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Query: UMLS:C0598934 (
tumor growth
)
58,965
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Mammalian cells contain an intron-less myc gene, such as the rat s-myc gene and human myc L2 gene, which are expressed in rat embryo chondrocytes and human testis, respectively. Our recent findings demonstrated that s-Myc expression suppresses the growth activity and tumorigenicity of glioma cells, indicating that s-Myc acts as a negative regulator in
tumor growth
. In addition, we found that s-Myc overexpression can effectively induce apoptotic cell death in human and rat glioma cells without serum deprivation, which is distinct from
c-Myc
-mediated apoptosis.
...
PMID:Myc-mediated apoptosis. 882 95
Currently, the contribution of cellular apoptotic sensitivity to tumor response after radiation therapy remains controversial. To address this issue, the survival of Rat-1 fibroblasts containing a 4-hydroxytamoxifen-regulated
c-Myc
allele, c-MycER (T. D. Littlewood et al., Nucleic Acids Res., 23: 1686-1690, 1995), after single and fractionated doses of radiation was investigated. This model system allows pharmacological regulation of apoptosis sensitivity in the same cells in vitro and as xenograft tumors derived from these cells in vivo (G. I. Evan et al., Cell, 69: 119-128, 1992; R. M. Alarcon et al., Cancer Res., 56: 4315-4319, 1996). Activating c-MycER in vitro resulted in marked sensitization of Rat-1 fibroblasts to the effects of both single-dose and fractionated irradiation as measured by the induction of apoptosis and clonogenic survival. Overexpression of the antiapoptosis protein Bcl-2 suppressed the induction of apoptosis and increased clonogenic survival in cells with activated
c-Myc
after single-dose and fractionated radiation. Systemic time-release implant delivery of 4-hydroxytamoxifen to severe combined immunodeficient mice bearing Rat-1-MycER tumors over the course of either single-dose (10 Gy) or fractionated (five fractions of 2 Gy) radiotherapy resulted in prolonged
tumor growth
delay relative to identical tumors from mice that received placebo implants. Furthermore, tumors derived from Rat-1-MycER cells that overexpressed Bcl-2 exhibited shorter
tumor growth
delays relative to similarly treated Rat-1-MycER tumors. The length of
tumor growth
delay after single-dose or fractionated radiotherapy strongly correlated with the extent of radiation-induced apoptosis in the xenograft tumors as measured by terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated nick end labeling. These in vivo results provide direct evidence that increasing the sensitivity of tumor cells to die by apoptosis increases the efficacy of fractionated radiotherapy by reducing tumor cell clonogenic survival.
...
PMID:Direct evidence that apoptosis enhances tumor responses to fractionated radiotherapy. 958 11
Cell growth and viability are dependent on the function of the multicatalytic proteinase complex (proteasome), a multisubunit particle that affects progression through the mitotic cycle by degradation of cyclins. Exposure of rodent fibroblasts and human lymphoblasts in culture to benzyloxycarbonyl-leucyl-leucyl-phenylalaninal (Z-LLF-CHO), a cell-permeable peptidyl aldehyde inhibitor of the chymotrypsin-like activity of the proteasome, resulted in the induction of apoptosis in a rapid, dose-dependent fashion. Fibroblasts transformed with ras and myc, lymphoblasts transformed by c-myc alone, and a Burkitt's lymphoma (BL) cell line that overexpresses
c-Myc
were up to 40-fold more susceptible to apoptosis than were either primary rodent fibroblasts or immortalized nontransformed human lymphoblasts, respectively. To determine whether such preferential apoptosis could impact upon
tumor growth
in vivo, toxicological studies were performed in mice with severe combined immunodeficiency and showed that mice tolerated single interscapular doses of Z-LLF-CHO without unacceptable toxicity. Severe combined immunodeficient mice bearing s.c. BL tumors in the flank were treated interscapularly with Z-LLF-CHO or a comparable dose of the peptidyl alcohol (Z-LLF-OH), which does not induce proteasome inhibition or apoptosis. Single doses of Z-LLF-CHO induced statistically significant (P < 0.0001) early tumor regression and a significant (P < 0.0001) delay in tumor progression. Analysis of tumor specimens revealed increased apoptosis in BL tumors from mice treated with Z-LLF-CHO. These results, showing a 42%
tumor growth
delay, indicate that proteasome inhibitors have the potential of curbing the growth of a c-myc-related tumor.
...
PMID:Tumor growth inhibition induced in a murine model of human Burkitt's lymphoma by a proteasome inhibitor. 976 62
Deregulated
c-Myc
expression leads to a cellular state where proliferation and apoptosis are equally favored depending on the cellular microenvironment. Since the apoptotic sensitivity of many cells is influenced by the status of the p53 tumor suppressor gene, we investigated whether the induction of apoptosis by DNA damage or non-genotoxic stress are also influenced by the p53 status of cells with altered
c-Myc
activity. Rat-1 fibroblasts expressing a conditional
c-Myc
allele (c-MycER), were transfected to express an antisense RNA complimentary to p53 mRNA. Expression of antisense p53 RNA decreased p53 protein levels and delayed p53 accumulation following
c-Myc
activation. Under hypoxic or low serum conditions, cells expressing antisense p53 were substantially more resistant to
c-Myc
-induced apoptosis than were control cells.
c-Myc
activation also sensitized Rat-1 cells to radiation-induced apoptosis. Rat-1 cells expressing antisense p53 RNA were more resistant to apoptosis induced by the combined effects of
c-Myc
activation and gamma irradiation. In a similar manner, apoptosis induced by
c-Myc
in serum starved, hypoxic or gamma irradiated fibroblasts was also inhibited by Bcl-2. These data indicate that p53 is involved in
c-Myc
-mediated apoptosis under a variety of stresses which may influence
tumor growth
, evolution and response to therapy.
...
PMID:p53 mediates apoptosis induced by c-Myc activation in hypoxic or gamma irradiated fibroblasts. 1020 Apr 56
The s-Myc is similar to
c-Myc
in its ability to induce apoptosis requiring caspase activation. However, s-Myc is distinct from
c-Myc
in that it has activity to suppress
tumor growth
and does not require wild-type p53 to induce apoptosis. These facts suggest differential regulation between s-Myc and
c-Myc
. Here we showed that s-Myc-mediated apoptosis triggered by UV was not inhibited by the inactive form mutant JNK (APF), though
c-Myc
-mediated apoptosis was. Moreover, we found that JNK did not affect the transactivation activity of s-Myc, but stimulated that of
c-Myc
. In contrast, both Myc-mediated apoptosis and caspase-3-like protease activation were suppressed by kinase-negative MKK6 and an inactive form mutant p38(AGF). Our results indicate that s-Myc does not require the JNK signaling unlike
c-Myc
during UV-triggered apoptosis, but the MKK6/p38MAPK pathway might regulate common apoptotic machinery for both s-Myc and
c-Myc
upstream of caspase.
...
PMID:Differential role of the JNK and p38 MAPK pathway in c-Myc- and s-Myc-mediated apoptosis. 1062 2
The Myc/Max/Mad network of transcriptional regulatory proteins plays an essential role in cell proliferation, growth, apoptosis, and differentiation. Whereas Myc proteins affect cell cycle progression positively, Mad proteins are negative regulators of cell proliferation. It has been shown in several in vitro systems that Mad proteins antagonize
c-Myc
functions. In this report we describe the inhibition of tumor cell outgrowth in vivo by Mad1 expression. Transformed cell lines were generated by co-transfection of c-myc, c-H-ras, and a chimeric mad1ER construct into primary rat embryo cells (MRMad1ER cells). Activation of Mad1 by 4-Hydroxy-Tamoxifen (OHT) resulted in abrogation of telomerase activity, reduced cloning efficiency, and decreased proportion of cells in S phase. Injection of MRMad1ER cells into syngenic rats induced aggressively growing tumors after a short latency period. This
tumor growth
was inhibited by OHT-treatment of animals, with the extent of inhibition correlating with the amount of OHT injected. No effect of OHT on
tumor growth
was observed with similarly transformed Myc/Ras cell lines which did not express Mad1ER. These data demonstrate that Mad1 is able to suppress Myc/Ras-mediated transformation under in vivo conditions.
...
PMID:Repression of in vivo growth of Myc/Ras transformed tumor cells by Mad1. 1182 57
Aberrant activation of the Wnt/beta-catenin signaling pathway is associated with numerous human cancers and often correlates with the overexpression or amplification of the c-myc oncogene. Paradoxical to the cellular transformation potential of
c-Myc
is its ability to also induce apoptosis. Using an inducible c-MycER expression system, we found that Wnt/beta-catenin signaling suppressed apoptosis by inhibiting
c-Myc
-induced release of cytochrome c and caspase activation. Both cyclooxygenase 2 and WISP-1 were identified as effectors of the Wnt-mediated antiapoptotic signal. Soft agar assays showed that neither
c-Myc
nor Wnt-1 alone was sufficient to induce cellular transformation, but that Wnt and
c-Myc
coordinated in inducing transformation. Furthermore, coexpression of Wnt-1 and
c-Myc
induced high-frequency and rapid
tumor growth
in nude mice. Extensive apoptotic bodies were characteristic of
c-Myc
-induced tumors, but not tumors induced by coactivation of
c-Myc
and Wnt-1, indicating that the antiapoptotic function of Wnt-1 plays a critical role in the synergetic action between
c-Myc
and Wnt-1. These results elucidate the molecular mechanisms by which Wnt/beta-catenin inhibits apoptosis and provide new insight into Wnt signaling-mediated oncogenesis.
...
PMID:Wnt signaling promotes oncogenic transformation by inhibiting c-Myc-induced apoptosis. 1198 Sep 18
The c-myc protooncogene plays a key role in the abnormal growth regulation of melanoma cells. We have targeted three polypurine sequences within the mouse myc mRNA with acridine-modified, clamp-forming antisense oligonucleotides (AS ODNs) in an effort to inhibit growth of murine melanoma cells. These ODNs are unique in that they hybridize to the target mRNA by both Watson-Crick and Hoogsteen hydrogen bond interactions, forming a triple-stranded structure. At a concentration of 3 microM E1C, E2C and E3C inhibit B16-F0 proliferation by 76, 66 and 78%, respectively. Both immunofluorescent staining and western blot analysis corroborate a proportional reduction in
c-Myc
expression by all three ODNs. There were clear distinctions in the ability of these ODNs to inhibit tumor progression in C57BL/6 mice as a function of Myc expression. There was no synergy demonstrated between ODN E1C with cisplatin (DDP), which inhibited
tumor growth
by 77% alone and 82% in combination. Although E2C inhibited growth by 54%, its effect was decreased to 32% with DDP, when compared with controls. E3C, on the other hand, demonstrated a synergistic effect with DDP, inhibiting growth by 72% in combination, but only by 1% as a single agent. Immunofluorescence analysis of tumors for each group revealed a concomitant reduction in
c-Myc
expression in tumors from mice treated with the most active clamp ODN alone (E1C) or clamp ODN + DDP (E1C/E3C + DDP). Western blot analysis confirmed this decrease in target protein expression. Our results document the growth-inhibitory activity of two myc-targeting antisense clamp ODNs; E1C, which has activity as a single agent, and E3C, which has in vivo synergy with DDP pretreatment. These data confirm the antiproliferative effects of these novel ODNs and document an interesting synergy with the chemotherapeutic agent DDP.
...
PMID:Acridine-modified, clamp-forming antisense oligonucleotides synergize with cisplatin to inhibit c-Myc expression and B16-F0 tumor progression. 1203 46
We have previously shown that the Jak2 tyrosine kinase is activated in Bcr-Abl positive cell lines and blood cells from CML blast crisis patients by tyrosine phosphorylation. We are searching for downstream targets of Jak2 in Bcr-Abl positive cells. It is known that
c-Myc
expression is required for the oncogenic effects of Bcr-Abl, and that over-expression of
c-Myc
complements the transformation defect of the Bcr-Abl SH2 deletion mutant. Moreover, the Bcr-Abl SH2 deletion mutant and an Abl C-terminal deletion mutant are deficient in activating
c-Myc
expression. Since the Jak2 binds to the C-terminal domain of Bcr-Abl and optimal Jak2 activation requires the SH2 domain, we tested whether Jak2 was involved in
c-Myc
protein induction by Bcr-Abl. We treated the 32Dp210 Bcr-Abl cells with the Jak2 specific tyrosine kinase inhibitor, AG490, and found that this drug, like the Abl tyrosine kinase inhibitor STI-571, inhibited
c-Myc
protein induction by Bcr-Abl. Treatment of 32Dp210 Bcr-Abl cells with AG490 also inhibited c-MYC RNA expression. It is also known that
c-Myc
protein is a labile protein that is increased in amounts in response to various growth factors by a mechanism not involving new Myc protein formation. Treatment of 32Dp210 Bcr-Abl cells with both the proteasome inhibitor MG132 and AG490 blocked the reduction of the
c-Myc
protein observed by AG490 alone. An adaptor protein SH2-Bbeta is involved in the enhancement of the tyrosine kinase activity of Jak2 following ligand/receptor interaction. In this regard we showed that the Jak2/Bcr-Abl complex contains SH2-Bbeta. Expression of the SH2-Bbeta R555E mutant in 32Dp210 Bcr-Abl cells reduced
c-Myc
expression about 40% compared to a vector control. Interestingly, we found the reduction of the
c-Myc
protein in several clones of dominant-negative (DN) Jak2 expressing K562 cells correlated very well with the reduction of
tumor growth
of these cells in nude mice as compared to vector transfected K562 cells. Both STI-571 and AG490 also induced apoptosis in 32Dp210 cells. Of interest, IL-3 containing medium reversed the STI-571 induced apoptosis of 32Dp210 cells but did not reverse the induction of apoptosis by AG490, which strongly supports the specificity of the inhibitory effects of AG490 on the Jak2 tyrosine kinase. In summary, our findings indicate that Jak2 mediates the increase in
c-Myc
expression that is induced by Bcr-Abl. Our results indicate that activated Jak2 not only mediates an increase of c-MYC RNA expression but also interferes with proteasome-dependent degradation of
c-Myc
protein.
...
PMID:Jak2 is involved in c-Myc induction by Bcr-Abl. 1237 Aug 3
Chemotherapy resistance is a significant obstacle in lung cancer therapy, and has been found to frequently correlate with amplification and overexpression of the c-myc oncogene. Earlier studies have shown that
c-Myc
inhibition alone is not always effective in cancer models. The purpose of this study was to test different dosing regimen, which included commonly used chemotherapeutic drugs in combination with
c-Myc
inhibition in a Lewis lung syngeneic drug-resistant murine tumor model. Inhibition of c-myc was specifically achieved by using phosphorodiamidate Morpholino oligomer (PMOs), a novel, non-toxic antisense DNA chemistry for inhibition of gene expression by an RNase H-independent mechanism. When administration of cisplatin overlapped with c-myc PMO (AVI-4126) treatment there was no additional effect on
tumor growth
inhibition compared to cisplatin alone. In contrast, using a dosing regimen in which cisplatin or taxol treatment preceded AVI-4126, a dramatic decrease in
tumor growth
rate was observed with tumor areas less then 0.5 cm2 in 60% of the animals at the end of the study. This effect was specific to
c-Myc
inhibition as other antisense PMOs against p21 or Rad51 showed no such effect in combination with chemotherapy. Immunoblot and HPLC-based analysis of tumor lysates at the end of the study confirmed
c-Myc
inhibition and detection of intact AVI-4126, respectively. In conclusion, AVI-4126 potentiates the efficacy of chemotherapeutic drugs in a manner that is schedule dependent.
...
PMID:Resistance to chemotherapeutic drugs overcome by c-Myc inhibition in a Lewis lung carcinoma murine model. 1254 57
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