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Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (
p53
)
77,613
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In the highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) era, AIDS-related non-Hodgkin's lymphomas (AIDS-NHL) and their treatment still represent an open issue, because HAART may not be sufficient to prevent the development of NHL. The present spectrum of AIDS-NHL includes systemic lymphomas, primary central nervous system lymphomas, and 2 rare entities, primary effusion lymphomas (PEL) and plasmablastic lymphomas of the oral cavity. The vast majority of systemic AIDS-NHL belongs to 3 high-grade B-cell lymphomas: Burkitt's lymphoma (BL), immunoblastic lymphoma (IBL), and large-cell lymphoma (LCL). The pathologic heterogeneity of AIDS-NHL is correlated with the heterogeneity of the molecular lesions associated with these lymphomas. The molecular lesions associated with AIDS-BL involve activation of c-MYC inactivation of
p53
, and infection by Epstein-Barr virus (EBV). EBV infection occurs in 40% of LCL cases and in 90% of IBL cases. Rearrangements of BCL-6 are detected in 20% of AIDS-LCL cases. In the presence of EBV infection, BCL-6 expressing AIDS-LCL fails to express the latent membrane protein 1 (LMP1) antigen. Conversely, AIDS-IBL are characterized by absent BCL-6 expression, absence of BCL-6 rearrangements, and frequent expression of LMP1. Consistently, the molecular pathways of
viral infection
and lesions of cancer-related genes associated with AIDS-NHL vary substantially in different clinicopathologic categories of the disease. The marked degree of biologic heterogeneity of AIDS-NHL is highlighted by their histogenetic differences, because AIDS-NHL are related to distinct B cell subsets (ie, germinal center [GC] or post-GC B cells). The phenotypic pattern of AIDS-BL and systemic AIDS-LCL closely reflects B cells residing in the GC, namely centroblasts and centrocytes. Conversely, the phenotype of AIDS-IBL, either systemic or localized primarily to the central nervous system, and AIDS-PEL reflects post-GC B cells in all cases. New information on the molecular and virologic pathogenesis of AIDS-NHL may serve as a point of attack for pathogenic-driven therapies. Moreover, a greater knowledge of other biologic features of these tumors may help investigators identify new potential targets for "intelligent" therapies.
...
PMID:AIDS-related non-Hodgkin's lymphomas: from pathology and molecular pathogenesis to treatment. 1205 73
Primary human embryo lung fibroblasts and adult diploid fibroblasts infected by the human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) display beta-galactosidase (beta-Gal) activity at neutral pH (senescence-associated beta-Gal [SA-beta-Gal] activity) and overexpression of the plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 (PAI-1) gene, two widely recognized markers of the process designated premature cell senescence. This activity is higher when cells are serum starved for 48 h before infection, a process that speeds and facilitates HCMV infection but that is insufficient by itself to induce senescence. Fibroblasts infected by HCMV do not incorporate bromodeoxyuridine, a prerequisite for the formal definition of senescence. At the molecular level, cells infected by HCMV, beside the accumulation of large amounts of the cell cycle regulators
p53
and pRb, the latter in its hyperphosphorylated form, display a strong induction of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor (cdki) p16(INK4a), a direct effector of the senescence phenotype in fibroblasts, and a decrease of the cdki p21(CIP1/WAF). Finally, a replicative senescence state in the early phases of infection significantly increased the number of cells permissive to
virus infection
and enhanced HCMV replication. HCMV infection assays carried out in the presence of phosphonoformic acid, which inhibits the virus DNA polymerase and the expression of downstream genes, indicated that immediate-early and/or early (alpha) genes are sufficient for the induction of SA-beta-Gal activity. When baculovirus vectors expressing HCMV IE1-72 or IE2-86 proteins were inoculated into fibroblasts, the increase of p16(INK4a) (observed predominantly with IE2-86) was similar to that observed with the whole virus, as was the induction of SA-beta-Gal activity, suggesting that the viral IE2 gene leads infected cells into senescence. Altogether our results demonstrate for the first time that HCMV, after arresting the cell cycle and inhibiting apoptosis, triggers the cellular senescence program, probably through the p16(INK4a) and
p53
pathways.
...
PMID:Cell cycle arrest by human cytomegalovirus 86-kDa IE2 protein resembles premature senescence. 1241 54
Adenovirus early proteins E4 ORF3 and E4 ORF6 have complementary functions during
viral infection
. Both proteins facilitate efficient viral DNA replication, late protein expression, and prevention of concatenation of viral genomes. Additionally, E4 ORF6 is involved in the shutoff of the host cell protein synthesis through its interaction with the E1B 55K protein. This complex also leads to the degradation of
p53
. A unique function of E4 ORF3 is the reorganization of nuclear structures known as PML oncogenic domains (PODs). The function of these domains is unclear, but PODs have been implicated in a number of important cellular processes, including transcriptional regulation, apoptosis, transformation, and response to interferon. The goal of this study was to determine the functional significance of the reorganization of PODs by E4 ORF3. Point mutations were made in the E4 ORF3 gene. These mutants were recombined into a virus lacking E4 ORF6 and expressed under the control of the natural virus E4 promoter. The panel of mutant viruses was used to investigate the role of E4 ORF3 during the course of the
viral infection
program. One of the mutant viruses exhibited aberrant reorganization of PODs and had a severe defect in viral DNA replication, thus leading to a dramatic decrease in virus production. A number of mutants accumulated viral DNA and infectious virus particles to wild-type levels but showed significant viral genome concatenation. These data show that E4 ORF3 is a multifunctional protein and that a specific rearrangement of nuclear PML domains is coupled to efficient viral DNA replication. This function is distinct from the role of E4 ORF3 in the regulation of virus genome concatenation via inhibition of cellular double-strand break repair.
...
PMID:Distinct roles of the Adenovirus E4 ORF3 protein in viral DNA replication and inhibition of genome concatenation. 1269 31
The samples of hepatocellular carcinoma from Turkey, a country with a high prevalence of hepatitis B virus and hepatitis C virus, but low dietary exposure to aflatoxin B1, were examined in order to detect the frequency of mutant p53 and its association with clinical and pathological data. Fifty-two samples of hepatocellular cancer from the patients who were diagnosed in our clinic were included in this study. The mutant p53 protein was searched for by specific enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Of 52 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma, 26 (50%) had the mutant p53. The incidence of
p53
mutation in hepatocellular cancer patients with chronic liver disease due to hepatitis B
virus infection
was significantly higher than in those with chronic liver disease due to alcohol, indicating that not alcohol but hepatitis B virus, in fact induces the mutations in
p53
gene. In addition, it has been shown that the
p53
mutation was significantly associated with the diameter of tumor nodule and the degree of cellular differentiation in hepatocellular cancer. The
p53
mutation rate found in our study is concordant for a geography where hepatitis B virus and hepatitis C virus are common. Hepatitis B virus and possibly hepatitis C virus, but not alcohol, should be responsible, to a degree, for the mutational change in
p53 protein
in hepatocellular cancer patients with chronic liver disease. The
p53
mutation is a late event in hepatocarcinogenesis because it is related with cellular differentiation and tumor diameter. The specific ELISA can be a useful screening test in future studies to select the patients for gene therapy using wild-type
p53
.
...
PMID:Detection of mutant p53 in hepatocellular cancer from Turkey and its correlation with clinicopathologic parameters. 1277 81
Association of infection with papillomavirus and dysplasia of the cervix uteri has been firmly established. There are only few cervical cancers where no HPV DNA is detectable. The mechanism of epithelial cell immortalization by interaction with tumour suppressor genes
p53
and pRb by viral oncogenes E6 and E7 is elucidated. Progression of the HPV infected cell to a malignant phenotype involves further modification of host gene expression and/or mutations. The appearance of chromosomal aberrations can lead to mutational inactivation or loss of tumour suppressor genes (TSG), activation and amplification of oncogenes, with importance for the process of carcinogenesis. Oncogene amplification, with exception of few reports, seems not to be a major mechanism in cervical carcinogenesis. In contrast, cytogenetic and loss of heterozygosity (LOH) results from CIN and invasive cancer demonstrate alterations at specific chromosomal regions, pointing at localisation of TSG. Genetic alterations at chromosomes 3p, 6p, 1lq were frequently found early in tumour development Primary invasive carcinoma showed additional allelic losses at chromosome arms 6q, 17p and 18q. Useful biological diagnostic and prognostic markers for high-risk HPV infection and malignant progression may be p16NK4 p27Kip, and NET-I/C4.8. Putative senescence genes relevant for HPV-induced carcinogenesis are localized on chromosomes 2, 4 and 10. Genes for Telomerase suppression are presumably located on chromosomes 3, 4 and 6. Natural immune responses to HPV infection exist Therefore, immune therapy is an attractive possibility for prevention and therapy of HPV infection. To date, vaccine development has reached clinical evaluation. Prophylaxis aims at the induction of virus neutralizing antibodies to capsid proteins. Virus-like particle vaccines are currently tested in clinical trials. Due to the long lag period between infection and clinical manifestation trials will take a long time until conclusive results are obtained. Mandatory expression of viral and perhaps certain cellular genes in infected epithelial and tumour cells offers targets for therapeutic approaches. Since most dysplasia clears spontaneously the
viral infection
is immunogenic to some extent. However, in some individuals the immune response has to be stimulated by vaccination in order to be effective. Several strategies are being tested in clinical trials and others are in preclinical development The task will be to circumvent immunosuppressive features of the HPV infected cells.
...
PMID:HPV induced cervical carcinogenesis: molecular basis and vaccine development. 1279 44
Few studies have examined the etiology of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in patients without hepatitis
virus infection
. We evaluated the role of occult hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection in the development of HCC in Japanese patients without hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) and antibodies to hepatitis C antigen (anti-HCV). Twenty-one HBsAg negative and anti-HCV negative (non-B, non-C) patients with HCC were studied. HBV DNA in serum and HBV transcripts in liver were examined by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) or reverse transcription and PCR. HBV DNA integration was examined by Southern blot analysis or cassette-ligation-mediated PCR as described previously.
p53
mutations were examined by direct sequencing. HBV DNA was not detected in serum from any patients. HBV-related transcripts were detected in 5 of 7 HCCs from patients with antibodies to hepatitis core antigen (anti-HBc) and in 3 of 14 HCCs from patients without anti-HBc (P = 0.0261). HBV DNA was integrated into human genome in two non-B, non-C HCCs. Of the 14 patients without anti-HBc, 5 had a history of excessive alcohol intake. In exons 5 through 8 of the
p53
gene, mutations were detected in 2 of 8 HCCs with HBV-transcripts and in 5 of 13 HCCs without such transcripts.
p53
mutation at codon 159 was found in 2 of 6 patients with excessive alcohol intake without HBV-transcripts. These results suggested that occult HBV infection might play an important role in hepatocarcinogenesis in non-B, non-C patients with anti-HBc and that excessive alcohol intake might be related to HCC in non-B, non-C patients in Japan.
...
PMID:HBV DNA integration and HBV-transcript expression in non-B, non-C hepatocellular carcinoma in Japan. 1455 60
We have previously shown a critical role for IFN regulatory factor 5 (IRF-5) in the innate immune response to
virus infection
. For the first time, we now show that although IRF-5 is a direct target of
p53
, its cell cycle regulatory and proapoptotic effects are
p53
independent. IRF-5 inhibits both in vitro and in vivo B-cell lymphoma tumor growth in the absence of wild-type
p53
. The molecular mechanism(s) of IRF-5-mediated growth inhibition is associated with a G(2)-M cell cycle arrest and modulation of growth regulatory and proapoptotic genes, including p21, Bak, DAP kinase 2, and Bax. Taken together, these data indicate that although IRF-5 is a downstream target of
p53
, its growth inhibitory and proapoptotic effects are independent of
p53
.
...
PMID:Interferon regulatory factor 5, a novel mediator of cell cycle arrest and cell death. 1455 32
Cytochrome P450 (CYP) gene transfer sensitizes tumor xenografts to anticancer prodrugs such as cyclophosphamide (CPA) without a detectable increase in host toxicity. Optimal prodrug activation is achieved when a suitable P450 gene (e.g., human CYP2B6) is delivered in combination with NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase (P450R), which encodes the flavoenzyme P450 reductase. We sought to improve this gene therapy by coordinated delivery and expression of P450 and P450R on a single bicistronic vector using an internal ribosomal entry site (IRES) sequence. Retrovirus encoding a CYP2B6-IRES-P450R expression cassette was shown to induce strong P450-dependent CPA cytotoxicity in a population of infected 9L gliosarcoma cells. Adeno-P450, a replication-defective, E1/E3 region-deleted adenovirus engineered to express CYP2B6-IRES-P450R, induced intracellular CPA 4-hydroxylation, and CPA cytotoxicity, in a broad range of human cancer cell lines. However, limited Adeno-P450 gene transfer and CPA chemosensitization was seen with certain human tumor cells, notably PC-3 prostate and HT-29 colon cancer cells. Remarkable improvements could be obtained by coinfecting the tumor cells with Adeno-P450 in combination with Onyx-017, an E1b-55k gene-deleted adenovirus that selectively replicates in
p53
pathway-deficient cells. Substantial increases in gene expression were observed during the early stages of
viral infection
, reflecting an apparent coamplification of the Adeno-P450 genome, followed by enhanced viral spread at later stages, as demonstrated in cultured tumor cells, and in A549 and PC-3 solid tumor xenografts grown in scid mice. This combination of the replication-defective Adeno-P450 with a replication-conditional and tumor cell-targeted helper adenovirus dramatically improved the low gene transfer observed with some human tumor cell lines and correspondingly increased tumor cell-catalyzed CPA 4-hydroxylation, CPA cytotoxicity, and in vivo antitumor activity in a PC-3 tumor xenograft model. The use of tumor-selective, replicating adenovirus to promote the spread of replication-defective gene therapy vectors, such as Adeno-P450, substantially increases the therapeutic potential of adenoviral delivery systems, and should lead to increased activity and enhanced tumor selectivity of cytochrome P450 and other gene-directed enzyme prodrug therapies.
...
PMID:Use of replication-conditional adenovirus as a helper system to enhance delivery of P450 prodrug-activation genes for cancer therapy. 1472 37
While both in vivo and in vitro evidence has suggested that liver cells undergo apoptosis in response to dengue
virus infection
, little is known about the mechanism of induction. Given that the
p53
tumour suppressor gene is a key mediator of apoptosis, we sought to define the role of this gene in response to dengue
virus infection
. After infection, a
p53
wild type liver cell line (HepG2) showed changes consistent with apoptosis including alterations of cell morphology, cellular detachment and DNA laddering. However,
p53
was neither up-regulated, nor showed any evidence of complexing with dengue virus proteins as determined by immunoprecipitation. Infection of a
p53
null liver cell line (Hep3B) also produced changes consistent with the induction of apoptosis. While the profile of the cells undergoing apoptosis in each cell line was similar as determined by flow cytometry, the absolute levels were markedly different with up to 90% of Hep3B cells undergoing apoptosis compared to only 20% of HepG2 cells at day 5 post infection. By day 7, all Hep3B infected cells were dead. In contrast, it proved possible to culture dengue virus infected HepG2 cells for 3 months. Viral progeny released from the
p53
null cell line were nine-fold higher per attached cell than from the
p53
wild type cell line. These results suggest that, while induction of apoptosis in liver cells is mediated by a non-
p53
regulated pathway,
p53
may play a role in restricting the level of viral progeny to below a critical level at which apoptosis is triggered.
...
PMID:Apoptosis in dengue virus infected liver cell lines HepG2 and Hep3B. 1474 67
p53
plays an important role in tumour suppression in cells exposed to some genotoxic stresses. We found that the
p53 protein
level was increased in a variety of cell lines infected with human herpesvirus 6 (HHV-6). Because the elevation in
p53
began very soon after infection (4 h) and did not occur with UV-inactivated
virus infection
, it appeared to require the expression of one or more viral immediate-early (IE) genes. To elucidate the mechanism of
p53
induction, we investigated its regulation at the protein level. Pulse-chase analysis showed that the stability of
p53
increased in HHV-6-infected cells. In addition, the ubiquitination of
p53
decreased after infection, indicating that the stability of
p53
was increased through deubiquitination. We showed by confocal microscopy that the additional
p53
mainly localized to the cytoplasm and that
p53
was retained in the cytoplasm even after UV irradiation, but that it translocated into the nucleus in mock-infected cells. Furthermore, DNA fragmentation analysis, a terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick end-labelling (TUNEL) assay and annexin V staining showed that infected cells were resistant to UV-induced apoptosis. These results lead us to propose that HHV-6 has a mechanism for retaining
p53
within the cytoplasm and protects the infected cells from apoptosis.
...
PMID:Productive human herpesvirus 6 infection causes aberrant accumulation of p53 and prevents apoptosis. 1503 30
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