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Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (
p53
)
77,613
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The ubiquitin-proteasome system is an important regulator of cell growth and apoptosis. The potential of specific proteasome inhibitors to act as novel anti-cancer agents is currently under intensive investigation. Several proteasome inhibitors exert anti-tumour activity in vivo and potently induce apoptosis in tumour cells in vitro, including those resistant to conventional chemotherapeutic agents. By inhibiting NF-kappaB transcriptional activity, proteasome inhibitors may also prevent angiogenesis and metastasis in vivo and further increase the sensitivity of cancer cells to apoptosis. Proteasome inhibitors also exhibit some level of selective cytotoxicity to cancer cells by preferentially inducing apoptosis in proliferating or transformed cells or by overcoming deficiencies in growth-inhibitory or pro-apoptotic molecules. High expression of oncogene products like c-Myc also makes cancer cells more susceptible to proteasome inhibitor-induced apoptosis. The induction of apoptosis by proteasome inhibitors varies between cell types but often occurs following an initial accumulation of short-lived proteins such as
p53
, p27, pro-apoptotic Bcl-2 family members or activation of the stress kinase
JNK
. These initial events often result in a perturbation of mitochondria with concomitant release of cytochrome c and activation of the Apaf-1 containing apoptosome complex. This results in activation of the apical caspase-9 followed by activation of effector caspases-3 and -7, which are responsible for the biochemical and morphological changes associated with apoptosis.
...
PMID:The proteasome: a novel target for cancer chemotherapy. 1196 Mar 20
DNA damage, an important initiator of neuronal death, has been implicated in numerous neurodegenerative conditions. We previously delineated several pathways that control embryonic cortical neuronal death evoked by the DNA-damaging agent, camptothecin. In this model, the
tumor suppressor p53
and cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) are activated independently and cooperate to mediate the conserved death pathway. To further our understanding, we presently examined whether the c-Jun/
JNK
pathway modulates death and whether this pathway is regulated by CDKs,
p53
, and Bax. We show that c-Jun/
JNK
is activated following DNA damage. Moreover, the c-Jun pathway is one mediator of death, because expression of dominant negative c-Jun and cdc42, and
JNK
pathway inhibitors are neuroprotective. Although previous evidences indicate that JNK3 is required for neuronal death under certain conditions, we show that JNK3 deficiency only partially mediates c-Jun phosphorylation and its deficiency does not protect neurons from death. Interestingly, we provide evidence that CDK activity regulates c-Jun but does not affect upstream pathways that lead to
JNK
phosphorylation. Finally, c-Jun activation is independent of
p53
and Bax. Accordingly, we propose that c-Jun is regulated by the
JNK
and CDK pathways and that both must be activated for efficient c-Jun activation to occur.
...
PMID:Interaction of the c-Jun/JNK pathway and cyclin-dependent kinases in death of embryonic cortical neurons evoked by DNA damage. 1209 88
A general overview of the activation mechanisms of programmed cell death or apoptosis following an irradiation is given in this review. First, are summarized the main induction pathways of radiation-induced apoptosis by which extracellular (tumor necrosis factor (TNF), Fas ligand, TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL)) and intracellular (mitochondria and caspases) signals are integrated. A second part is then devoted to the importance of
p53
and of its regulators (ATR, ATM, DNA-PKcs) in the process of radiation-induced apoptosis. Thereafter, signal transduction pathways and more specially the role of some protein kinases (MEKK, SAPK/
JNK
, p38-MAPK) is treated. At last, a chapter concerns the clinical interest of radiation-induced apoptosis and the implication of apoptosis in the treatment of certain diseases.
...
PMID:[Mechanisms of radio-induced apoptosis]. 1218 18
Tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha and TNF-related apoptosis inducing ligand (TRAIL) share a common signaling pathway. Here we show a novel potentiating effect of cadmium on TNF-alpha- or TRAIL-mediated cell death via distinct signaling. TNF-alpha or TRAIL sensitized otherwise resistant NIH3T3 embryo fibroblast cells to death, when exposed to cadmium. The potentiating effects elicited by TNF-alpha or TRAIL on cell death were NF-kappaB- and SAPK/
JNK
-independent and were not diminished by the expression of Bcl-2. TNF-alpha potentiated the cadmium-induced accumulation of
p53
but did not affect expression levels of Bax, Mdm2 and p21(WAF/CIP). A similar pattern of
p53
accumulation was also observed in Balbc/3T3 fibroblasts but not in human tumor cell lines, MCF7 and HeLa cells. The synergistic cell death evoked by TNF-alpha and cadmium was attenuated by transient expression of a dominant negative
p53
(Val135) mutant in NIH3T3 cells and was not observed in
p53
(-/-) mouse embryo fibroblasts, indicating that
p53
accumulation appears to contribute to cell death. In contrast, TRAIL did not further increase the cadmium-induced accumulation of
p53
despite its potentiation effects on the cadmium-induced cell death. Expression of
p53
(Val135) mutant did not reduce TRAIL- and cadmium-mediated cell death. Taken together, these results suggest that TNF-alpha and TRAIL potentiate the cadmium-mediated cell death via distinct
p53
expression patterns.
...
PMID:Sensitizing effects of cadmium on TNF-alpha- and TRAIL-mediated apoptosis of NIH3T3 cells with distinct expression patterns of p53. 1218 81
Biological effects were examined in confluent cultures of fibroblasts and epithelial cells exposed to very low mean doses of alpha radiation, doses by which only 1-2% of the cells were actually traversed by an alpha particle. Enhanced frequencies of sister chromatid exchanges and HPRT mutations occurred in the non-irradiated, 'bystander' cells associated with a similar increase in the frequency of micronuclei, indicating the induction of DNA damage in these cells. In order to gain information concerning molecular pathways, changes in gene expression were examined in bystander cells by western analysis and in situ immunofluorescence staining. The expression levels of
p53
, p21 and MDM2 were significantly modulated in bystander cells; the damage signals leading to these changes were transmitted from irradiated to bystander cells by gap junction mediated intercellular communication. The bystander response was suppressed by incubation with superoxide dismutase as well as an inhibitor of NADPH oxidase, suggesting the effect may be mediated by oxidative stress. To examine other signalling pathways responsive to oxidative stress, the activation of stress-related kinases and their downstream transcription factors were analysed in bystander cells by western blotting and electrophoretic mobility shift assays; a 2-4-fold increase in the phosphorylation levels of
JNK
, ERK1/2, p90RSK, Elk-1 and ATF2 was observed. These changes were detected by 15 min after irradiation and persisted for at least 1 h. These findings indicate the activation of multiple signal transduction pathways in bystander cells, involving signals arising from the plasma membrane as well as from DNA damage.
...
PMID:Bystander effects: intercellular transmission of radiation damage signals. 1219 73
IL-8 is an important mediator of leukocyte trafficking and activation, participating in tumor angiogenesis, inflammatory processes and coronary atherosclerosis. Under flow conditions IL-8, in conjunction with MCP-1, triggers the firm adhesion of monocytes to the vascular endothelium. While previous studies have suggested the requirement of NF-kappaB for IL-8 secretion by endothelial cells, we investigated the possibility of IL-8 transactivation under conditions of NF-kappaB suppression. Inhibition of the proteasome by MG-132 or lactacystin completely blocked TNF-alpha-induced IkappaBalpha degradation as well as NF-kappaB activity in human arterial endothelial cells. Surprisingly, basal secretion of IL-8 protein was eight- to tenfold induced by proteasome inhibitors, while MCP-1 expression was, as expected, completely down-regulated. IL-8 was up-regulated at the transcriptional level, and promoter studies proved a more than ninefold induction of transcription factor AP-1 activity to be the cause of increased IL-8 transcription. Mutation of the AP-1 binding site in an IL-8 promoter construct completely abrogated this effect, while mutation of the NF-kappaB motif did not influence IL-8 transactivation by proteasome inhibitors. With DNA binding assays we found a seven- to eightfold induction of phosphorylated c-Jun and hence
JNK
kinase activity under MG-132 treatment. Induction of
JNK
kinase appeared independent of the cell type, even in tumor cell lines not responding to proteasome inhibitors. Since neither inactivation of
p53
in wild-type
p53
cells nor reintroduction of functional
p53
into
p53
(-/-) cells affected MG-132-inducible IL-8 secretion, a direct influence of
p53
on IL-8 regulation could be excluded. These results show that proteasome inhibitors can not only lead to functional AP-1 induction by enhanced c-Jun phosphorylation, but also transactivate the IL-8 gene in human endothelial cells despite complete suppression of NF-kappaB activity.
...
PMID:Proteasome inhibition leads to NF-kappaB-independent IL-8 transactivation in human endothelial cells through induction of AP-1. 1220 33
Cell loss and neuritic/cytoskeletal lesions represent two of the major categories of dementia-associated structural abnormalities in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Cell loss is ultimately mediated by apoptosis and mitochondrial DNA damage due to enhanced sensitivity to oxidative stress, but the mechanism responsible for the neuritic/cytoskeletal lesions including the abnormal proliferation of cortical neurites is not known. This study examines the potential role of oxygen free radical injury as a factor contributing to both cell death and neuritic sprouting cascades in AD. PNET2 human neuronal cells were treated with H2O2 (8 micro M to 88 micro M) for 24 hours and then analyzed for viability, DNA damage, and pro-apoptosis, survival, and sprouting gene expression and signaling. H2O2-treatment resulted in dose-dependent increases in cell death due to genomic and mitochondrial DNA damage associated with increased levels of 8-OHdG and the
p53
and CD95 pro-apoptosis genes, reduced levels of the Bcl-2 survival gene, activation of
JNK
and p38 stress kinases, and inhibition of PI3 kinase survival signaling. However, the H2O2-treated cells also manifested increased expression of growth and sprouting molecules, including GAP-43, nitric oxide synthase 3, neuronal thread protein (NTP; approximately 17 kD and approximately 21 kD forms), proliferating cell nuclear antigen, and phospho-Erk MAPK, and normal levels of the AD-associated approximately 41 kD NTP species, cyclin dependent kinase 5 (cdk-5), and phospho-tau. In addition, the H2O2-treated cells had increased levels of p25, the catalytically active and stable cleavage product of p35, which regulates cdk-5 activity. Previous studies demonstrated p25 accumulation in AD brains and p25-induced hyperphosphorylation of tau and neuronal apoptosis. The findings herein suggest that oxygen free radical injury in human CNS neuronal cells is sufficient to cause some but not all of the pro-death and pro-sprouting molecular abnormalities that occur in AD.
...
PMID:Oxygen free radical injury is sufficient to cause some Alzheimer-type molecular abnormalities in human CNS neuronal cells. 1221 88
Mammalian cells have a remarkable diverse repertoire of response to genotoxic stress that damage DNA. Cellular responses to DNA damaging agents will initially exhibit gene induction, which is regulated by complex mechanism(s) and probably involves multiple signaling pathways. In this paper, we demonstrate that induction of ATF3 protein, a member of the ATF/CREB family of transcription factors, by ionizing radiation (IR) requires normal cellular
p53
function. In contrast, induction of ATF3 after UV radiation (UV) or Methyl methanesulphonate (MMS) is independent of
p53
status. Induction of ATF3 by DNA damage is rapid, transient, and through a transcriptional mechanism. The ATF3 promoter is induced by UV and MMS, but not by IR. In addition, ATF3 promoter can be activated by MEKK1, an upstream activator of the ERK and
JNK
kinase pathway, but not induced following
p53
expression. Those results indicate that regulation of ATF3 induction after DNA damage utilizes both the
p53
-dependent and -independent pathways, and may also involve MAP kinase signaling pathways. Using the tetracycline-inducible system (tet-off), we have found that over-expression of ATF3 protein moderately suppresses cell growth. Interestingly, over-expression of ATF3 protein is able to slow down progression of cells from G1 to S phase, indicating that ATF3 protein might play a negative role in the control of cell cycle progression.
...
PMID:ATF3 induction following DNA damage is regulated by distinct signaling pathways and over-expression of ATF3 protein suppresses cells growth. 1238 11
Activating transcription factor (ATF) 3, a member of the ATF/cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP)-responsive element binding protein (ATF/CREB) family of transcription factors, is induced by a wide range of stress stimuli. Although the ATF3 homodimer is known to repress transcription of several genes, its precise biological roles are still unclear. In this study, we investigated the functional role of ATF3 in doxorubicin (DOX=adriamycin)-treated neonatal rat cardiac myocytes. DOX rapidly activated
JNK
and c-Jun and induced ATF3 at both mRNA and protein level. Adenovirus-mediated expression of ATF3 protected cardiomyocytes from DOX-induced apoptosis, as determined by flow cytometry, cell viability, and TUNEL assay. It was further shown that
p53
, one of the apoptosis-inducing transcription factors, was downregulated in the ATF3-overexpressing cardiomyocytes. These results strongly suggest that ATF3 may function as a cytoprotective transcription factor in DOX-treated cardiac myocytes, at least in part, owing to downregulation of
p53
. ATF3 may be a novel therapeutic target that protects cardiac myocytes from DOX-induced apoptosis.
...
PMID:ATF3 inhibits doxorubicin-induced apoptosis in cardiac myocytes: a novel cardioprotective role of ATF3. 1239 99
We have recently shown that proteasome inhibitor PS-341 induces apoptosis in drug-resistant multiple myeloma (MM) cells, inhibits binding of MM cells in the bone marrow microenvironment, and inhibits cytokines mediating MM cell growth, survival, drug resistance, and migration in vitro. PS-341 also inhibits human MM cell growth and prolongs survival in a SCID mouse model. Importantly, PS-341 has achieved remarkable clinical responses in patients with refractory relapsed MM. We here demonstrate molecular mechanisms whereby PS-341 mediates anti-MM activity by inducing
p53
and MDM2 protein expression; inducing the phosphorylation (Ser15) of
p53 protein
; activating c-Jun NH(2)-terminal kinase (
JNK
), caspase-8, and caspase-3; and cleaving the DNA protein kinase catalytic subunit, ATM, and MDM2. Inhibition of
JNK
activity abrogates PS-341-induced MM cell death. These studies identify molecular targets of PS-341 and provide the rationale for the development of second-generation, more targeted therapies.
...
PMID:Molecular mechanisms mediating antimyeloma activity of proteasome inhibitor PS-341. 1239
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