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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (
leukemia
)
93,477
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Adult rat dorsal root ganglion sensory neurons in culture require nerve growth factor for synthesis of substance P and calcitonin gene-related peptide but express vasoactive intestinal peptide independently of nerve growth factor. In contrast, the same neurons from newborn rats do not express detectable vasoactive intestinal polypeptide when cultured with nerve growth factor. To further explore the mechanisms regulating neuropeptide expression in these cells, I compared the effects of nerve growth factor, brain-derived neurotrophic factor, neurotrophin-3, ciliary neurotrophic factor and
leukaemia
inhibitory factor on substance P, calcitonin gene-related peptide, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide and
somatostatin
expression in rat dorsal root ganglion cultures. As with neurons from adult animals, newborn rat sensory neurons required nerve growth factor for synthesis of substance P and calcitonin gene-related peptide. This effect was independent of neuronal survival since most neurons capable of expressing these peptides appeared to survive without added neurotrophic factors. Neurons surviving in the absence of nerve growth factor also expressed vasoactive intestinal polypeptide, suggesting that nerve growth factor suppresses vasoactive intestinal polypeptide expression in immature neurons. However, nerve growth factor withdrawal after eight days' culture failed to cause vasoactive intestinal polypeptide induction which therefore appears to depend on other factors also. Neither ciliary neurotrophic factor nor
leukaemia
inhibitory factor affected peptide levels when used alone, but both inhibited nerve growth factor-stimulated expression of substance P and calcitonin gene-related peptide in adult rat neurons. They also stimulated vasoactive intestinal polypeptide expression in newborn rat neurons in the presence of nerve growth factor but not to such high levels as those seen under conditions of nerve growth factor deprivation. Neither brain-derived neurotrophic factor nor neurotrophin-3 affected peptide expression significantly.
Somatostatin
was defected in adult rat neurons, but was unaffected by neurotrophic factors. No
somatostatin
was detected in newborn rat neurons. These results suggest that in immature animals at least, the increased expression of vasoactive intestinal polypeptide seen in sensory neurons following peripheral nerve injury in vivo, could result from deprivation of target-derived nerve growth factor in combination with increased availability of ciliary neurotrophic factor or
leukaemia
inhibitory factor from the injured nerve.
...
PMID:Neuropeptide expression by newborn and adult rat sensory neurons in culture: effects of nerve growth factor and other neurotrophic factors. 751 8
Mice infected with the LP-BM5 murine
leukemia
virus mixture develop severe immunosuppression and an encephalopathy characterized by spatial learning deficits. Twelve weeks after infection of C57BL/6J mice with LP-BM5, significant (50-60%) reductions in Met-enkephalin and substance P levels were observed in the striatum, whereas
somatostatin
levels were unchanged. In addition, a 39% decrease in hypothalamic substance P concentrations was observed, with no alteration in Metenkephalin levels. The apparent selectivity of the decrease in neuropeptide concentrations indicates that a functional alteration of the primary striatal efferent neurons occurs in this infection, which may contribute to the impairment of spatial learning observed in these mice. Moreover, this decrease in striatal neuropeptide levels is similar to the neuropathological changes in basal ganglia observed in HIV-infected individuals and is consistent with previous studies suggesting that the LP-BM5-infected mouse may serve as a useful model of AIDS dementia.
...
PMID:Striatal met-enkephalin and substance P levels are decreased in mice infected with the LP-BM5 murine leukemia virus. 753 38
The regulation of human T-cell
leukemia
virus type 1 (HTLV-1) long terminal repeat gene expression is dependent on three cis-acting elements known as 21-bp repeats and the transactivator protein Tax. Mutagenesis has demonstrated that sequences in each of the 21-bp repeats can be divided into three domains designated A, B, and C. Tax stimulates the binding of CREB to the B domain, which is essential for Tax activation of HTLV-1 gene expression. In this study, we demonstrate that Tax will stimulate the binding of CREB to the HTLV-1 21-bp repeats but does not stimulate CREB binding to the consensus cyclic AMP response element (CRE) element found in the
somatostatin
promoter. However, Tax stimulates CREB binding to a consensus CRE in the context of the 21-bp repeats, indicating the importance of these sequences in stimulating CREB binding. To determine the mechanism by which Tax stimulates CREB binding and determine potential interactions between Tax and CREB, we used the mammalian two-hybrid system in conjunction with in vitro binding and gel retardation assays. Two-hybrid analysis indicated that mutations in either the basic or leucine zipper region of CREB prevented interactions with Tax. Since several studies have demonstrated that Tax will also stimulate the binding of a variety of different basic region-leucine zipper proteins to their cognate binding sites, we assayed whether chimeric proteins composed of portions of CREB and another basic region-leucine zipper protein, Jun, could be used to map domains required for interactions with Tax. These studies were possible because we did not detect in vivo or in vitro interactions between Tax and Jun. The amino acid sequence of the CREB basic region and a portion of its leucine zipper were required for both in vivo and in vitro interactions with Tax and increased binding of CREB to the 21-bp repeats in response to Tax. These studies define the domains in CREB required for both in vivo and in vitro interactions by the HTLV-1 Tax protein.
...
PMID:Chimeric proteins composed of Jun and CREB define domains required for interaction with the human T-cell leukemia virus type 1 Tax protein. 766 22
Gene expression from the human T-cell
leukemia
virus type I (HTLV-I) long terminal repeat (LTR) is mediated by three cis-acting regulatory elements known as 21-bp repeats and the transactivator protein Tax. The 21-bp repeats can be subdivided into three motifs known as A, B, and C, each of which is important for maximal gene expression in response to Tax. The B motif contains nucleotide sequences known as a cyclic AMP response element (CRE) or tax-response element which binds members of the ATF/CREB family of transcription factors. Though mutations of this element in the HTLV-I LTR eliminate tax activation, Tax will not activate most other promoters containing these CRE sites. In this study, we investigated the mechanism by which Tax activates gene expression in conjunction with members of the ATF/CREB family. We found that Tax enhanced the binding of one member of the ATF/CREB family, CREB 1, to each of the three HTLV-I LTR 21-bp repeats but not another member designated CRE-BP1 or CREB2. Tax enhanced the binding of CREB1 to nonpalindromic CRE binding sites such as those found in the HTLV-I LTR, but Tax did not enhance the binding of CREB1 to palindromic CRE binding sites such as found in the
somatostatin
promoter. This finding may help explain the failure of Tax to activate promoters containing consensus CRE sites. These studies were extended by use of the mammalian two-hybrid system. Tax was demonstrated to interact directly with CREB1 but not with other bZIP proteins, including CREB2 and Jun. Site-directed mutagenesis of both Tax and CREB1 demonstrated that the amino terminus of Tax and both the basic and the leucine zipper regions of CREB1 were required for direct interactions between these proteins both in vivo and in vitro. This interaction occurred in vivo and thus did not require the presence of the HTLV-I 21-bp repeats, as previously suggested. These results define the domains required for interaction between Tax and CREB that are likely critical for the activation of HTLV-I gene expression.
...
PMID:Protein domains involved in both in vivo and in vitro interactions between human T-cell leukemia virus type I tax and CREB. 774 88
Two cis-acting promoter elements (-108 to -100 and -49 to -33) of the mouse alpha A-crystallin gene, which is highly expressed in the ocular lens, were studied. Here we show that DE1 (-108 to -100; 5'TGACGGTG3'), which resembles the consensus cyclic AMP (cAMP)-responsive element sequence (CRE; 5'TGACGT[A/C][A/G]3'), behaves like a functional CRE site. Transfection experiments and electrophoretic mobility shift assays (EMSAs) using site-specific mutations correlated a loss of function with deviations from the CRE consensus sequence. Results of EMSAs in the presence of antisera against CREB, delta CREB, and CREM were consistent with the binding of CREB-like proteins to the DE1 sequence. Stimulation of alpha A-crystallin promoter activity via 8-bromo-cAMP, forskolin, or human T-cell
leukemia
virus type I Tax1 in transfections and reduction of activity of this site in cell-free transcription tests by competition with the
somatostatin
CRE supported the idea that DE1 is a functional CRE. Finally, Pax-6, a member of the paired-box family of transcription factors, activated the mouse alpha A-crystallin promoter in cotransfected COP-8 fibroblasts and bound to the -59 to -29 promoter sequence in EMSAs. These data provide evidence for a synergistic role of Pax-6 and CREB-like proteins for high expression of the mouse alpha A-crystallin gene in the lens.
...
PMID:Transcriptional regulation of the mouse alpha A-crystallin gene: activation dependent on a cyclic AMP-responsive element (DE1/CRE) and a Pax-6-binding site. 782 34
L-Asparaginase-induced pancreatitis is an uncommon but potentially lethal complication. An 8-year-old girl with acute lymphoblastic
leukaemia
developed acute pancreatitis following treatment with asparaginase. Clinical and laboratory improvements were evident after treatment with
somatostatin
, with no complications of pancreatitis. Induction therapy for the
leukaemia
was able to be continued and complete remission was documented during the course of pancreatitis and
somatostatin
treatment, suggesting a beneficial role of
somatostatin
in the management of asparaginase-induced pancreatitis.
...
PMID:Somatostatin therapy in L-asparaginase-induced pancreatitis. 790 15
The rat Preprotachykinin-A promoter (PPT) directs high levels of expression in dorsal root ganglia (DRG) neurons in culture either endogenously or when linked to a receptor construct. It is not active in any of the established tissue culture cell lines which we have analyzed. To search for transcriptional regulators within this promoter we have started to dissect the promoter into individual elements to determine their function. A DNA element which had previously been suggested to regulate transcription from DNA sequence analysis of the rat PPT promoter occurs at position -200 relative to the major start of transcription within the PPT promoter. The equivalent element from the bovine PPT promoter had previously been proposed to be a cAMP responsive element (CRE). The sequence of this enhancer has similarities with both the AP1 and CRE DNA consensus sequences. We have demonstrated that one copy of this rat PPT element linked to a heterologous basal promoter will enhance transcription in HeLa and PC12 cell lines as well as adult rat DRG neurons grown in culture. It is also demonstrated that the rat PPT element will bind proteins in HeLa nuclear extract distinct from those binding to the well-characterized Gibbon Ape
Leukemia
Virus (GALV) AP1 or
somatostatin
CRE sites by gel retardation analysis. This PPT element, when cloned in a heterologous reporter construct, although showing properties of both AP1 and CRE elements, was functionally distinguished from both the
somatostatin
CRE element and the GALV AP1 enhancer when these elements were tested in the same reporter construct. This PPT element has a constitutive level of activity in adult rat DRG neurons, which is fivefold higher than that driven by the reporter construct promoter. It is also significantly different from the same reporter construct linked to the
somatostatin
CRE and analyzed in DRG neurons.
...
PMID:An activator element within the preprotachykinin-A promoter. 803 84
Gene expression from the human T-cell
leukemia
virus type I (HTLV-I) long terminal repeat (LTR) is mediated by three cis-acting regulatory elements known as 21-base pair (bp) repeats in addition to the transactivator protein Tax. Each of the 21-bp repeats contain nucleotide sequences which are homologous to a cAMP response element (CRE) which bind members of the ATF/CREB family of transcription factors. In this study, we investigated whether CREB alone or in the presence of Tax was able to induce DNA structural changes when bound to CRE sites in the HTLV-I 21 bp, the cellular
somatostatin
promoter, or a hybrid CRE construct comprised of both the
somatostatin
and 21-bp repeat sequences. Circular permutation analysis indicated that CREB was able to induce DNA flexure upon binding to each of these elements. However, phasing analysis, which is a more sensitive method to determine the degree and orientation of directed DNA bending, demonstrated that CREB induced DNA bending of the HTLV-I 21-bp repeat and the hybrid CRE but not the
somatostatin
CRE. The addition of Tax did not change CREB-mediated bending of the 21-bp repeat or the hybrid CRE although it markedly increased the amount of CREB bound to each of these DNA elements. These results indicate that sequence motifs flanking the CRE in the 21-bp repeat are critical for inducing DNA structural changes and that these changes are likely important in mediating Tax activation of the HTLV-I LTR.
...
PMID:cAMP-response element-binding protein induces directed DNA bending of the HTLV-I 21-base pair repeat. 861 46
The regulation of human T-cell
leukemia
virus type 1 (HTLV-1) gene expression is dependent on three cis-acting elements, known as the 21-bp repeats, in the long terminal repeat. Each of the 21-bp repeats contains a nonpalindromic cyclic AMP response element (CRE) sequence which is capable of binding members of the ATF/CREB family of transcription factors. The HTLV-1 transactivator protein Tax is able to markedly stimulate the in vitro binding of CREB to the CRE sites present in each of the 21-bp repeats but not to CRE sites present in cellular promoters. The ability to Tax to stimulate CREB binding to different CRE sites correlates with the ability of Tax to activate gene expression from these sites. We wished to determine how sequence differences between the
somatostatin
CRE and the 21-bp repeat were involved in this different response to Tax. Scatchard analysis indicated that CREB bound to the
somatostatin
CRE with a single class of high-affinity binding while CREB bound to the 21-bp repeats with a biphasic binding pattern, indicating the presence of both low- and high-affinity binding. Tax increased the affinity of CREB binding but not that of another ATF/CREB protein, CREB2, to the 21-bp repeat. However, Tax did not increase affinity of binding of CREB to the
somatostatin
CRE. To determine the mechanism by which Tax increased dCREB binding affinity, immobilized oligonucleotides corresponding to either the 21-bp repeat or the
somatostatin
CRE were used to demonstrate that Tax formed a highly specific complex with CREB on the 21-bp repeat but not on the
somatostatin
CRE. These results indicate that formation of a complex between Tax and CREB results in specific high-affinity binding of this ternary complex to the HTLV-1 21 bp repeats.
...
PMID:Complex formation between CREB and Tax enhances the binding affinity of CREB for the human T-cell leukemia virus type 1 21-base-pair repeats. 864 26
Paediatric oncology continues to search for improved methods for the early detection and effective treatment of solid tumours, especially those of the nervous system, which constitute 50% of all solid tumours in children and adolescents. These tumours, including neuroblastoma, meningioma, low-grade astrocytoma and medulloblastoma express
somatostatin
receptors and can be imaged effectively using 111In-octreotide. In addition to improved imaging techniques,
somatostatin
analogues are being developed for use in radioreceptor-guided surgery, as a component of adjuvant chemotherapy and for supportive treatment. Radioreceptor-guided surgery utilises 125I-Tyr3-octreotide or 125I-lanreotide to detect tumour foci within minutes of injection. It allows the detection of 0.1-1.0 mg tumour (1 x 10(5) to 1 x 10(6) tumour cells). This technique has successfully located foci of occult tumour in children with neuroblastoma.
Somatostatin
analogues are also currently being studied as tumour growth inhibitors between regular chemotherapy cycles and for the treatment of chemotherapy-induced pancreatitis in children with
leukaemia
. Research on somatostatin receptor subtype expression in paediatric tumours suggests that further investigation of analogue effects on growth inhibition and induction of differentiation will contribute to improved therapy for children with solid tumours.
...
PMID:Clinical use of somatostatin analogues in paediatric oncology. 881 66
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