Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0178874 (tumor progression)
40,807 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Phospholipase D2 (PLD2), one of the two mammalian members of the PLD family, has been implicated in cell proliferation, transformation, tumor progression and survival. However, as precise mechanistic details are still unknown, we investigated here if the PLD2 isoform would signal through the PI3K/AKT pathway. Transient expression of PLD2 in COS7 cells with either the WT or with a Y179F mutant, resulted in an increased basal phosphorylation of AKT in residues T308 and S473, in a PI3K-dependent manner. Transfection of PLD2-Y179F (but not the wild type) caused an increased (>2-fold) DNA synthesis even in the absence of extracellular stimuli. Other signaling mechanisms downstream such PLD/PI3K dependence (that might lead to DNA synthesis regulation) were further studied. PLD2-Y179F caused an increase in phosphorylation of p42/p44 ERK and in the expression of G0/G1 phase transition markers (p21 CIP, PCNA), and these effects, too, were dependent on PI3K. Interestingly, Akt, once activated induced the phosphorylation of PLD2 on residue T175, an effect that was inhibited by LY296004. Lastly, if PLD2-Y179F is further mutated in residue K758 (PLD2 Y179F-K758R), which renders inactive a catalytic site, DNA synthesis is then abrogated, indicating that the activity of the enzyme (i.e. synthesis of PA) is necessary for the observed effects. In conclusion, the unavailability of residue Y179 on PLD2 to become phosphorylated leads to an augmentation of DNA synthesis concomitantly with MEK and AKT phosphorylation, in a process that is dependent on PI3K and independent of any extracellular stimuli. This might be critical for the maintenance of the PLD2-regulated proliferative status.
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PMID:Mutation of Y179 on phospholipase D2 (PLD2) upregulates DNA synthesis in a PI3K-and Akt-dependent manner. 1800 75

We identified the platelet derived growth factor receptor (PDGFR) as a potential target in epithelial ovarian carcinoma (EOC). This led us to test whether inhibition of the PDGFR affects ovarian cancer cell proliferation and survival and regulates other processes critical to tumor growth and metastasis. We postulated that there is a correlation between the PDGF-PDGFR axis and the secretion of VEGF in EOC. VEGF secretion in ovarian tumors, cancer cells, serum and ascites fluid was measured by IHC, Western Blot and ELISA. We found increased VEGF expression and secretion in most ovarian tumors (by IHC), in EOC malignant ascites and in the conditioned media of primary ovarian cancer cells (quantified by ELISA). In malignant ascites, the levels of secreted PDGF BB and VEGF were strongly correlated (Pearson coefficient of correlation R = 0.728), suggesting that the two pathways interconnect. In PDGFR expressing immortalized ovarian cancer cells, PDGF potently induced VEGF secretion, while imatinib mesylate (Gleevec), a partially selective PDGFR inhibitor, reduced PDGF stimulated VEGF production to basal state. In ovarian cancer cells overexpressing constitutively active Akt, imatinib inhibited partially VEGF secretion, suggesting that the PI3K/Akt pathway is implicated in PDGF-stimulated VEGF secretion. In summary, these results suggest a correlation between the PDGF and VEGF networks in ovarian cancer cells and tumors. The effects of imatinib on VEGF secretion in tumor cells may affect the tumor microenvironment in a manner detrimental to tumor progression.
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PMID:PDGF BB induces VEGF secretion in ovarian cancer. 1807 2

Transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGF-beta1) plays an essential role in tumor progression and metastasis. Integrins are the major adhesive molecules in mammalian cells. Here we found that TGF-beta1 increased the migration and cell surface expression of alphavbeta3 integrin in human chondrosarcoma cells (JJ012 cells). Phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase inhibitor (PI3K; Ly294002) or Akt inhibitor inhibited the TGF-beta1-induced increase the migration of chondrosarcoma cells. TGF-beta1 stimulation increased the phosphorylation of p85 subunit of PI3K, and serine 473 of Akt. In addition, treatment of JJ102 cells with NF-kappaB inhibitor (PDTC) or IkappaB protease inhibitor (TPCK) inhibited TGF-beta1-induced cells migration and integrins expression. Treatment of JJ012 cells with TGF-beta1-induced IkappaB kinase alpha/beta (IKKalpha/beta) phosphorylation, IkappaBalpha phosphorylation, p65 Ser(536) phosphorylation, and kappaB-luciferase activity. The TGF-beta1-mediated increases in IKKalpha/beta phosphorylation and p65 Ser(536) phosphorylation were inhibited by Ly294002 and Akt inhibitor. Cotransfection with p85 and Akt mutants also reduced the TGF-beta1-induced kappaB-luciferase activity. Taken together, these results suggest that the TGF-beta1 acts through PI3K/Akt, which in turn activates IKKalpha/beta and NF-kappaB, resulting in the activations of alphavbeta3 integrins and contributing the migration of chondrosarcoma cells.
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PMID:TGF-beta1 increases motility and alphavbeta3 integrin up-regulation via PI3K, Akt and NF-kappaB-dependent pathway in human chondrosarcoma cells. 1819 Nov 7

C-myc is an oncogene that functions both in the stimulation of cell proliferation and in and apoptosis. C-myc elicits its oncogenic activity by causing immortalization, and to a lesser extent the transformation of cells, in addition to several other mechanisms. C-myc may also enhance or reduce the sensitivity of cancer cells to chemotherapy, but how this dual function is controlled is largely unclear. Cyclin D1 (D1) is another oncogene that drives cell cycle progression; it acts as a growth factor sensor to integrate extracellular signals with the cell cycle machinery, though it may also promote apoptosis. C-Myc collaborates with TGFalpha, epidermal growth factor receptor, Ras, PI3K/Akt, and NF-kappaB. in part via coordination in regulation of D1 expression, because D1 is a common downstream effector of these growth pathways. Coordination of c-Myc with D1 or its upstream activators not only accelerates tumor formation, but also may drive tumor progression to a more aggressive phenotype. Because c-Myc may effect immortalization while D1 or its upstream activators elicit transformation, targeting c-myc and D1 may be a good strategy for cancer prevention. Moreover, since D1 imposes chemoresistance on cancer cells, targeting D1 may also be a good strategy for cancer chemotherapy, whereas practicioners should be cautious to downregulate c-myc for chemotherapy, since c-Myc may elicit apoptosis.
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PMID:Perspectives on c-Myc, Cyclin D1, and their interaction in cancer formation, progression, and response to chemotherapy. 1819 90

Progression of cancer leads to hypoxic solid tumors that mount specific cell signaling responses to low oxygen conditions. An important objective of anti-cancer therapy is the development of new drugs that suppress hypoxic responses in solid tumors. Apigenin is a natural flavone that has been shown to have chemopreventive and/or anti-cancer properties against a number of tumor types. However, the mechanisms underlying apigenin's chemopreventive properties are not yet completely understood. In this study, we have investigated the effects of apigenin on expression of hypoxia-inducible factor-1 (HIF-1) in human metastatic prostate PC3-M cancer cells. We found that hypoxia induced a time-dependent increase in the level of HIF-1alpha subunit protein in PC3-M cells, and treatment with apigenin markedly decreased HIF-1alpha expression under both normoxic and hypoxic conditions. Further, apigenin prevented the activation of the HIF-1 downstream target gene vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). We then showed that apigenin inhibited expression of HIF-1alpha by reducing stability of the protein as well as by reducing the level of HIF-1alpha mRNA. We also found that apigenin inhibited Akt and GSK-3beta phosphorylation in PC3-M cells. Further experiments demonstrated that constitutively active Akt blunted the effect of apigenin on HIF-1alpha expression. Taken together, our results identify apigenin as a bioflavonoid that inhibits hypoxia-activated pathways linked to cancer progression in human prostate cancer, in particular the PI3K/Akt/GSK-3 pathway. Further studies on the mechanism of action of apigenin will likely provide new insight into its applicability for pharmacologic targeting of HIF-1alpha for cancer therapeutic or chemopreventive purposes.
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PMID:Inhibition of HIF-1 alpha and VEGF expression by the chemopreventive bioflavonoid apigenin is accompanied by Akt inhibition in human prostate carcinoma PC3-M cells. 1824 Feb 92

Immune escape is a critical gateway to malignancy. The emergence of this fundamental trait of cancer represents the defeat of immune surveillance, a potent, multi-armed and essential mode of cancer suppression that may influence the ultimate clinical impact of an early stage tumor. Indeed, immune escape may be a central modifier of clinical outcomes, by affecting tumor dormancy versus progression, licensing invasion and metastasis and impacting therapeutic response. Although relatively little studied until recently, immune suppression and escape in tumors are now hot areas with clinical translation of several new therapeutic agents already under way. The interconnections between signaling pathways that control immune escape and those that control proliferation, senescence, apoptosis, metabolic alterations, angiogenesis, invasion and metastasis remain virtually unexplored, offering rich new areas for investigation. Here, an overview of this area is provided with a focus on the tryptophan catabolic enzyme indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) and its recently discovered relative IDO2 that are implicated in suppressing T-cell immunity in normal and pathological settings including cancer. Emerging evidence suggests that during cancer progression activation of the IDO pathway might act as a preferred nodal modifier pathway for immune escape, for example analogous to the PI3K pathway for survival or the VEGF pathway for angiogenesis. Small molecule inhibitors of IDO and IDO2 heighten chemotherapeutic efficacy in mouse models of cancer in a nontoxic fashion and an initial lead compound entered phase I clinical trials in late 2007. New modalities in this area offer promising ways to broaden the combinatorial attack on advanced cancers, where immune escape mechanisms likely provide pivotal support.
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PMID:Immune escape as a fundamental trait of cancer: focus on IDO. 1831 52

The expression of hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) and c-Met is associated with tumor progression in many human malignancies. A recent study demonstrated HGF and c-Met expression in human salivary gland cancer tissues. Here, we investigated the role of the HGF/c-Met system in the invasive growth of two human salivary gland cancer cell lines: green fluorescent protein-adenoid cystic carcinoma 2 (GFP-ACC2) and GFP-ACCM. HGF enhanced the invasive growth of the two cell lines by activating PI3K/Akt signaling. All Akt isoforms (Akt1, Akt2, and Akt3) were detected in both cell types by Western blot analysis. Knockdown of any of the Akt isoforms using isoform-specific synthetic small-interfering RNAs largely abrogated the invasive growth induced by HGF. Our findings suggest that all of the Akt isoforms are required for the HGF-stimulated invasive growth of human salivary gland cancer cells, and that targeting a single Akt isoform could be effective in treating salivary gland cancers.
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PMID:Role of Akt isoforms in HGF-induced invasive growth of human salivary gland cancer cells. 1835 39

The p53 tumor suppressor restricts tumorigenesis through the transcriptional activation of target genes involved in cell-cycle arrest and apoptosis. Here, we identify Prl-3 (phosphatase of regenerating liver-3) as a p53-inducible gene. Whereas previous studies implicated Prl-3 in metastasis because of its overexpression in metastatic human colorectal cancer and its ability to promote invasiveness and motility, we demonstrate here that Prl-3 is an important cell-cycle regulator. Consistent with a role in DNA damage-induced cell-cycle arrest, Prl-3 overexpression induces G(1) arrest downstream of p53 by triggering a PI3K-Akt-activated negative feedback loop. Surprisingly, attenuation of Prl-3 expression also elicits an arrest response, suggesting that basal level Prl-3 expression is pivotal for normal cell-cycle progression. Our findings highlight key dose-dependent functions of Prl-3 in both positive and negative regulation of cell-cycle progression and provide insight into Prl-3's role in cancer progression.
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PMID:The metastasis-associated gene Prl-3 is a p53 target involved in cell-cycle regulation. 1847 70

The androgen receptor (AR) plays an important role in early prostate cancer by activating transcription of a number of genes participating in cell proliferation and growth and cancer progression. However, as the cancer progresses, prostate cancer cells transform from an androgen-dependent to an androgen-independent state. Androgen-independent prostate cancer can manifest itself in several forms, including a percentage of cancers that show reduced levels of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) and can progress without the need for the ligand or active receptor. Therefore, our goal was to examine the role of intracellular signaling pathways in an androgen-independent prostate cancer in vitro model. Using the cell line PC3(AR)(2), we stimulated cells with 5-alpha-dihydrotestosterone (DHT) and epidermal growth factor (EGF) and then analyzed PSA expression. We observed lower PSA expression when cells were jointly stimulated with DHT and EGF, and this was associated with an increase in AKT activity. We examined the role of AKT in AR activity and PSA expression by creating stable PC3(AR)(2) cell lines transfected with a PI3K-Ras-effector loop mutant. These cell lines showed lower DHT-stimulated PSA expression that correlated to changes in the phosphorylated state of AR. Therefore, we propose an in vitro androgen-independent model in which a PI3K/AKT activity threshold and subsequent AR transactivation regulate PSA expression.
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PMID:An AKT activity threshold regulates androgen-dependent and androgen-independent PSA expression in prostate cancer cell lines. 1862 4

In a breast tumor xenograft model, the MCT-1 oncogene increases the in vivo tumorgenicity of MCF7 cells by promoting angiogenesis and inhibiting apoptosis. Increases in the tumor microvascular density are accompanied by a strong reduction in the levels of the angiogenesis inhibitor thrombospondin-1 (TSP1), but the mechanisms underlying this process are unknown. We show that TSP1 expression is controlled, at least in part, by post-transcriptional events. Using RNA interference to knock down the expression of the RNA-binding protein HuR in MCF7 cells as well as HuR overexpression, we demonstrate that HuR plays an important role in translation of the TSP1 mRNA. Furthermore, employing the RIP-Chip assay yielded 595 transcripts with significantly altered binding to HuR in the more tumorigenic breast cancer clones compared with the weakly tumorigenic clones. These mRNAs clustered in several pathways implicated in the transformed phenotype, such as the RAS pathway (involved in mitogenesis), the PI3K pathway (evasion of apoptosis) and pathways mediating angiogenesis and the cellular response to hypoxia. These findings demonstrate for the first time that global changes in HuR-bound mRNAs are implicated in the evolution to a more tumorigenic phenotype in an in vivo tumor model and underscore the role of global mRNA-protein interactions toward tumor progression.
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PMID:Post-transcriptional gene regulation by HuR promotes a more tumorigenic phenotype. 1864 87


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