Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0023467 (acute myeloid leukemia)
35,200 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Chromosomal translocations in acute leukemia that affect the AML-1/CBFbeta transcription factor complex create dominant inhibitory proteins. However, the mechanisms by which these proteins act remain obscure. Here we demonstrate that the multidrug resistance 1 (MDR-1) promoter is a target for AML/ETO transcriptional repression. This repression is of basal, not activated, expression from the MDR-1 promoter and thus represents a new mechanism for AML/ETO function. We have defined two domains in AML/ETO that are required for repression of basal transcription from the MDR-1 promoter: a hydrophobic heptad repeat (HHR) motif and a conserved zinc finger (ZnF) domain termed the MYND domain. The HHR mediates formation of AML/ETO homodimers and AML/ETO-ETO heterodimers. Single serine substitutions at conserved cysteine residues within the predicted ZnFs also abrogate transcriptional repression. Finally, we observe that AML/ETO can also inhibit Ets-1 activation of the MDR-1 promoter, indicating that AML/ETO can disrupt both basal and Ets-1-dependent transcription. The fortuitous inhibition of MDR-1 expression in t(8;21)-containing leukemias may contribute to the favorable response of these patients to chemotherapeutic drugs.
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PMID:The MYND motif is required for repression of basal transcription from the multidrug resistance 1 promoter by the t(8;21) fusion protein. 958 1

Caspases are aspartate-specific cysteine proteases that play a pivotal role in drug-induced cell death. We designed RT-PCR assays to analyse the expression of CASP-3, CASP-4, CASP-6 and the long and short isoforms of CASP-2 genes in human cells. These genes heterogeneously coexpress in leukemic cell lines and bone marrow samples from patients with de novo acute myelogenous leukemia at diagnosis. Treatment of U937 and HL60 leukemic cells and HT29 colon carcinoma cells with the topoisomerase II inhibitor etoposide upregulates CASP-2 and CASP-3 genes in these cells before inducing their apoptosis. This effect of etoposide is not observed in K562 cells and bcl-2-transfected U937 cells which are less sensitive to drug-induced apoptosis. Nuclear run-on experiments demonstrate that etoposide increases CASP gene transcription in U937 cells, an effect that is prevented by Bcl-2 overexpression. Upregulation of CASP genes is associated with an enhanced synthesis of related procaspases that precedes the appearance of apoptosis markers including caspase-3 activation, poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase cleavage and internucleosomal DNA fragmentation. These results suggest that the ability of tumor cells to upregulate CASP-2 and CASP-3 genes in response to cytotoxic drugs could be predictive of their sensitivity to drug-induced apoptosis.
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PMID:Upregulation of CASP genes in human tumor cells undergoing etoposide-induced apoptosis. 967 9

Identification and characterization of genes expressed in normal cells and decreased in their malignant counterparts is an important method for detecting candidate tumor suppressors. Using differential display of mRNAs from nontumorigenic infinite life span human fibroblast cell strain MSU-1.1 and an isogenic fibrosarcoma-derived cell line, 6A/SB1, which was derived from chemical carcinogen transformed MSU-1.1 cells, we identified a novel gene, ST7, showing sixfold lower expression in 6A/SB1 cells compared with parental MSU-1.1 cells. Molecular cloning of a near full-length cDNA revealed that the novel gene encodes a putative transmembrane protein composed of 859 amino acids: the 492 N-terminal amino acids including a fivefold cysteine-rich repeat of 40 amino acids homologous to the ligand binding repeat of the known low density lipoprotein receptor, a 24 hydrophobic amino acid stretch spanning the plasma membrane, and a C-terminal domain of 343 residues. ST7 is located on human chromosome 8, band q22.2-23.1, the same locus as the genes involved in acute myeloid leukemia and a locus of high polymorphism in cancer biopsies. The ST7 gene is widely expressed in normal human tissues and is particularly abundant in human heart and skeletal muscle. Northern analysis of 15 tumor cell lines derived from patients and 16 cell lines established from tumors formed in athymic mice by MSU-1.1 cells transformed in culture by various methods showed that 16 of the 31 cell lines have low or undetectable levels of ST7 mRNA. Furthermore, Western blotting analysis using a specific anti-peptide antibody demonstrated that the level of ST7 protein is high in normal fibroblasts and low in 12 sarcoma-derived cell lines tested. Altered expression of ST7 appears to occur at both the transcriptional and post-transcriptional levels. These studies are a first step in characterizing a novel putative receptor protein, whose expression is downregulated in some malignantly transformed cells, and which may play an important role in the transformation process of these cells.
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PMID:Cloning and characterization of a novel gene encoding a putative transmembrane protein with altered expression in some human transformed and tumor-derived cell lines. 992 90

Dysregulation of apoptosis is an important mechanism in leukemogenesis. Caspases are cysteine proteases that play a major role in the activation of apoptotic pathways and chemotherapy-induced cell death. High levels of inactive, uncleaved caspase 2 and caspase 3 have recently been associated with poor survival in patients with acute myelogenous leukemia. We hypothesized a similarly significant role for caspase 2 and caspase 3 in patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. We determined levels of uncleaved caspase 2 and caspase 3 by quantitative Western blot analysis in peripheral blood samples of 45 adults with newly diagnosed ALL. We evaluated patient prognostic variables and caspase levels using multivariate logistic and Cox regression models to determine their impact on complete remission rate and overall survival probability. Levels of caspase 2 and, to a lesser degree, caspase 3 were highly associated with cytogenetic abnormalities, with lower levels in the diploid group (P = 0.016 and P = 0.10, respectively). No association between either caspase level and the percentage of bone marrow blasts was found. A high level of caspase 3 (>0.37 as determined graphically) was significantly associated with achieving complete remission (CR; P = 0.006). A multivariate logistic regression analysis including age, WBC count, percentage of peripheral and marrow blasts, hemoglobin, albumin, lactate dehydrogenase, bilirubin, and creatinine determined that a high level of caspase 3 was the most significant predictor of CR (P = 0.025, adjusted), with albumin the only other significant variable (P = 0.031). Caspase 2 levels were not associated with probability of CR. In a multivariate Cox model for survival, however, levels of caspase 2 above 0.37 were associated with a lower survival probability than were levels below that threshold (P = 0.064). High levels of caspase 3 may have a significant effect on achieving CR. Because of the limited power (n = 45) of our study, the significance of caspase 2 and caspase 3 on overall survival remains to be validated by further investigations.
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PMID:Caspase 2 and caspase 3 as predictors of complete remission and survival in adults with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. 1063 37

HePTP is a tyrosine specific protein phosphatase that is strongly expressed in activated T-cells. It was recently demonstrated that in transfected T-cells HePTP impairs TCR-mediated activation of the MAP-kinase family members ERK2 and p38 and it was suggested that both ERK and p38 MAP-kinases are substrates of HePTP. The HePTP gene has been mapped to human chromosome 1q32.1. Abnormalities in this region are frequently found in various hematopoietic malignancies. HePTP is highly expressed in acute myeloid leukemia and its expression in fibroblasts resulted in transformation. To address a possible involvement of HePTP in hematopoietic malignancies we sought to identify HePTP substrate(s) in leukemic cells. Using substrate trapping mutants we have identified the MAP-kinase ERK2 as a specific target of HePTP in the myelogenous leukemia cell line K562. Tyrosine phosphorylated ERK2, but not ERK1, p38, or JNK1, efficiently bound to catalytically inactive HePTP mutants in which the active site cysteine (HePTP-C/S) or the conserved aspartic acid residue (HePTP-D/A) had been exchanged for serine and alanine, respectively. Moreover, the interaction of ERK2 with HePTP trapping mutants was dependent on ERK2 tyrosine phosphorylation, indicating that HePTP is specifically targeted to activated ERK2. Using a deletion mutant of HePTP (HePTP-dLD), in which 14 amino acid residues within the N-terminus are missing, we show that regions outside the catalytic domain are also required for the interaction. Furthermore, overexpression of HePTP in K562 cells and fibroblasts interfered with PMA or growth factor induced MAP-kinase activation and HePTP efficiently dephosphorylated active ERK2 on the tyrosine residue in the activation loop in vitro. Together, these data identify ERK2 as a specific and direct target of HePTP and are consistent with a model in which HePTP negatively regulates ERK2 activity as part of a feedback mechanism. Oncogene (2000) 19, 858 - 869.
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PMID:The MAP-kinase ERK2 is a specific substrate of the protein tyrosine phosphatase HePTP. 1070 94

Polycythemia vera (PV) is a clonal stem cell disorder characterized by hyperproliferation of the erythroid, myeloid, and megakaryocytic lineages. Although it has been shown that progenitor cells of patients with PV are hypersensitive to several growth factors, the molecular pathogenesis of this disease remains unknown. To investigate the molecular defects underlying PV, we used subtractive hybridization to isolate complementary DNAs (cDNAs) differentially expressed in patients with PV versus normal controls. We isolated a novel gene, subsequently named PRV-1, which is highly expressed in granulocytes from patients with PV (n = 19), but not detectable in normal control granulocytes (n = 21). Moreover, PRV-1 is not expressed in mononuclear cells from patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia (n = 4) or acute myelogenous leukemia (n = 5) or in granulocytes from patients with essential thrombocythemia (n = 4) or secondary erythrocytosis (n = 4). Northern blot analysis showed that PRV-1 is highly expressed in normal human bone marrow and to a much lesser degree in fetal liver. It is not expressed in a variety of other tissues tested. Although PRV-1 is not expressed in resting granulocytes from normal controls, stimulation of these cells with granulocyte colony-stimulating factor induces PRV-1 expression. The PRV-1 cDNA encodes an open reading frame of 437 amino acids, which contains a signal peptide at the N-terminus and a hydrophobic segment at the C-terminus. In addition, PRV-1 contains 2 cysteine-rich domains homologous to those found in the uPAR/Ly6/CD59/snake toxin-receptor superfamily. We therefore propose that PRV-1 represents a novel hematopoietic receptor. (Blood. 2000;95:2569-2576)
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PMID:Cloning of PRV-1, a novel member of the uPAR receptor superfamily, which is overexpressed in polycythemia rubra vera. 1549 66

Recent studies have suggested that variations in levels of caspases, a family of intracellular cysteine proteases, can profoundly affect the ability of cells to undergo apoptosis. In this study, immunoblotting was used to examine levels of apoptotic protease activating factor-1 (Apaf-1) and procaspases-2, -3, -7, -8, and -9 in bone marrow samples (at least 80% leukemia) harvested before chemotherapy from adults with newly diagnosed acute myelogenous leukemia (AML, 42 patients) and acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL, 18 patients). Levels of each of these polypeptides varied over a more than 10-fold range between specimens. In AML samples, expression of procaspase-2 correlated with levels of Apaf-1 (R(s) = 0.52, P <.02), procaspase-3 (R(s) = 0.56, P <.006) and procaspase-8 (R(s) = 0.64, P <.002). In ALL samples, expression of procaspases-7 and -9 was highly correlated (R(s) = 0.90, P <.003). Levels of these polypeptides did not correlate with prognostic factors or response to induction chemotherapy. In further studies, 16 paired samples (13 AML, 3 ALL), the first harvested before induction therapy and the second harvested at the time of leukemia regrowth, were also examined. There were no systematic alterations in levels of Apaf-1 or procaspases at relapse compared with diagnosis. These results indicate that levels of initiator caspases vary widely among different leukemia specimens but cast doubt on the hypothesis that this variation is a major determinant of drug sensitivity for acute leukemia in the clinical setting. (Blood. 2000;96:3922-3931)
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PMID:Evaluation of Apaf-1 and procaspases-2, -3, -7, -8, and -9 as potential prognostic markers in acute leukemia. 1109 79

Nitric oxide (NO) inhibits growth and induces differentiation in acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) cells. To identify genes associated with these processes, we studied the effect of NO on AML gene expression using the technique of Representational Difference Analysis. Exposure of HL-60 cells to the NO donor DETA-NO for 24 h induced the expression of a novel gene that was named rno (regulated by nitric oxide). Treatment of HL-60 cells with dimethyl sulphoxide induced expression of rno, but treatment with Vitamin D3 or all-trans retinoic acid did not. Upregulation of rno by NO was cGMP independent. Northern blot analysis indicated that constitutive expression of the novel gene was limited to leucocytes. Three isoforms of rno were identified. An rno cDNA clone was obtained by screening a human leucocyte library. The nucleotide sequence of the open reading frame shared significant homology with that of the human ribonuclease/angiogenin inhibitor (RI). The predicted amino acid sequence indicated that, like RI, rno is leucine and cysteine rich and is comprised of a series of repetitive elements (leucine-rich repeats) that may mediate macromolecular interactions. Enhancement of expression of rno may be a component of the process by which differentiation and growth inhibition of leukaemia cells is induced by NO.
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PMID:Identification and characterization of a novel gene that is upregulated in leukaemia cells by nitric oxide. 1116 94

NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase 1 (NQO1) is an enzyme that detoxifies quinones and reduces oxidative stress. A cysteine-to-threonine (C --> T) substitution polymorphism at nucleotide 609 of the NQO1 complementary DNA (NQO1 C609T) results in a lowering of NQO1 activity. Individuals homozygous for this mutation have no NQO1 activity, and heterozygotes have low to intermediate activity compared with people with wild type. DNA samples from 493 adult de novo acute leukemia patients and 838 matched controls were genotyped for NQO1 C609T. The majority of cases were diagnosed as acute myeloid leukemia (AML) (n = 420); 67 as acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL); and 6 as other forms of acute leukemia. The frequency of cases with low or null NQO1 activity (heterozygote + homozygous mutant) was significantly higher among total acute leukemia case subjects compared with their matched controls (odds ratio [OR] = 1.49; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.17-1.89). Both ALL (OR = 1.93; 95% CI, 0.96-3.87) and AML case subjects (OR = 1.47; 95% CI, 1.13-1.90) exhibited a higher frequency of low or null NQO1 genotypes than controls. For de novo AML, the most significant effect of low or null NQO1 activity was observed among the 88 cases harboring translocations and inversions (OR = 2.39; 95% CI, 1.34-4.27) and was especially high for those harboring inv(16) (OR = 8.13; 95% CI, 1.43-46.42). These findings were confirmed in a second group of 217 de novo AML cases with known cytogenetics. Thus, inheritance of NQO1 C609T confers an increased risk of de novo acute leukemia in adults, implicating quinones and related compounds that generate oxidative stress in producing acute leukemia.
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PMID:Low NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase 1 activity is associated with increased risk of acute leukemia in adults. 1122 89

Disruptions of pathways of programmed cell death, or apoptosis, are increasingly found in malignant cells of both solid and hematologic neoplasms. Caspases belong to a family of cysteine proteases and have emerged as central regulators of the apoptotic cascade. Despite many and diverse signals that can trigger apoptosis, the execution of apoptosis appears to be uniformly mediated through activation of caspase enzymes. Inapproriate expression of caspases or malfunctions in their regulation through other pathways may also be an important step in the pathogenesis of acute leukemias. Recent studies have shown that overexpression of the inactive forms of caspases CPP32 (caspase 3) and ICH-1 (caspase 2) is frequently observed in the blasts of patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). Many other enzymes involved in apoptosis are expressed at high levels in patients with acute leukemia. Whether this signals the capacity of leukemic cells to rapid induction of apoptosis with fast reduction of the burden of disease and favorable clinical outcome, or accumulation of inactive substrates that cannot be activated by lack of cellular mechanisms to do so, requires further investigation. With the identification of many other regulators of apoptotic activity in the leukemic cells, new targets for future therapy may be identified and many new insights can be gained in understanding the biological behavior of response and resistance to therapy as well as control and relapse from minimal residual disease.
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PMID:The clinical significance of caspase regulation in acute leukemia. 1142 20


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