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Query: UMLS:C0029463 (
osteosarcoma
)
16,637
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Activation of Cdc2, is the universal event controlling the onset of mitosis. In higher eukaryotes, Cdc2 activity is in part regulated by inhibitory phosphorylation of Thr14 and Tyr15, catalyzed by Wee1 and Myt1, which prevents catastrophic premature entry into mitosis. In this study we defined the function of Myt1 by overexpression studies in both S. pombe and a human
osteosarcoma
cell line. Similar to Wee1, overexpression of human Myt1 prevented entry into mitosis in both cell types; however, Myt1 catalytic activity was not essential for the cell cycle delay observed with human cells. Myt1 expression was restricted to proliferating cells. Furthermore, we detected no major decline in Myt1 protein abundance prior to the entry into mitosis, which coincides with the loss of Myt1 activity. We localized mitotic phosphoepitopes, recognized by the monoclonal antibody MPM-2, to the C-terminal domain of Myt1. The mitotic peptidyl-prolyl isomerase, Pin1, was able to associate with this domain in a phosphorylation-dependent manner. Truncation of the C-terminal domain of Myt1 prevented its ability to induce G(2)/M phase arrest in overexpression studies in human cells and dramatically reduced its ability to phosphorylate Cdc2 in vitro. We demonstrate that the C-terminal domain of Myt1 was required for recruitment of Cdc2, and we infer that this domain lies in the cytoplasm because it can interact with and is phosphorylated by Cdc2. In conclusion, we propose that Myt1 can negatively regulate Cdc2/
cyclin B1
and inhibit G(2)/M progression by two means, both of which require the C-terminal domain; first, Myt1 can bind and sequester Cdc2/
cyclin B1
in the cytoplasm preventing entry into the nucleus, and, second, it can phosphorylate associated Cdc2/
cyclin B1
at Thr14 and Tyr15 thus inhibiting its catalytic activity.
...
PMID:The C-terminal domain of the Cdc2 inhibitory kinase Myt1 interacts with Cdc2 complexes and is required for inhibition of G(2)/M progression. 1050 41
Progression through the cell cycle and redirection of cells towards programmed cell death (apoptosis) are tightly inter-related processes. However the requirement for tissue and cell type specificity suggests that a wide variety of mechanisms are used to achieve the same purpose. To examine this issue, we investigated cell cycle (c-myc, p53, p21/WAF) and apoptosis related (bcl-2, bcl-X(L), bax-alpha) gene expression in two cell lines of very different origin under proliferating and apoptosis-inducing conditions. Transformed human
osteosarcoma
cells (MG63) and non-transformed human kidney embryonal fibroblasts (293-0) were kept in culture in medium containing 10% FCS and growth arrest was induced by the addition of 50 ng/ml colcemid. Colcemid treatment caused growth arrest and elevated expression of
cyclin B1
protein in both cell lines. Apoptosis was significantly elevated in both cell lines after colcemid exposure for at least one cell cycle. However the pattern of expression of cell cycle and apoptosis related genes, determined by RT-PCR, was quite different between the two cell lines during exponential growth and cell cycle arrest. Colcemid treatment did not markedly influence c-myc, p53 and p21/WAF expression in MG63 cells but did suppress c-myc and increase p21/WAF in 293-0 cells. Furthermore colcemid treated MG63 cells exhibited elevated bcl-2 and bax-alpha expression while similar treatment of 293-0 cells resulted in decreased bcl-X(L) and slightly increased bax-alpha expression. While growth arrest and apoptosis were induced in both MG63 and 293 cells following colcemid treatment, the differences in gene expression suggest that the mechanism by which these cells determine cell fate is quite different and may determine the sensitivity of different cell populations to anti-neoplastic drug therapy. The distinct patterns of gene expression should be carefully defined before mechanisms of apoptotic cell death are studied.
...
PMID:Expression of apoptosis and cell cycle related genes in proliferating and colcemid arrested cells of divergent lineage. 1072 74
The cytotoxic activity of the imidazoacridinone C1311 was assessed on two ovarian cancer cell lines (A2780, OAW42) and one
osteogenic sarcoma
cell line (U2-OS) and their sublines (A2780Cp8, OAW42-MER and U2-OS-R) with experimentally induced resistance to cisplatin. A 1-h exposure to C1311 significantly inhibited the growth of all cell lines, with IC50 values ranging from 0.50 +/-0.11 to 4.10+/-0.36 microM. No or only partial cross-resistance was found between C1311 and cisplatin in the different cell lines. Treatment with equitoxic (IC50) C1311 concentrations consistently induced accumulation of cells in the G2M phase. The
cyclin B1
-associated p34(cdc2) kinase activity in cells arrested in G2M was superimposable to that of control cells in the OAW42-MER and U2-OS cell lines, whereas a reduction of cdc2 catalytic activity was observed in OAW42 and U2-OS-R cells. Exposure to C1311 (IC50) induced apoptosis in the U2-OS and U2-OS-R cell lines, whereas in the OAW42 and OAW42-MER cell lines there was a negligible percentage of apoptotic cells. In U2-OS, U2-OS-R and OAW42 cells, C1311 induced an increase in p53 expression and an increase in p21waf1 protein, whereas p53 failed to transactivate p21waf1 in OAW42-MER cells. An almost complete abrogation of bcl-2 was observed in U2-OS-R cells in correspondence with the peak of apoptosis induction. Our results indicate that C1311 is active against human ovarian cancer and
osteogenic sarcoma
cells and is not cross-resistant with CDDP. Moreover, C1311 blocks cells in the G2M phase and induces apoptosis in a small percentage of
osteogenic sarcoma
cells.
...
PMID:Cell growth inhibition, G2M cell cycle arrest and apoptosis induced by the imidazoacridinone C1311 in human tumour cell lines. 1157 53
Earlier we have found that in p53-deficient cells the expression of activated Ras attenuates the DNA damage-induced arrest in G(1) and G(2). In the present work we studied Ras-mediated effects on the G(2) checkpoint in two human cell lines, MDAH041 immortalized fibroblasts and Saos-2
osteosarcoma
cells. The transduction of the H-Ras mutants that retain certain functions (V12S35, V12G37, and V12C40 retain the ability to activate Raf or RalGDS or phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase, respectively) as well as the activated or dominant-negative mutants of RalA (V23 and N28, respectively) has revealed that the activation of Ras-RalGEFs-Ral pathway was responsible for the attenuation of the G(2) arrest induced by ethyl metanesulfonate or doxorubicin. Noteworthy, the activated RalA V23N49 mutant, which cannot interact with RLIP76/RalBP1 protein, one of the best studied Ral effectors, retained the ability to attenuate the DNA damage-induced G(2) arrest. Activation of the Ras-Ral signaling affected neither the level nor the intracellular localization of
cyclin B1
and CDC2 but interfered with the CDC2 inhibitory phosphorylation at Tyr(15) and the decrease in the cyclin B/CDC2 kinase activity in damaged cells. The revealed function of the Ras-Ral pathway may contribute to the development of genetic instability in neoplastic cells.
...
PMID:Activation of Ras-Ral pathway attenuates p53-independent DNA damage G2 checkpoint. 1520 5
Recent evidence suggests that inflammatory cytokines and growth factors contribute to arsenite (As)-induced human carcinogenesis. We investigated the expression of inflammatory cytokine mRNAs during the transformation process induced by chronic As exposure in non-tumorigenic human
osteogenic sarcoma
(N-HOS) cells using gene arrays, and results were confirmed by RT-PCR and protein arrays. Caffeic acid phenethyl ester (CAPE), a naturally occurring immunomodulating agent, was used to evaluate the role of inflammatory factors in the process of As-mediated N-HOS cell transformation and in As-transformed HOS (AsT-HOS) cells. We found that an 8-week continuous exposure of N-HOS to 0.3 microM arsenite resulted in HOS cell transformation. That exposure also caused substantial decreases in inflammatory cytokine mRNAs, such as interleukin (IL) IL-1alpha, IL-2, IL-8, IL-18, MCP-1, TGF-beta2, and TNF-alpha, while it increased c-jun mRNA in a time-dependent manner. Co-incubation of N-HOS with As and CAPE (0.5-2.5 microM) prevented As-mediated declines in cytokine mRNAs in the co-treated cells, as well as their transformation to anchorage independence, while it caused decreases in c-jun mRNA. CAPE (up to 10 microM) had no effect on growth of N-HOS cells. However, CAPE (1-10 microM) treatment of AsT-HOS cells inhibited cell growth, induced cell cycle G2/M arrest, and triggered apoptosis, accompanied by changes in cytokine gene expression, as well as decreases in
cyclin B1
and cdc2 abundance. Resveratrol (RV) and (-)(.) epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG), preventive agents present in grapes and green tea, respectively, induced similar changes in AsT-HOS cell growth but required much higher doses than CAPE to cause 50% growth arrest (<2.5 microM CAPE versus 25 microM RV or 50 microM EGCG). Overall, our findings suggest that inflammatory cytokines play an important role in the suppressive effects of CAPE on As-induced cell transformation and in the selective cytotoxicity of CAPE to As-transformed HOS cells.
...
PMID:Caffeic acid phenethyl ester (CAPE) prevents transformation of human cells by arsenite (As) and suppresses growth of As-transformed cells. 1608 47
Cell cycle analysis using flow cytometry (FC) to measure cellular DNA content is a common procedure in drug mechanism of action studies. Although this technique lends itself readily to cell lines that grow in suspension, adherent cell cultures must be resuspended in a cumbersome and potentially invasive procedure that normally involves trypsinization and mechanical agitation of monolayer cultures. High-content analysis (HCA), an automated microscopy-based technology, is well suited to analysis of monolayer cell cultures but provides intrinsically less accurate determination of cellular DNA content than does FC and thus is not the method of choice for cell cycle analysis. Using Cellomics's ArrayScan reader, the authors have developed a 4-color multiparametric HCA approach for cell cycle analysis of adherent cells based on detection of DNA content (4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole [DAPI] fluorescence), together with the known cell cycle markers bromo-2-deoxyuridine (BrdU) incorporation,
cyclin B1
expression, and histone H3 (Ser28) phosphorylation within a single cell population. Considering all 4 markers together, a reliable and accurate quantification of cell cycle phases was possible, as compared with flow cytometric analysis. Using this assay, specific cell cycle blocks induced by treatment with thymidine, paclitaxel, or nocodazole as test drugs were easily monitored in adherent cultures of U-2 OS
osteosarcoma
cells.
...
PMID:Multiparametric cell cycle analysis by automated microscopy. 1684 64
The E2F transcription factors play a critical role in coordinating transcription of specific genes essential for G1-S transition. In early G1, the retinoblastoma protein (pRB) becomes phosphorylated by cyclin-dependent kinases, disrupting pRB binding to E2F-1-3, allowing "free" E2F to regulate genes involved in proliferation. In the present study, we used a tetracycline E2F-1 inducible U2OS
osteosarcoma
cell line to investigate the effect of increasing levels of E2F-1 on the cytotoxicity of various chemotherapeutic drugs. Upon overexpression of E2F-1, there was no detectable change in cytotoxicity to doxorubicin, cisplatin, 5-fluorouracil, or etoposide. In contrast, overexpression of E2F-1 resulted in a marked increase in sensitivity to vinblastine and paclitaxel, drugs that are known to be more effective against cells in M phase. Therefore, we investigated the effect of E2F-1 overexpression on proteins regulating the G2-M transition and M phase, in particular
cyclin B1
and cdc2 kinase. Cyclin B1 mRNA and protein levels increased within 24 hours of E2F1 induction together with an increase in associated cdc2 kinase activity. Overexpression of
cyclin B1
also resulted in a specific increase in sensitivity to paclitaxel and an increase in the cellular growth rate. Knockdown of
cyclin B1
using an RNA interference oligo resulted in a slower cellular growth rate and an increase in resistance to paclitaxel. These studies add support to recent reports that show E2F regulates genes involved in mitotic entry and exit and allow the suggestion that mitotic inhibitors may have selective effects in tumors that overexpress E2F-1.
...
PMID:E2F-1 overexpression in U2OS cells increases cyclin B1 levels and cdc2 kinase activity and sensitizes cells to antimitotic agents. 1684 74
The circadian timing system and the cell division cycle are frequently deregulated in cancer. The therapeutic relevance of the reciprocal interactions between both biological rhythms was investigated using Seliciclib, a cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) inhibitor (CDKI). Mice bearing Glasgow
osteosarcoma
received Seliciclib (300 mg/kg/d orally) or vehicle for 5 days at Zeitgeber time (ZT) 3, 11, or 19. On day 6, tumor mRNA 24-hour expression patterns were determined for clock genes (Per2, Rev-erbalpha, and Bmal1) and clock-controlled cell cycle genes (c-Myc, Wee1,
cyclin B1
, and CDK1) with quantitative reverse transcription-PCR. Affinity chromatography on immobilized Seliciclib identified CDK1/CDK2 and extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) 1/ERK2, CDK7/CDK9, and casein kinase CK1epsilon as Seliciclib targets, which respectively regulate cell cycle, transcription, and circadian clock in Glasgow
osteosarcoma
. Seliciclib reduced tumor growth by 55% following dosing at ZT3 or ZT11 and by 35% at ZT19 compared with controls (P < 0.001). Tolerability was also best at ZT3. Mean transcriptional activity of Rev-erbalpha, Per2, and Bmal1 was arrhythmic in the tumors of untreated mice. Seliciclib induced rhythmic clock gene expression patterns with physiologic phase relations only after ZT3 dosing. c-Myc and Wee1 mRNAs displayed synchronous circadian rhythms in the tumors of control mice receiving vehicle only but not in those of mice given the drug. Seliciclib further enhanced Wee1 expression irrespective of dosing time, an effect that reinforced G(2)-M gating. Seliciclib also inhibited CK1epsilon, which determines circadian period length. The coordination of clock gene expression patterns in tumor cells was associated with best antitumor activity of Seliciclib. The circadian clock and its upstream regulators represent relevant targets for CDKIs.
...
PMID:Improved tumor control through circadian clock induction by Seliciclib, a cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor. 1710 8
Diallyl trisulfide (DATS), a cancer chemopreventive constituent of garlic, inhibits growth of cancer cells by interfering with cell cycle progression, but the mechanism is not fully understood. Here, we show the existence of a novel ataxia-telangiectasia mutated and Rad3 related (ATR)/checkpoint kinase 1 (Chk1)-dependent checkpoint partially responsible for DATS-mediated prometaphase arrest in cancer cells, which is different from the recently described gamma irradiation-induced mitotic exit checkpoint. The PC-3 human prostate cancer cells synchronized in prometaphase by nocodazole treatment and released to DATS-containing medium remained arrested in prometaphase, whereas the cells released to normal medium exited mitosis and resumed cell cycle. The mitotic arrest was maintained even after 4 h of culture of DATS-treated cells (4-h treatment) in drug-free medium. The DATS-arrested mitotic cells exhibited accumulation of anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C) substrates cyclin A and
cyclin B1
and hyperphosphorylation of securin, which was accompanied by increased phosphorylation of the APC/C regulatory subunits Cdc20 and Cdh1. The DATS-mediated accumulation of
cyclin B1
and hyperphosphorylation of securin, Cdc20, and Cdh1 were partially but markedly attenuated by knockdown of Chk1 or ATR protein. The U2OS
osteosarcoma
cells expressing doxycycline-inducible kinase dead ATR were significantly more resistant not only to DATS-mediated prometaphase arrest but also to the accumulation of
cyclin B1
and hyperphosphorylation of securin, Cdc20, and Cdh1 compared with cells expressing wild-type ATR. However, securin protein knockdown failed to rescue cells from DATS-induced prometaphase arrest. In conclusion, the present study describes a novel signaling pathway involving ATR/Chk1 in the regulation of DATS-induced prometaphase arrest.
...
PMID:Activation of a novel ataxia-telangiectasia mutated and Rad3 related/checkpoint kinase 1-dependent prometaphase checkpoint in cancer cells by diallyl trisulfide, a promising cancer chemopreventive constituent of processed garlic. 1740 33
Interstitial flow in and around tumor tissue affects the mechanical microenvironment to modulate tumor cell growth and metastasis. We investigated the roles of flow-induced shear stress in modulating cell cycle distribution in four tumor cell lines and the underlying mechanisms. In all four cell lines, incubation under static conditions for 24 or 48 h led to G(0)/G(1) arrest; in contrast, shear stress (12 dynes/cm(2)) induced G(2)/M arrest. The molecular basis of the shear effect was analyzed, and the presentation on molecular mechanism is focused on human MG63
osteosarcoma
cells. Shear stress induced increased expressions of
cyclin B1
and p21(CIP1) and decreased expressions of cyclins A, D1, and E, cyclin-dependent protein kinases (Cdk)-1, -2, -4, and -6, and p27(KIP1) as well as a decrease in Cdk1 activity. Using specific antibodies and small interfering RNA, we found that the shear-induced G(2)/M arrest and corresponding changes in G(2)/M regulatory protein expression and activity were mediated by alpha(v)beta(3) and beta(1) integrins through bone morphogenetic protein receptor type IA-specific Smad1 and Smad5. Shear stress also down-regulated runt-related transcription factor 2 (Runx2) binding activity and osteocalcin and alkaline phosphatase expressions in MG63 cells; these responses were mediated by alpha(v)beta(3) and beta(1) integrins through Smad5. Our findings provide insights into the mechanism by which shear stress induces G(2)/M arrest in tumor cells and inhibits cell differentiation and demonstrate the importance of mechanical microenvironment in modulating molecular signaling, gene expression, cell cycle, and functions in tumor cells.
...
PMID:Tumor cell cycle arrest induced by shear stress: Roles of integrins and Smad. 1831 Mar 19
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