Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0038187 (starvation)
24,951 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Tumor cells exposed to a growth stress such as low pH, glucose starvation and hypoxia have been shown to exhibit a transient increase in experimental metastatic potential, particularly when allowed to recover under normal growth conditions for a period of 24-48 h. In this study we examined whether this increase in metastatic ability could be explained by changes in the expression of a number of different metastasis-associated genes, when the cells were exposed to similar conditions (24-48 h exposure to the stress condition followed by 0-48 h recovery under normal growth conditions). Although the cell lines used (KHT fibrosarcoma, SCC VII squamous cell carcinoma, and B16F1 melanoma) demonstrated altered metastatic ability after the treatment, no overall temporal correlation between changes in the mRNA levels for cathepsin B, cathepsin L, nm23, TIMP-1, osteopontin, or VEGF and metastatic ability in the three cell lines was observed. The production of gelatinase A (72 kDa collagenase) and gelatinase B (92 kDa collagenase) was also measured by gelatin zymography. There was an increase in production of these enzymes with increasing recovery time, but it did not parallel changes in metastatic potential. Although these results suggest that the products of most of the genes studied may not be involved in the transient metastatic changes, further studies are required to establish whether changes in protein levels track with changes in mRNA levels for these genes.
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PMID:An examination of the effects of hypoxia, acidosis, and glucose starvation on the expression of metastasis-associated genes in murine tumor cells. 924 50

AMP-activated protein kinases (AMPKs) are a class of serine/threonine protein kinases that are activated by an increase in intracellular AMP concentration. They are a sensitive indicator of cellular energy status and have been found to promote tumor cell survival during nutrient starvation. We recently identified a novel AMPK catalytic subunit family member, ARK5, whose activation is directly regulated by Akt, which, in turn, has been reported to be a key player in tumor malignancy. In this study, we attempted to determine whether ARK5 is involved in tumor malignancy under regulation by Akt. Matrigel invasion assays demonstrated that both overexpressed and endogenous ARK5 showed strong activity dependent on Akt. In addition, ARK5 expression induced activation of matrix metalloproteinase 2 (MMP-2) and MMP-9 following new expression of membrane type 1 MMP (MT1-MMP), and the MT1-MMP expression induced by ARK5 was initiated by rapamycin-sensitive signaling. In nude mice, ARK5 expression was associated with a significant increase in tumor growth and significant suppression of necrosis in tumor tissue. Interestingly, only the ARK5-overexpressing PANC-1 cell line (P/ARK) tumor showed invasion and metastasis in nude mice, although Akt was activated in tumors derived from both P/ARK and its parental cell line. We report that a novel AMPK catalytic subunit family member, ARK5, plays a key role in tumor malignancy downstream of Akt.
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PMID:ARK5 is a tumor invasion-associated factor downstream of Akt signaling. 1506 Jan 71