Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P04155 (pS2)
1,234 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

An accumulation of multiple genetic and epigenetic alterations of oncogenes, tumor suppressor genes, DNA repair genes, cell cycle regulators, cell adhesion molecules, and the growth factor/receptor system is involved in the course of multistep conversion of normal epithelial cells to clinical gastric cancer. Some of them differ depending on the histological type, well-differentiated (intestinal) and poorly differentiated (diffuse) types, suggesting the presence of two distinct genetic pathways. Genetic instability, chromosomal instability (telomere reduction), and immortality (activation of telomerase and expression of telomerase reverse transcriptase: TERT) participate in the initial step of stomach carcinogenesis. Because TERT protein expression precedes the telomerase activities in precancerous lesions, TERT expression may be a prerequisite for telomerase activation. The cyclin E gene is amplified in 15%-20% of gastric cancer. Reduced expression of a cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) inhibitor, p27Kip1, is frequently found in gastric cancer associated with high grade malignancy. E2F-1, an important downstream target of cyclins/CDKs, is overexpressed in about 40% of gastric carcinomas, whereas gene amplification of E2F-1 rarely occurs. Loss of heterozygosity (LOH) of p73, the p53-related new tumor suppressor gene, preferentially occurs in well-differentiated adenocarcinomas of foveolar type expressing pS2, a gastric-specific trefoil factor, indicating the importance of p73 LOH in the genesis.
...
PMID:Genetic and epigenetic alterations in multistep carcinogenesis of the stomach. 1077 29

Multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (MEN1) is a hereditary tumor syndrome characterized by tumors of the parathyroid glands, the pancreatic islets, the pituitary gland, the adrenal glands, as well as by neuroendocrine carcinoid tumors, often at a young age. Causal to the syndrome are germline mutations of the MEN1 tumor-suppressor gene. Identification of gene-mutation carriers has enabled presymptomatic diagnosis and treatment of MEN1-related lesions. The product of the MEN1 gene is the nuclear protein menin. Recent observations indicate several functions for menin in the regulation of transcription, serving either as a repressor or as an activator: menin interacts with the activator-protein-1-family transcription factor JunD, changing it from an oncoprotein into a tumor-suppressor protein, putatively by recruitment of histone deacetylase complexes; menin maintains transforming growth factor beta mediated signal transduction involved in parathyroid hormone and prolactin gene expression; and menin is an integral component of histone methyltransferase complexes. In this capacity menin is a regulator of expression of the cyclin-dependent-kinase inhibitors p18INK4C and p27Kip1; furthermore, menin serves as a co-activator of estrogen receptor mediated transcription, by recruiting methyltransferase activity to lysine 4 of histone 3 at the estrogen responsive TFF1(pS2) gene promoter. We propose that menin links transcription-factor function to histone-modification pathways and that this is crucial for MEN1 tumorigenesis. Understanding the molecular pathology of MEN1 tumorigenesis will lead to new therapeutic strategies.
...
PMID:Mechanisms of disease: multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1-relation to chromatin modifications and transcription regulation. 1702 55