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Query: UNIPROT:B0FTZ7 (
catenin
)
18,795
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Caspases are responsible for the proteolysis of many cytoskeletal proteins in apoptotic cells. It has been demonstrated here that during cisplatin-induced apoptosis of human embryo retinoblasts both E- and P-cadherin were degraded by caspases, giving initially major polypeptide products of apparent molecular weights 48 K and 104 K respectively. This proteolysis occurred over a similar time-scale to the observed degradation of PARP and to the onset of DNA fragmentation but appreciably later than p53 induction and cleavage of Mdm2 and p21. Addition of caspase inhibitors such as Z-VAD-FMK inhibited apoptosis and cadherin degradation. Co-immunoprecipitation studies carried out on viable cells confirmed previously observed complexes between cadherins and alpha and
beta catenin
and between the catenins themselves. These interactions were sustained in apoptotic cells as long as the protein components remained intact. Using confocal microscopy it has been shown that cytoskeletal changes associated with apoptosis precede degradation of catenins and cadherins by several hours. In particular, after addition of cisplatin relatively rapid (within 3 h) re-localization of adherens junction proteins from the cell periphery to the cytoplasm was observed whereas little cadherin or
catenin
degradation occurred until 10 h. We conclude that neither caspase-mediated degradation of cytoskeletal components nor disruption of adherens junction protein-protein interactions is required for morphological change.
...
PMID:The fate of E- and P-cadherin during the early stages of apoptosis. 1038 31
The cytoskeletal proteins spectrin and ankyrin colocalize with sites of E-cadherin-mediated cell-cell adhesion in mammalian cells. Here we examined the effects of Drosophila DE-cadherin expression on spectrin and ankyrin in Drosophila S2 tissue culture cells. DE-cadherin caused a dramatic change in the cytoplasmic concentration and distribution of armadillo, the Drosophila homolog of
beta catenin
. However, DE-cadherin expression had no detectable effect on the quantity or subcellular distribution of ankyrin or spectrin. In reciprocal experiments, recruitment of ankyrin and alphabeta spectrin to the plasma membrane by another cell adhesion molecule, neuroglian, had no effect on the quantity or distribution of armadillo. The results indicate that DE-cadherin-
catenin
complexes and neuroglian-spectrin/ankyrin complexes form by nonintersecting pathways. Recruitment of spectrin does not appear to be a conserved feature of DE-cadherin function.
...
PMID:Neuroglian and DE-cadherin activate independent cytoskeleton assembly pathways in Drosophila S2 cells. 1055 74
OBJECTIVES: Characterization of breast cancers by various tumour markers which are appropriate for the identification of high risk groups. Markers related to the metastasis cascade and tumour recurrence have been investigated. MATERIALS AND METHODS: RT-PCR was used to determine the expression of cytokeratin 20 in the bone marrow and sentinel lymph node of breast cancer patients (n=45). The expression of HER2, Cadherin E, Cyclin D, Bcl2 and Bax has been evaluated by Western blot (n=744 invasive ductal carcinomas and 117 invasive lobular carcinomas, 124 recurrent breast cancers). Mutations of p53, APC and beta Catenin genes were detected by PCR-SSCP method. RESULTS: Expression of cytokeratin 20 was found in 30% of the bone marrow samples indicating the presence of micrometastasis. The level of Cyclin D, HER2 and Bcl2 is elevated four-fold in the recurrent breast cancers. The metastasis of invasive ductal carcinomas is accompained by high frequency of p53 mutations (24%) and APC mutations (18%). The invasive lobular carcinomas could be characterized with low frequency of p53 mutation (3%), low level of Cadherin E and high level of
catenin
beta. CONCLUSIONS: Identification of micrometastasis can promote the development of therapeutic strategy. Evaluation of HER2 level and determination of p53 mutations contribute to the identification of high risk patients. Our results suggest that the progression of invasive ductal carcinomas depends on the APC mutations, while metastasis of invasive lobular carcinomas depends on
beta catenin
mutations.
...
PMID:[Prognostic factors of breast cancer] 1205 Jul 67
The E-cadherin-
catenin
complex proteins function in cell-cell adhesion and have been reported to be dysregulated in various human malignancies. Beta
catenin
is a cytoplasmic protein that associates with tyrosine kinase receptors and modulates cytoskeletal dynamics. It also plays a role in the Wnt signaling pathway. During neoplastic transformation, the phosphorylation of beta-catenin causes a loss of intercellular adhesions resulting in increased tumor cell motility and invasiveness. Tissue sections from 100 cases of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) were immunostained with a monoclonal beta-catenin antibody. There were 47 squamous cell carcinomas (SCC) and 53 adenocarcinomas (AC) in the study group. Plasma membrane/cytoplasmic beta-catenin immunoreactivity was scored for intensity and distribution and correlated with tumor stage, grade and survival. Plasma membrane/cytoplasmic immunoreactivity for beta-catenin protein was observed in 71 (71%) of 100 NSCLC. 44 (94%) of 47 SCC and 27 (51%) of 53 AC expressed
beta catenin
. On univariate analysis, loss of
beta catenin
expression correlated with high tumor stage (p = 0.025), large tumor size (p = 0.02) and decreased patient survival (p = 0.04). The loss of
beta catenin
expression associated with high grade NSCLC reached near significance (p = 0.07). On multivariate analysis, the loss of
beta catenin
expression independently predicted shortened overall patient survival in NSCLC (p = 0.05). Beta
catenin
expression loss is associated with advanced tumor stage and is an independent predictor of shortened patient survival in NSCLC.
...
PMID:Downregulation of plasma membrane expression/cytoplasmic accumulation of beta-catenin predicts shortened survival in non-small cell lung cancer. A clinicopathologic study of 100 cases. 1267 38
The authors investigated the expression of three kinds of catenins (alpha, beta, gamma) in vascularized and non-vascularized nerve grafts, using the rat sciatic nerve model. The vascularized nerve, 15 mm in length, was elevated with its nutrient vessels in the left hindlimb of rats. In the right hindlimb, a 15-mm segment of the sciatic nerve was elevated (resected) without the nutrient vessels as a non-vascularized nerve. Both nerves were sutured to the original site. At various periods up to 14 weeks after operation, the entire graft was removed. Expression of three catenins was detected by Western blot analysis and histochemical staining, using the antibody to each
catenin
. The level of
beta catenin
increased during nerve regeneration in both the vascularized and non-vascularized grafts, while the level of alpha and gamma catenins did not increase in both grafts. There was no difference in the level of the three catenins between the two methods of nerve grafting. Histochemical findings showed that at the 4th and 14th postoperative weeks, alpha and gamma catenins were stained diffusely in both grafts, while
beta catenin
was stained around the regenerating axons in both grafts. The degree of
beta catenin
was greater in the 4th postoperative week than in the 14th postoperative week, but no obvious difference in the degree of staining of the three catenins between two grafts was found. These results suggest that
beta catenin
may play a different role from alpha and gamma catenins in nerve regeneration, and that the expression of these catenins is not influenced by vascularization of the nerve graft.
...
PMID:Expression of alpha, beta, and gamma catenins in vascularized and nonvascularized nerve grafts during the regeneration process. 1285 51
Using plasma amyloid beta protein (Abeta42) levels as an intermediate, quantitative phenotype for late onset Alzheimer's disease (LOAD), we previously obtained significant linkage at approximately 80 cM on chromosome 10. Linkage to the same region was obtained independently in a study of affected LOAD sib-pairs. Together, these two studies provide strong evidence for a novel LOAD locus on chromosome 10 that acts to increase Abeta42. VR22 is a large (1.7 Mb) gene located at 80 cM that encodes alpha-T
catenin
, which is a binding partner of
beta catenin
. This makes VR22 an attractive candidate gene because
beta catenin
interacts with presenilin 1, which has many mutations that elevate Abeta42 and cause early onset familial AD. We identified two intronic VR22 SNPs (4360 and 4783) in strong linkage disequilibrium (LD) that showed highly significant association (P=0.0001 and 0.0006) with plasma Abeta42 in 10 extended LOAD families. This association clearly contributed to the linkage at approximately 80 cM because the lod scores decreased when linkage analysis was performed conditional upon the VR22 association. This association replicated in another independent set of 12 LOAD families (P=0.04 for 4783 and P=0.08 for 4360). Bounding of the association region using multiple SNPs showed VR22 to be the only confirmed gene within the region of association. These findings indicate that VR22 has variant(s) which influence Abeta42 and contribute to the previously reported linkage for plasma Abeta42 in LOAD families.
...
PMID:Fine mapping of the alpha-T catenin gene to a quantitative trait locus on chromosome 10 in late-onset Alzheimer's disease pedigrees. 1455 75
Bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs) are important regulators of cellular differentiation and embryonic development. Beta
catenin
mediated nuclear signaling has been implicated in BMP-2-modulated chondrogenic differentiation in the pluripotential stem cell line C3H10T1/2. However, there is little information on the functional role of
beta catenin
in BMP-2-modulated differentiation of primary nontransformed mesenchymal cells. Here, we present evidence to show that BMP-2-induced chondrogenic differentiation in high-density primary mesenchymal culture is associated with a significant decrease in membrane-bound
beta catenin
by 72 hours compared to controls. Nuclear localization of
beta catenin
is not detectable by immunofluorescence and the TCF-responsive reporter vector TOPFLASH shows only background activity during chondrogenic differentiation. BMP-2-treated cultures show reduced cell-cell adhesion by 72 hours, which correlates with the changes in levels of membrane-bound
beta catenin
. Up-regulation of membrane-bound
beta catenin
blocks the effect of BMP-2 on both chondrogenic differentiation and cell-cell adhesiveness. These findings suggest that BMP-2 can modulate the adhesivity of adherens junctions through regulation of membrane bound
beta catenin
.
...
PMID:BMP-2-modulated chondrogenic differentiation in vitro involves down-regulation of membrane-bound beta-catenin. 1619 78
Different event is a process that is dependent on stimulation of extracellular signals, signal transduction and gene express. Malignant transformation of hepatocytes may occur in cirrhosis, which is the result of extracellular matrix (ECM) remodeling. ECM could affect and maintain the differentiated phenotype of hepatocytes by regulating liver transcription factors. Moreover, ECM remodeling is correlated with dedifferentiation of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Integrin-matrix adhesion system and E-cadherin/
catenin
adhesion complex mediate the cell-matrix interaction through focal adhesion kinase, extracellular-signal-regulated kinases and
beta catenin
/Wnt pathway. The different event of HCC compared with the reversion of abnormal cell-matrix interaction. New drugs that are power for regulating cell-matrix interaction may represent a novel therapeutic strategy for HCC.
...
PMID:Cell-matrix talks: effects on differentiation of hepatocellular carcinoma. 1710 70
Pleomorphic lobular carcinoma of the breast is a high nuclear grade variant of lobular carcinoma. E-cadherin, a tumor-invasion suppressor gene, codes for a transmembrane protein that functions in intercellular adhesion. The E-cadherin protein internal domain binds with alpha, beta, gamma, and p120 catenins to anchor the E-cadherin complex to the actin cytoskeleton of the cell. The E-cadherin gene is routinely mutated in lobular neoplasia. This study examines the morphomolecular spectrum of the components of the E-cadherin-
catenin
complex in lobular neoplasia. Fifteen cases of pleomorphic lobular neoplasia, 8 cases of classic lobular neoplasia and 4 ductal carcinomas were studied. Normal breast epithelium and invasive ductal carcinomas all showed intense linear cell membrane immunostaining with antibodies to E-cadherin, alpha, beta, gamma, and P120 catenins. Membrane immunostaining of the
catenin
antibodies in lobular neoplasia was negative, except for rare cases that displayed beaded or dotlike patterns. Cytoplasmic immunostaining patterns for all lobular lesions included coarse paranuclear granules of
beta catenin
or diffuse intense cytoplasmic staining for P120
catenin
. These immunostaining patterns demonstrate that catenins alpha, beta, gamma, and p120 are routinely dislocated from the cell membrane into the cytoplasm in lobular neoplasia and that the disrupted
catenin
patterns parallel absence of membrane E-cadherin in all cases. The diffuse cytoplasmic immunostaining of p120 in lobular neoplasia may be useful diagnostically as a positive marker for lobular neoplasia.
...
PMID:The spectrum of morphomolecular abnormalities of the E-cadherin/catenin complex in pleomorphic lobular carcinoma of the breast. 1772 Dec 69
Whole genome-scale integrated analyses of exon array and array-comparative genomic hybridization are expected to enable the identification of unknown genetic features of cancer cells. Here, we evaluated this approach in 22 gastric and colorectal cancer cell lines, focusing on protein kinase genes and genes belonging to the cadherin-
catenin
family. Regarding alternative splicing patterns, several cancer cell lines predominantly expressed isoform 1 of protein kinase A catalytic subunit beta (PRKACB). Paired gastric cancer specimens demonstrated that isoform 1 of PRKACB was a novel cancer-related variant transcript in gastric cancers. In addition, the exon array analysis clearly identified exon 3 or exon 3-4 skipping in
catenin beta 1
, a short intron insertion with exon 9 skipping in CDH1, and a deletional transcript of CDH13. These abnormal transcripts were shown to have arisen from small genomic deletions. Meanwhile, an integrated analysis of 11 gastric cancer cell lines revealed that four cell lines amplified fibroblast growth factor receptor 2, with truncated forms observed in two of the cell lines. Gene amplification, and not the truncated form, was found to determine the sensitivity to a fibroblast growth factor receptor inhibitor, indicating that our cell line panel might be useful for cell-based evaluations of specific inhibitors. Using an integrated analysis, we identified several abnormal transcripts and genomic alterations in gastric and colorectal cancer cells. Our approach might enable genetic changes to be identified more efficiently, and the present results warrant further investigation using clinical samples and integrated analyses.
...
PMID:Integrated analysis of whole genome exon array and array-comparative genomic hybridization in gastric and colorectal cancer cells. 2203 5
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