell line transformed from a Ph positive CML patient. It can be induced to differentiate to granulocytic and/or monocytic lineages with certain molecules. IFN-alpha-2b generally exerts its effects on CML cells by Janus family kinases (Jak/Stat) pathway, mostly through tyrosine kinase system. However, there is almost no data on the relevance of serine/threonine (Ser/Thr)
protein phosphatase
(PP) system in the interferon induced signal transduction pathways. In this study, we investigated serine/threonine protein phosphatases in the IFN-alpha-2b induced K562 cytotoxicity. Trypan blue dye exclusion test and MTT assay were utilised for determining cytotoxicity. IC(50) of IFN-alpha-2b on K562 cells was found to be 600IU/ml. However, no differentiation was determined by analysis of cell surface antigen expressions. Serine/threonine protein phosphatase inhibitors calyculin A (Cal A) and okadaic acid (OKA) augmented the IFN-alpha-2b induced cytotoxicity. Apoptosis assay by the mono-oligonucleosome detection and acridine orange/propidium iodide dye revealed marked apoptosis underlying cytotoxicity. Phosphatase enzyme assay revealed a gradual increase in protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) activity during interferon induced cytotoxicity. Conversely, immunoblots showed no change in the expression of PP2A catalytic and regulatory subunits. In conclusion, PP2A plays a role in IFN-alpha-2b induced apoptosis of K562 cells and should be investigated as a new window furthermore.
...
PMID:Involvement of protein phosphatase 2A in interferon-alpha-2b-induced apoptosis in K562 human chronic myelogenous leukaemia cells. 1280 29
Benthic cyanobacteria from aquatic environments have been reported to produce biologically active metabolites. However, the toxicity and other biological activities of benthic cyanobacteria from the Baltic Sea are not well known. We determined the biological activities of 21 Anabaena, Calothrix, Nodularia, Nostoc, and Phormidium strains isolated from benthic littoral habitats of the Baltic Sea. We studied whether benthic cyanobacterial extracts caused cytotoxicity by necrosis or induced apoptosis in two mammalian cell lines, a human
leukemia
cell line (HL-60) and a mouse fibroblast cell line (3T3 Swiss), and examined potential hepatotoxin (microcystin and nodularin) production. Five of the six benthic Anabaena strains, one of the two Nostoc strains, and two of the three Nodularia strains were highly cytotoxic to human
leukemia
cells. The Calothrix and Phormidium strains did not cause LDH leakage, but the extract of Phormidium strain BECID15 induced apoptosis in the HL-60 cells. Neither the microcystin synthetase E (mcyE) nor the nodularin synthetase F (ndaF) gene was amplified by PCR, and no microcystins or nodularins were detected by the
protein phosphatase
inhibition assay from the cyanobacterial strains included in this study. This indicates that benthic Baltic cyanobacteria contain potentially harmful cytotoxic compounds even though they do not produce microcystins or nodularins. These cytotoxic compounds remain to be characterized, and the mechanisms of cytotoxicity need to be studied further.
...
PMID:Benthic cyanobacteria from the Baltic Sea contain cytotoxic Anabaena, Nodularia, and Nostoc strains and an apoptosis-inducing Phormidium strain. 1589 66
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