Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0027819 (neuroblastoma)
27,800 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Owing to their importance in normal cell division, DNA damage checkpoint and repair genes are often required for the earliest stages of embryzonic development. For example, conventional deletion of ATR, Chk1, Mad2, NBS, Rad50, BRCA1, BRCA2, or Rad51 leads to developmental arrest prior to gastrulation. While prior to arrest the number of cells extant in these embryos is low, procedures allowing rudimentary analysis of cell cycle checkpoints and genome integrity have been developed through culturing blastocysts in vitro. These procedures provide a small number of proliferating cells that can be analyzed for cell cycle progression, G2/M phase checkpoint responses, and gross chromosome abnormalities by mitotic spread preparation. Experiments such as these may help determine the essential functions of these genes in cell proliferation and early embryonic development. It is interesting to note that recently developed methods to introduce single-copy transgenes into one-cell zygotes via lentiviruses may provide a means to generate Cre/lox-conditional cell lines from these conventional knockouts.
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PMID:Analysis of cell cycle progression and genomic integrity in early lethal knockouts. 1518 55

In pediatric solid tumors, such as neuroblastoma (NB), it has been reported that the frequency of TP53 gene alterations is lower than that in adult tumors, suggesting that other tumor suppressor genes may play more important roles in the development of pediatric solid tumors. The CHK2 gene, whose product is a checkpoint kinase that plays a central role in DNA damage response and acts upstream of TP53, has been found to be mutated in a subset of Li-Fraumeni syndrome without mutations of TP53 and in some other sporadic human tumors, earmarking this serine/threonine kinase as a candidate tumor suppressor gene. Thus, we analyzed the CHK2 gene to address whether it is a candidate tumor suppressor gene for pediatric solid tumors. We screened for mutations of the CHK2 gene in 25 NB, 8 rhbdomyosarcoma, 12 Ewing sarcoma, and 26 other pediatric solid tumor cell lines as well as 77 fresh tumors including two cases of multiple cancers. Using polymerase chain reaction-single-strand conformation polymorphism (PCR-SSCP) analysis and reverse transcriptase (RT)-PCR-SSCP followed by direct sequence analysis, we detected only one missense mutation (S505T) in one NB cell line and two silent mutations in one NB cell line and one NB fresh tumor, respectively. Through RT-PCR and subcloning analysis, we detected a similar expression of the CHK2 gene in all of the NB cell lines and fresh tumors; however, we identified at least three isoforms of the CHK2 gene, two of which have not been reported previously. These results suggest that aberrations of the CHK2 gene are rare in pediatric solid tumors.
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PMID:Aberrations of the CHK2 gene are rare in pediatric solid tumors. 1594 82

Checkpoint kinase inhibitors can enhance the cancer killing action of DNA-damaging chemotherapeutic agents by disrupting the S/G(2) cell cycle checkpoints. The in vitro and in vivo effects of the Chk1/2 inhibitor AZD7762 when combined with these agents were examined using neuroblastoma cell lines with known p53/MDM2/p14(ARF) genomic status. Four of four p53 mutant lines and three of five MDM2/p14(ARF) abnormal lines were defective in G(1) checkpoint, correlating with failure to induce endogenous p21 after treatment with DNA-damaging agents. In cytotoxicity assays, these G(1) checkpoint-defective lines were more resistant to DNA-damaging agents when compared to G(1) checkpoint intact lines, yet becoming more sensitive when AZD7762 was added. Moreover, AZD7762 abrogated DNA damage-induced S/G(2) checkpoint arrest both in vitro and in vivo. In xenograft models, a significant delay in tumor growth accompanied by histological evidence of increased apoptosis was observed, when AZD7762 was added to the DNA-damaging drug gemcitabine. These results suggest a therapeutic potential of combination therapy using checkpoint kinase inhibitor and chemotherapy to reverse or prevent drug resistance in treating neuroblastomas with defective G(1) checkpoints.
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PMID:Checkpoint kinase inhibitor synergizes with DNA-damaging agents in G1 checkpoint-defective neuroblastoma. 2115 47

Neuroblastoma is a childhood cancer that is often fatal despite intense multimodality therapy. In an effort to identify therapeutic targets for this disease, we performed a comprehensive loss-of-function screen of the protein kinome. Thirty kinases showed significant cellular cytotoxicity when depleted, with loss of the cell cycle checkpoint kinase 1 (CHK1/CHEK1) being the most potent. CHK1 mRNA expression was higher in MYC-Neuroblastoma-related (MYCN)-amplified (P < 0.0001) and high-risk (P = 0.03) tumors. Western blotting revealed that CHK1 was constitutively phosphorylated at the ataxia telangiectasia response kinase target site Ser345 and the autophosphorylation site Ser296 in neuroblastoma cell lines. This pattern was also seen in six of eight high-risk primary tumors but not in control nonneuroblastoma cell lines or in seven of eight low-risk primary tumors. Neuroblastoma cells were sensitive to the two CHK1 inhibitors SB21807 and TCS2312, with median IC(50) values of 564 nM and 548 nM, respectively. In contrast, the control lines had high micromolar IC(50) values, indicating a strong correlation between CHK1 phosphorylation and CHK1 inhibitor sensitivity (P = 0.0004). Furthermore, cell cycle analysis revealed that CHK1 inhibition in neuroblastoma cells caused apoptosis during S-phase, consistent with its role in replication fork progression. CHK1 inhibitor sensitivity correlated with total MYC(N) protein levels, and inducing MYCN in retinal pigmented epithelial cells resulted in CHK1 phosphorylation, which caused growth inhibition when inhibited. These data show the power of a functional RNAi screen to identify tractable therapeutical targets in neuroblastoma and support CHK1 inhibition strategies in this disease.
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PMID:RNAi screen of the protein kinome identifies checkpoint kinase 1 (CHK1) as a therapeutic target in neuroblastoma. 2128 83

Microcephaly is a clinical characteristic for human nijmegen breakage syndrome (NBS, mutated in NBS1 gene), a chromosomal instability syndrome. However, the underlying molecular pathogenesis remains elusive. In the present study, we demonstrate that neuronal disruption of NBS (Nbn in mice) causes microcephaly characterized by the reduction of cerebral cortex and corpus callosum, recapitulating neuronal anomalies in human NBS. Nbs1-deficient neocortex shows accumulative endogenous DNA damage and defective activation of Ataxia telangiectasia and Rad3-related (ATR)-Chk1 pathway upon DNA damage. Notably, in contrast to massive apoptotic cell death in Nbs1-deficient cerebella, activation of p53 leads to a defective neuroprogenitor proliferation in neocortex, likely via specific persistent induction of hematopoietic zinc finger (Hzf) that preferentially promotes p53-mediated cell cycle arrest whilst inhibiting apoptosis. Moreover, Trp53 mutations substantially rescue the microcephaly in Nbs1-deficient mice. Thus, the present results reveal the first clue that developing neurons at different regions of brain selectively respond to endogenous DNA damage, and underscore an important role for Nbs1 in neurogenesis.
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PMID:A distinct response to endogenous DNA damage in the development of Nbs1-deficient cortical neurons. 2221 82

Nitric oxide (NO) works as a bi-modal effector of cell proliferation, inducing either the increase or decrease of cell growth when cells are exposed, respectively, to low or high NO concentrations. To get further insight into the action of NO, we tested the effect of short- and long-lived NO donors on the control of the cell cycle in human neuroblastoma NB69 cells. We demonstrated that long-time exposure of cells to NO not only decreased the expression and/or the phosphorylation of elements involved in the control of the G(1)/S transition, such as the transcriptional repressor pRb and cyclin D1, but also down-regulated systems controlling the S and G(2)/M phases, such as the phosphorylation of Cdk1(cdc2) and the expression of cyclins A and B1. Increasing concentrations of NO also induced a biphasic effect on the expression of cyclins D1, A and B1, while this effect was less pronounced for cyclin E expression, but the levels of mRNAs of those cyclins changed in a distinct and complex manner. NO also changed the phosphorylation pattern of cyclin E and decreased the levels of phospho-cyclins D1 and B1. Moreover, NO decreased the expression of the Cdk inhibitors p16(Ink4a) and p19(Ink4d), without affecting p27(Kip1). In contrast, NO induced a biphasic effect on p21(Cip1/Waf1) expression. The BRCA1/Chk1/p53 pathway mediated the upregulation of p21(Cip1/Waf1). We also demonstrated that the NO-mediated up-regulation of p21(Cip1/Waf1) was inversely correlated with the activation status of the p38MAPK pathway.
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PMID:Activation of the BRCA1/Chk1/p53/p21(Cip1/Waf1) pathway by nitric oxide and cell cycle arrest in human neuroblastoma NB69 cells. 2240 65

Following genotoxic stress, cells activate a complex signalling network to arrest the cell cycle and initiate DNA repair or apoptosis. The tumour suppressor p53 lies at the heart of this DNA damage response. However, it remains incompletely understood, which signalling molecules dictate the choice between these different cellular outcomes. Here, we identify the transcriptional regulator apoptosis-antagonizing transcription factor (AATF)/Che-1 as a critical regulator of the cellular outcome of the p53 response. Upon genotoxic stress, AATF is phosphorylated by the checkpoint kinase MK2. Phosphorylation results in the release of AATF from cytoplasmic MRLC3 and subsequent nuclear translocation where AATF binds to the PUMA, BAX and BAK promoter regions to repress p53-driven expression of these pro-apoptotic genes. In xenograft experiments, mice exhibit a dramatically enhanced response of AATF-depleted tumours following genotoxic chemotherapy with adriamycin. The exogenous expression of a phospho-mimicking AATF point mutant results in marked adriamycin resistance in vivo. Nuclear AATF enrichment appears to be selected for in p53-proficient endometrial cancers. Furthermore, focal copy number gains at the AATF locus in neuroblastoma, which is known to be almost exclusively p53-proficient, correlate with an adverse prognosis and reduced overall survival. These data identify the p38/MK2/AATF signalling module as a critical repressor of p53-driven apoptosis and commend this pathway as a target for DNA damage-sensitizing therapeutic regimens.
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PMID:AATF/Che-1 acts as a phosphorylation-dependent molecular modulator to repress p53-driven apoptosis. 2296 Jun 35

Following genotoxic stress, cells activate a complex, kinase-based signaling network to arrest the cell cycle and initiate DNA repair or apoptosis. The tumor suppressor p53 lies at the heart of this DNA damage response. p53 mediates the transactivation of both cell cycle-regulating and pro-apoptotic clusters of target genes. However, it remains incompletely understood which signaling molecules dictate the choice between these two opposing p53-dependent cellular outcomes. Over recent years, numerous regulatory mechanisms impacting on the cellular outcome of p53 signaling have been described. However, no single dominant mechanism has thus far been identified to regulate the cellular choice between p53-driven apoptosis or senescence. The transcriptional regulator AATF has recently emerged as a novel factor impacting on the cellular outcome of the p53 response. Upon genotoxic stress, cytoplasmic pools of MRLC-bound AATF are phosphorylated through the p38MAPK/MK2 checkpoint kinase complex. This AATF phosphorylation results in the disruption of cytoplasmic MRLC3:AATF complexes followed by rapid nuclear localization of AATF. Once in the nucleus, AATF binds to the PUMA, BAX and BAK promoters to repress the DNA damage-induced expression of these pro-apoptotic p53 target genes. Depletion of AATF in tumor cells results in a dramatically enhanced response to DNA-damaging chemotherapeutics, both in vitro and in vivo. Furthermore, focal copy number gains at the AATF locus in neuroblastoma correlate with adverse prognosis and reduced overall survival in this typically p53-proficient malignancy. These data identify the p38/MK2/AATF signaling pathway as a critical repressor of p53-driven apoptosis in tumor cells and implicate this signaling cascade as a novel target for chemotherapy-sensitizing therapeutic efforts.
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PMID:Putting the brakes on p53-driven apoptosis. 2298 26

Neuroblastoma is uniquely sensitive to single-agent inhibition of the DNA damage checkpoint kinase Chk1, leading us to examine downstream effectors of this pathway and identify mitotic regulator Wee1 as an additional therapeutic target in this disease. Wee1 was overexpressed in both neuroblastoma cell lines and high-risk patient tumors. Genetic or pharmacologic abrogation of Wee1 signaling results in marked cytotoxicity in 10 of 11 neuroblastoma cell lines with a median IC(50) of 300 nmol/L for the Wee1-selective small-molecule inhibitor MK-1775. Murine tumor lines derived from mice that were either heterozygous or homozygous for MycN were particularly sensitive to single-agent inhibition of Wee1 (IC(50)s of 160 and 62 nmol/L, respectively). Simultaneous pharmacologic inhibition of Chk1 and Wee1 acted in a synergistic fashion to further impede neuroblastoma cell growth in vitro, in a manner greater than the individual inhibitors either alone or combined with chemotherapy. Combination Chk1 and Wee1 inhibition also revealed in vivo efficacy in neuroblastoma xenografts. Taken together, our results show that neuroblastoma cells depend on Wee1 activity for growth and that inhibition of this kinase may serve as a therapeutic for patients with neuroblastoma.
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PMID:Combination therapy targeting the Chk1 and Wee1 kinases shows therapeutic efficacy in neuroblastoma. 2313 16

Dysregulation of cell cycle genes such as Cyclin D1 and Chk1 contributes to the undifferentiated phenotype of neuroblastoma (NB). CASZ1 functions as a tumor suppressor in NB; here we sought to determine how loss of CASZ1 contributes to cell cycle dysregulation in NB. CASZ1 restoration in NB cells delays NB cell cycle progression. The earliest changes occur within 8 h of CASZ1 restoration in SY5Y cells with a 2.8-fold increase in the level of p21, an inhibitor of Cdk2/4. By 16 h, there is a 40% decrease in the steady-state levels of Cdk6. Restoration of CASZ1 decreases Cdk2-dependent cyclins A and E protein levels and Cdk4/6-dependent Cyclin D1 protein levels. The restoration of CASZ1 resulted in a decrease in pRb phosphorylation and a significant reduction of E2F transcriptional activity. Subsequent to the changes in the G 1/S transition, induction of CASZ1 results in a decrease in Cyclin B levels and Cdc25c phosphatase levels, an upstream activator of the G 2/M regulator CyclinB:Cdk1. In addition, induction of CASZ1 results in a decrease in the levels of phospho-Chk1, a key M-phase regulatory kinase. Similar results were found in a NB cell line with MYCN amplification. Taken together, this study indicates that restoration of CASZ1 activates pRb in G 1 and inhibits the G 2/M regulators Cyclin B1 and Chk1, leading to a lengthening of NB cell cycle progression and a subsequent decrease in cell proliferation.
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PMID:CASZ1 inhibits cell cycle progression in neuroblastoma by restoring pRb activity. 2389 35


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