Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (p53)
77,613 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Opioids are powerful analgesics but also drugs of abuse. Because opioid addicts are susceptible to certain infections, opioids have been suspected to suppress the immune response. This was supported by the finding that various immune-competent cells express opioid receptors and undergo apoptosis when treated with opioid alkaloids. Recent evidence suggests that opioids may also effect neuronal survival and proliferation or migrating properties of tumor cells. A multitude of signaling pathways has been suggested to be involved in these extra-analgesic effects of opioids. Growth-promoting effects were found to be mediated through Akt and Erk signaling cascades. Death-promoting effects have been ascribed to inhibition of nuclear factor-kappaB, increase of Fas expression, p53 stabilization, cytokine and chemokine release, and activation of nitric oxide synthase, p38, and c-Jun-N-terminal kinase. Some of the observed effects were inhibited with opioid receptor antagonists or pertussis toxin; others were unaffected. It is still unclear whether these properties are mediated through typical opioid receptor activation and inhibitory G-protein-signaling. The present review tries to unravel controversial findings and provides a hypothesis that may help to integrate diverse results.
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PMID:Opioids as modulators of cell death and survival--unraveling mechanisms and revealing new indications. 1531 8

We analysed the possible cellular mechanism involved in the NO action in the balance between apoptosis and cell proliferation in liver regeneration process. We determined p53, proapoptotic protein Bax, antiapoptotic Bcl-xL, proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) and apoptotic index at the early stages of regenerative process after NO increase by lipopolysaccharide-induction (LPS) of inducible-type nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) and by direct NO donor (sodium nitroprusside, SNP). Male Wistar rats were randomised in four experimental groups: sham operated control (Sh), partial hepatectomised control (PH-C), partial hepatectomised pretreated with LPS (2 mg/kg body weight, i.p.) (PH-LPS), and partial hepatectomised pretreated with SNP (2.5 mg/kg body weight, i.v. at a rate of 1 ml/h) (PH-SNP). Animals were killed 5 h post-surgery. Hepatic cytosolic iNOS showed an increase of 34% in PH-C animals with respect to Sh, and LPS-treatment increased iNOS protein levels 30% compared with PH-C. Bax and p53 protein levels showed significant increases in LPS- and SNP-treated hepatectomised rats with respect to PH-C. The apoptotic indexes were increased 75% in both, PH-LPS and PH-SNP rats versus PH-C. The increase of NO did not show any change in the proliferation process. These results suggest that NO is involved in apoptosis via p53 and Bax proteins after PH, showing a tightly regulated growth process in liver regeneration.
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PMID:Role of nitric oxide increase on induced programmed cell death during early stages of rat liver regeneration. 1533 72

Inflammation influences the development of cancer. The nitric oxide synthase (NOS2) is induced by inflammatory cytokines, e.g., tumor necrosis factor alpha and interleukin 1beta, and produces nitric oxide (NO*), a critical mediator of the inflammatory response. Because p53 governs NO* production by transcriptionally transrepressing NOS2, we used a genetic strategy to determine whether NO* and p53 cooperatively regulate tumorigenesis. Lymphomas developed more rapidly in p53-/-NOS2-/- or p53-/-NOS2+/- mice than in p53-/-NOS2+/+ mice that were cross-bred into a >95% C57BL6 background and maintained in a pathogen-free condition. Likewise, sarcomas and lymphomas developed faster in p53+/-NOS2-/- or p53+/-NOS2+/- than in p53+/-NOS2+/+ mice. When compared with the double knockout mice, p53-/-NOS2+/+ mice showed a higher apoptotic index and a decreased proliferation index with an increased expression of death receptor ligands, CD95-L and tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand, and the cell cycle checkpoint protein, p21(waf1), in the spleen and thymus before tumor development. Furthermore, mice deficient in both p53 and NOS2 produced a high level of anti-inflammatory interleukin 10 when compared with p53-deficient mice. These studies provide genetic and mechanistic evidence that NO* can suppress tumorigenesis.
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PMID:Nitric oxide, a mediator of inflammation, suppresses tumorigenesis. 1546 71

Loss of expression of the apoptosis protease activator protein-1 (APAF-1) in human melanoma is thought to promote resistance to programmed cell death by preventing caspase-9 activation. However, the role of the APAF-1-dependent pathway in apoptosis activated by cellular stress and/or DNA damage has been recently questioned. We investigated APAF-1 expression in a large panel of human melanomas and assessed cellular response to several proapoptotic agents in tumors expressing or lacking APAF-1 protein. In two melanomas with wild-type p53 but with differential expression of APAF-1, treatment with camptothecin, celecoxib, or an nitric oxide synthase inhibitor (1400W) significantly modulated expression of 36 of 96 genes in an apoptosis-specific cDNA macroarray, but APAF-1 mRNA levels were not induced (in APAF-1(-) cells) nor up-regulated (in APAF-1(+) cells), a finding confirmed at the protein level. Treatment with cisplatin, camptothecin, etoposide, betulinic acid, celecoxib, 1400W, and staurosporine promoted enzymatic activity not only of caspases -2, -8, and -3 but also of caspase-9 in both APAF-1(+) and APAF-1(-) tumor cells. Moreover, drug-induced caspase-9 enzymatic activity could be not only partially but significantly reduced by caspase-2, -3, and -8 -specific inhibitors in both APAF-1(+) and APAF-1(-) tumor cells. In response to 1 to 100 micromol/L of cisplatin, camptothecin, or celecoxib, APAF-1(+) melanomas (n = 12) did not show significantly increased levels of apoptosis compared with APAF-1(-) tumors (n = 7), with the exception of enhanced apoptosis in response to a very high dose (100 micromol/L) of etoposide. These results suggest that the response of human melanoma cells to different proapoptotic agents may be independent of their APAF-1 phenotype.
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PMID:Apoptosis protease activator protein-1 expression is dispensable for response of human melanoma cells to distinct proapoptotic agents. 1549 60

Nitric oxide (NO) is a potent tumor radiosensitizer; however, its clinical use is limited by systemic side effects. We have demonstrated previously that gene transfer of the human inducible NO synthase (iNOS) gene into tumor cells and tumors induces high-output NO production that significantly enhances tumor radioresponsiveness, with no observed side effects. Notably, iNOS gene transfer enhances tumor radioresponsiveness via apoptotic cell death. Because NO and ionizing radiation are both known to promote p53-dependent apoptosis, we hypothesized that p53 activation might be a primary mechanism for the synergy of these two genotoxic stresses. We report that NO and ionizing radiation synergistically activate p53 in colorectal cancers grown in athymic mice by augmenting phosphorylation of p53 at serine 15. The effect of NO and ionizing radiation on tumor cell apoptosis and tumor radioresponsiveness is significantly reduced in p53 knockout isogenic cancer cell lines. Furthermore, the transfer of both p53 and iNOS genes into tumor cells lacking functional p53 enhanced their radioresponsiveness more than transfer of either gene alone.
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PMID:Nitric oxide and ionizing radiation synergistically promote apoptosis and growth inhibition of cancer by activating p53. 1552 Feb 10

Hyperhomocysteinemia is believed to induce endothelial dysfunction and promote atherosclerosis; however, the pathogenic mechanism has not been clearly elucidated. In this study, we examined the molecular mechanism by which homocysteine (HCy) causes endothelial cell apoptosis and by which nitric oxide (NO) affects HCy-induced apoptosis. Our data demonstrated that HCy caused caspase-dependent apoptosis in cultured human umbilical vein endothelial cells, as determined by cell viability, nuclear condensation, and caspase-3 activation and activity. These apoptotic characteristics were correlated with reactive oxygen species (ROS) production, lipid peroxidation, p53 and Noxa expression, and mitochondrial cytochrome c release following HCy treatment. HCy also induced p53 and Noxa expression and apoptosis in endothelial cells from wild type mice but not in the p53-deficient cells. The NO donor S-nitroso-N-acetylpenicillamine, adenoviral transfer of inducible NO synthase gene, and antioxidants (alpha-tocopherol and superoxide dismutase plus catalase) but not oxidized SNAP, 8-Br-cGMP, nitrite, and nitrate, suppressed ROS production, p53-dependent Noxa expression, and apoptosis induced by HCy. The cytotoxic effect of HCy was decreased by small interfering RNA-mediated suppression of Noxa expression, indicating that Noxa up-regulation plays an important role in HCy-induced endothelial cell apoptosis. Overexpression of inducible NO synthase increased the formation of S-nitroso-HCy, which was inhibited by the NO synthase inhibitor N-monomethyl-l-arginine. Moreover, S-nitroso-HCy did not increase ROS generation, p53-dependent Noxa expression, and apoptosis. These results suggest that up-regulation of p53-dependent Noxa expression may play an important role in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis induced by HCy and that an increase in vascular NO production may prevent HCy-induced endothelial dysfunction by S-nitrosylation.
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PMID:Nitric oxide inhibition of homocysteine-induced human endothelial cell apoptosis by down-regulation of p53-dependent Noxa expression through the formation of S-nitrosohomocysteine. 1556 2

Nitric Oxide (NO) produced by activated microglia is an important contributor to neuronal damage. NO toxicity is generally thought to be mediated by the DNA damage-p53 pathway or mitochondrial dysfunction. We investigated the mechanism of NO toxicity by using microglial MG5 cells established from p53-deficient mouse. When MG5 cells were exposed to LPS plus IFN-gamma, mRNA and protein for inducible NO synthase (iNOS) were markedly induced and apoptosis occurred. Under these conditions, we found that mRNA and protein for CHOP/GADD153, a C/EBP family transcription factor that is involved in ER stress-induced apoptosis, were induced. These results suggest that NO-induced apoptosis in MG5 cells occurs through the ER stress pathway involving CHOP, but is independent of p53. Overactivation-induced apoptosis may be an essential self-regulatory mechanism for microglia in order to limit bystander killing of vulnerable neurons. On the other hand, recent reports suggest that there may exist two subtypes of microglia at least in the CNS. We found activated rat type-1 microglia induced expression of iNOS and exhibited neurotoxic to rat hippocampal neurons. By contrast, activated type-2 microglia hardly exhibited neurotoxicity in this co-culture system. These results suggest that the two subtype(s) of microglia may regulate differently the inflammatory response in the CNS.
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PMID:[NO-induced apoptosis and ER stress in microglia]. 1557 44

Iron-regulatory protein 2 (IRP2), a posttranscriptional regulator of iron metabolism, undergoes proteasomal degradation in iron-replete cells, while it is stabilized in iron deficiency or hypoxia. IRP2 also responds to nitric oxide (NO), as shown in various cell types exposed to pharmacological NO donors and in gamma interferon/lipopolysaccharide-stimulated macrophages. However, the diverse experimental systems have yielded conflicting results on whether NO activates or inhibits IRP2. We show here that a treatment of mouse B6 fibroblasts or human H1299 lung cancer cells with the NO-releasing drug S-nitroso-N-acetyl-penicillamine (SNAP) activates IRP2 expression. Moreover, the exposure of H1299 cells to SNAP leads to stabilization of hemagglutinin (HA)-tagged IRP2, with kinetics analogous to those elicited by the iron chelator desferrioxamine. Similar results were obtained with IRP2(Delta)(73), a mutant lacking a conserved, IRP2-specific proline- and cysteine-rich domain. Importantly, SNAP fails to stabilize HA-tagged p53, suggesting that under the above experimental conditions, NO does not impair the capacity of the proteasome for protein degradation. Finally, by employing a coculture system of B6 and H1299 cells expressing NO synthase II or IRP2-HA cDNAs, respectively, we demonstrate that NO generated in B6 cells stabilizes IRP2-HA in target H1299 cells by passive diffusion. Thus, biologically synthesized NO promotes IRP2 stabilization without compromising the overall proteasomal activity. These results are consistent with the idea that NO may negatively affect the labile iron pool and thereby trigger responses to iron deficiency.
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PMID:Nitric oxide inhibits the degradation of IRP2. 1568 86

Resveratrol, a dietary phytoalexin, has emerged as a promising chemopreventive agent due to its antiproliferative and pro-apoptotic action toward cancer cells and its ability to inhibit tumor growth in animals. Gastric adenocarcinoma cells respond to resveratrol treatment with suppression of DNA synthesis, activation of nitric oxide synthase, induction of apoptosis and inhibition of total PKC and PKC alpha activity. Here we demonstrate that treatment of gastric adenocarcinoma SNU-1 cells with resveratrol results in time and concentration dependent accumulation of tumor suppressors p21(cip1/WAF-1) and p53 and is preceded by loss of membrane-associated PKC delta protein and a concomitant increase in cytosolic PKC alpha. Arrest of the cell cycle at transition of S to G(2)/M phases correlates with the profile of (3)H-thymidine incorporation and accumulation of p21(cip1/WAF-1) and was temporally dependent on increase of p53. SNU-1 cells respond to resveratrol treatment with up-regulation of both Fas and Fas-L proteins, whereas in KATO-III cells, with deleted p53, only Fas-L is increased after resveratrol treatment. Although Fas and Fas-L proteins in SNU-1 cells and Fas-L in KATO-III cells were elevated within 24 h of cell treatment with low concentrations of resveratrol, significant apoptotic response at these concentrations was observed only after 48 h. Altogether, our findings indicate that resveratrol engages PKC alpha and delta signals in gastric adenocarcinoma SNU-1 cells prior to up-regulation of antiproliferative and pro-apoptotic signals. The specific cell death signals engaged by resveratrol appear to be cell type dependent and suggest that resveratrol has chemopreventive potential even after mutational changes have occurred.
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PMID:Resveratrol regulates cellular PKC alpha and delta to inhibit growth and induce apoptosis in gastric cancer cells. 1574 86

Hepatocytes and intrahepatic progenitor cells (oval cells) have similar responses to most growth factors but rarely proliferate together. Oval cells constitute a reserve compartment that is activated when hepatocyte proliferation is inhibited. Interferon gamma (IFN-gamma) increases in liver injury that involves oval cell responses, but it is not upregulated during liver regeneration after partial hepatectomy. Based on these observations, we used well-characterized lines of hepatocytes (AML-12 cells) and oval cells (LE-6 cells) to investigate the potential mechanisms that regulate differential growth responses in hepatocytes and oval cells. We show that IFN-gamma blocks hepatocyte proliferation in vivo, and that in combination with either tumor necrosis factor (TNF) or lipopolysaccharide (LPS), it causes cell cycle arrest in hepatocytes but stimulates oval cell proliferation in cultured cells. The hepatocyte cell cycle arrest is reversible, is p53-independent, and is not associated with apoptosis. Treatment of AML-12 hepatocytes with IFN-gamma/LPS or IFN-gamma/TNF, but not with individual cytokines, induced NO synthase and generated NO, while similarly treated oval cells produced little if any NO. Generation of NO by an NO donor reproduced the inhibitory effect of the cytokine combinations on AML-12 cell replication, while NO inhibitors abolish the replication deficiency. In conclusion, we propose that IFN-gamma, in conjunction with TNF or LPS, can both inhibit hepatocyte proliferation through the generation of NO and stimulate oval cell replication. The response of hepatocytes and oval cells to cytokine combinations may contribute to the differential proliferation of these cells in hepatic growth processes.
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PMID:Differential regulation of rodent hepatocyte and oval cell proliferation by interferon gamma. 1579 32


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