Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0023473 (chronic myeloid leukemia)
18,916 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

P53 is renowned as a cellular tumor suppressor poised to instigate remedial responses to various stress insults that threaten DNA integrity. P53 levels and activities are kept under tight regulation involving a complex network of activators and inhibitors, which determine the type and extent of p53 growth inhibitory signaling. Within this complexity, the p53-Mdm2 negative auto-regulatory loop serves as a major route through which intra- and extra-cellular stress signals are channeled to appropriate p53 responses. Mdm2 inhibits p53 transcriptional activities and through its E3 ligase activity promotes p53 proteasomal degradation either within the nucleus or following nuclear export. Upon exposure to stress signals these actions of Mdm2 have to be moderated, or even interrupted, in order to allow sufficient p53 to accumulate in an active form. Multiple mechanisms involving a variety of factors have been demonstrated to mediate this interruption. C-Abl is a critical factor that under physiological conditions is required for the maximal and efficient accumulation of active p53 in response to DNA damage. C-Abl protects p53 by antagonizing the inhibitory effect of Mdm2, an action that requires a direct interplay between c-Abl and Mdm2. In addition, c-Abl protects p53 from other inhibitors of p53, such as the HPV-E6/E6AP complex, that inhibits and degrades p53 in HPV-infected cells. Surprisingly, the oncogenic form of c-Abl, the Bcr-Abl fusion protein in CML cells, also promotes the accumulation of wt p53. However, in contrast to the activation of p53 by c-Abl, its oncogenic form, Bcr-Abl, counteracts the growth inhibitory activities of p53 by modulating the p53-Mdm2 loop. Thus, it appears that by modulating the p53-Mdm2 loop, c-Abl and its oncogenic forms critically determine the type and extent of the cellular response to DNA damage.
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PMID:C-Abl as a modulator of p53. 1586 30

Imatinib metylase is the first choice treatment for BCR/ABL positive chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML). However, as some CML patients develop resistance to imatinib therapy, there is a significant interest in development of alternative treatment strategies, such as identifying targets other than BCR/ABL that may participate in CML. Previously, we demonstrated strong PCNA up-regulation in CML patients. To further study its role in CML pathogenesis, we performed silencing of PCNA expression followed by array experiments. PCNA inhibition led to down-regulation of CDK1, CDK4, PLK1, ERK3, JNK1, STAT5, and several inhibitors of apoptosis (DAXX, Mdm2, survivin). The following genes were up-regulated: CDK inhibitors p21 and p19-INK4D, pro-apoptotic FAST kinase, fibronectin, etc. However, as PCNA affects cell growth in naturally proliferating cells as well as in cancerous cells, it seems to act a secondary role relating to proliferation activity of leukemic cells.
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PMID:Expression analysis of PCNA gene in chronic myelogenous leukemia--combined application of siRNA silencing and expression arrays. 1707 Sep 5

Senescence and apoptosis programs governed by the Rb and p53 signaling networks can counter tissue stem cell self-renewal. A master regulator of Rb and p53 is the INK4-ARF (CDKN2A/B) locus that encodes two CDK inhibitors, p16(INK4A) and p15(INK4B), that maintain Rb in its active, hypophosphorylated form, and p14(ARF) (p19(Arf) in mice), that inhibits Mdm2 and activates p53. The INK4-ARF genes are epigenetically silenced in hematopoietic stem cells but become poised to respond to oncogenic stress as blood cells differentiate. Inactivation of INK4-ARF endows differentiated cells with an inappropriate self-renewal capacity, a defining feature of cancer cells. In BCR-ABL-induced (Philadelphia chromosome-positive [Ph(+)]) leukemias, INK4-ARF deletions frequently occur in clinically aggressive acute lymphoblastic leukemias (Ph(+) ALLs) but are not seen in more indolent Ph(+) chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) or in CML myeloid blast crisis. Mouse modeling of Ph(+) ALL reveals that Arf inactivation attenuates responsiveness to targeted BCR-ABL kinase inhibitors, enhances the maintenance of leukemia-initiating cells within the hematopoietic microenvironment, and facilitates the emergence of malignant clones that harbor drug-resistant BCR-ABL kinase mutations. Thus, although BCR-ABL mutations typify drug resistance in both CML and Ph(+) ALL, loss of INK4-ARF in Ph(+) ALL enhances disease aggressiveness and undermines the salutary effects of targeted therapy.
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PMID:The INK4-ARF (CDKN2A/B) locus in hematopoiesis and BCR-ABL-induced leukemias. 1902 87

The BCR/ABL tyrosine kinase inhibitor imatinib is highly effective for treatment of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) and Philadelphia-chromosome positive (Ph+) acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). However, relapses with emerging imatinib-resistance mutations in the BCR/ABL kinase domain pose a significant problem. Here, we demonstrate that nutlin-3, an inhibitor of Mdm2, inhibits proliferation and induces apoptosis more effectively in BCR/ABL-driven Ton.B210 cells than in those driven by IL-3. Moreover, nutlin-3 drastically enhanced imatinib-induced apoptosis in a p53-dependent manner in various BCR/ABL-expressing cells, which included primary leukemic cells from patients with CML blast crisis or Ph+ ALL and cells expressing the imatinib-resistant E255K BCR/ABL mutant. Nutlin-3 and imatinib synergistically induced Bax activation, mitochondrial membrane depolarization, and caspase-3 cleavage leading to caspase-dependent apoptosis, which was inhibited by overexpression of Bcl-XL. Imatinib did not significantly affect the nutlin-3-induced expression of p53 but abrogated that of p21. Furthermore, activation of Bax as well as caspase-3 induced by combined treatment with imatinib and nutlin-3 was observed preferentially in cells expressing p21 at reduced levels. The present study indicates that combined treatment with nutlin-3 and imatinib activates p53 without inducing p21 and synergistically activates Bax-mediated intrinsic mitochondrial pathway to induce apoptosis in BCR/ABL-expressing cells.
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PMID:Enhancement of imatinib-induced apoptosis of BCR/ABL-expressing cells by nutlin-3 through synergistic activation of the mitochondrial apoptotic pathway. 2009 98

Nucleostemin (NS) is a nucleolar-nucleoplasmic shuttle protein that regulates cell proliferation, binds p53 and Mdm2, and is highly expressed in tumor cells. We have identified NS as a target of oxidative regulation in transformed hematopoietic cells. NS oligomerization occurs in HL-60 leukemic cells and Raji B lymphoblasts that express high levels of c-Myc and have high intrinsic levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS); reducing agents dissociate NS into monomers and dimers. Exposure of U2OS osteosarcoma cells with low levels of intrinsic ROS to hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) induces thiol-reversible disulfide bond-mediated oligomerization of NS. Increased exposure to H(2)O(2) impairs NS degradation, immobilizes the protein within the nucleolus, and results in detergent-insoluble NS. The regulation of NS by ROS was validated in a murine lymphoma tumor model in which c-Myc is overexpressed and in CD34+ cells from patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia in blast crisis. In both instances, increased ROS levels were associated with markedly increased expression of NS protein and thiol-reversible oligomerization. Site-directed mutagenesis of critical cysteine-containing regions of nucleostemin altered both its intracellular localization and its stability. MG132, a potent proteasome inhibitor and activator of ROS, markedly decreased degradation and increased nucleolar retention of NS mutants, whereas N-acetyl-L-cysteine largely prevented the effects of MG132. These results indicate that NS is a highly redox-sensitive protein. Increased intracellular ROS levels, such as those that result from oncogenic transformation in hematopoietic malignancies, regulate the ability of NS to oligomerize, prevent its degradation, and may alter its ability to regulate cell proliferation.
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PMID:Reactive oxygen species regulate nucleostemin oligomerization and protein degradation. 2124 6