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

Like most other normal cells, human endothelial cells possess a limited replicative life span, and, after multiple passages in vitro, develop an arrest in cell division referred to as replicative senescence. For many cell types senescence can be delayed by oncogenes or tumor suppressor genes or prevented altogether by malignant transformation; however, once developed, senescence has been regarded as irreversible. We now report that a cytokine, vascular permeability factor/vascular endothelial growth factor (VPF/VEGF), significantly delays senescence in human dermal microvascular endothelial cells (HDMEC). Typically, VPF/VEGF-treated HDMEC could be cultured for at least 15-20 more population doublings (PD) than control cells. Protection from senescence was reversible in that subsequent withdrawal of VPF/VEGF returned cells to the senescent phenotype. Expression of several cell cycle-related genes (p21, p16 and p27) was significantly reduced in VPF/VEGF-treated cells but p53 expression was not significantly altered. Of particular importance, VPF/VEGF was able to rescue senescent HDMEC, restoring them to proliferation, to a more normal morphology, and to reduced expression of a senescence marker, neutral beta-galactosidase. Taken together, VPF/VEGF delayed the onset of senescence and also reversed senescence in microvascular endothelial cells without inducing cell transformation.
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PMID:Vascular permeability factor/vascular endothelial growth factor (VPF/VEGF) delays and induces escape from senescence in human dermal microvascular endothelial cells. 916 Aug 82

Retinoids mediate the normal growth of a variety of epithelial cells and may play an important role in the chemoprevention of certain malignancies. Loss of retinoic acid (RA) receptor-beta function may be an important event in mammary carcinogenesis, because the majority of breast cancers, in contrast to normal mammary epithelial cells, fail to express this receptor. We previously reported that all-trans-RA mediates G1 arrest as well as apoptosis in certain RAR beta-transduced breast cancer cell lines. We now report the effect of RA on normal human mammary epithelial cells (HMECs), which express functionally active retinoid receptors. We observe that RA induces growth suppression and G1 arrest of these HMECs but find no evidence that RA mediates apoptosis in these normal cell strains. This RA-induced G1 arrest is temporally associated with decreased levels of hyperphosphorylated retinoblastoma protein without any significant changes in c-myc, p53, p21, or p27 expression. Expression of cyclin D1, cyclin-dependent kinase 4, and cyclin E proteins, however, decreased in association with RA-mediated G1 arrest. Our studies suggest that growth inhibition, rather than apoptosis, may be a mechanism by which RA and RA receptors act to prevent the malignant transformation of normal mammary epithelial cells. The molecular target(s) of the activated RA receptors that mediate this G1 arrest in HMECs appear to be associated with a retinoblastoma-dependent pathway.
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PMID:All-trans-retinoic acid mediates G1 arrest but not apoptosis of normal human mammary epithelial cells. 918 97

Decorin belongs to a family of secreted, small, leucine-rich proteoglycans that affect matrix assembly and cellular growth. Ectopic expression of decorin proteoglycan or protein core as a mutated form lacking any glycosaminoglycan side chains induced growth suppression in neoplastic cells of various histogenetic origins, including tumor cells derived from gastrointestinal, genital, skeletal, cutaneous, or bone marrow tissues. Exogenously added recombinant decorin also suppressed overall growth of the parental cell lines. In all stably-transfected clones, growth retardation was specifically associated with induction of the potent cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21, but not p27, and subsequent translocation of p21 protein into the nuclei of decorin-expressing cells. This led to a greater proportion of the cells arrested in G1 phase of the cell cycle. These changes were independent of functional p53 or retinoblastoma protein. De novo expression of decorin in HCT116 human colon carcinoma cells harboring a disrupted p21 gene failed to induce growth suppression, in contrast to the wild-type cells in which p21 and growth arrest could be induced. These findings indicate that ectopic production of decorin protein core can retard the growth of a variety of tumor cells and that endogenous p21 is a required downstream effector of this biological axis.
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PMID:Ectopic expression of decorin protein core causes a generalized growth suppression in neoplastic cells of various histogenetic origin and requires endogenous p21, an inhibitor of cyclin-dependent kinases. 920 67

Multiple doses of retinoic acid (RA) were administered intraperitoneally to three groups of male Fischer 344 rats over a 36 h period. The p53 isoforms from bone marrow nuclei in these three groups of rats were analyzed over time by two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) and fluorography for the incorporation of [35S]methionine (p53-synthesis) and [32P]phosphate (p53-phosphorylation). Two groups of rats, young (3.5 months) ad libitum (Y/AL) and old (28 months) ad libitum (O/AL), had free access to Purina rat chow; a third group of old (28 months) diet-restricted rats (O/DR) were maintained on a restricted caloric intake (60% of the AL diet) from 3 months of age. After 36 h of RA dosing, the PAGE patterns of p53 synthesis and phosphorylation in Y/AL and O/DR rats were very similar. In both groups, an increase in complexity was observed with labeling of additional isotypes possessing more acidic isoelectric values. In contrast, the O/AL animals showed a pattern of p53 isoform synthesis and phosphorylation that was considerably less complex and lacked the pronounced shift to more acidic forms following RA dosing. The p53 isoforms of O/AL rats as recognized by wild type (wt) Pab 246 antibody, were also much less dramatic in their increase to more acidic forms. Two-dimensional phospho-tryptic maps of Y/AL and O/DR rats were also very similar, both exhibiting two additional minor 32P-labeled fragments after RA dosing. The maps of O/AL rats did not show the two additional fragments following RA administration. After RA dosing, cyclin protein inhibitors (p16, p21, p27) revealed robust labeling with their respective antibodies in Y/AL and O/DR rats as analyzed by Western blotting. The O/AL animals showed marginally detectable antibody recognition of the cyclin inhibitors after RA dosing. Taken together, these data suggest that the biosynthesis and phosphorylation of p53 isoforms and the expression of cyclin dependent kinase inhibitor proteins is not significantly different between Y/AL and O/DR rats. Further, these results confirm and extend our previous observations that chronic diet-restriction attenuates the age related decline in the metabolic activity of nuclear protein products.
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PMID:P53 synthesis and phosphorylation in the aging diet-restricted rat following retinoic acid administration. 922 23

Cdc25A, a phosphatase essential for G1-S transition, associates with, dephosphorylates, and activates the cell cycle kinase cyclin E-cdk2. p21CIP1 and p27 are cyclin-dependent kinase (cdk) inhibitors induced by growth-suppressive signals such as p53 and transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta). We have identified a cyclin binding motif near the N terminus of Cdc25A that is similar to the cyclin binding Cy (or RR LFG) motif of the p21CIP1 family of cdk inhibitors and separate from the catalytic domain. Mutations in this motif disrupt the association of Cdc25A with cyclin E- or cyclin A-cdk2 in vitro and in vivo and selectively interfere with the dephosphorylation of cyclin E-cdk2. A peptide based on the Cy motif of p21 competitively disrupts the association of Cdc25A with cyclin-cdks and inhibits the dephosphorylation of the kinase. p21 inhibits Cdc25A-cyclin-cdk2 association and the dephosphorylation of cdk2. Conversely, Cdc25A, which is itself an oncogene up-regulated by the Myc oncogene, associates with cyclin-cdk and protects it from inhibition by p21. Cdc25A also protects DNA replication in Xenopus egg extracts from inhibition by p21. These results describe a mechanism by which the Myc- or Cdc25A-induced oncogenic and p53- or TGF-beta-induced growth-suppressive pathways counterbalance each other by competing for cyclin-cdks.
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PMID:p21CIP1 and Cdc25A: competition between an inhibitor and an activator of cyclin-dependent kinases. 923 91

Human papilloma virus 16 (HPV 16) is associated with cervical cancer and is therefore considered a major health risk for women. Immortalization of keratinocytes induced by HPV infection is largely due to the binding of p53 and Rb by the the viral oncoproteins E6 and E7, respectively, and is driven to a large extent by a transforming growth factor alpha/amphiregulin epidermal growth factor receptor autocrine loop. In this study, we show that the growth of HPV 16-immortalized human keratinocytes can be blocked by a selective epidermal growth factor receptor kinase inhibitor, AG 1478, and by AG 555, a blocker of cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (Cdk2) activation. AG 1478 induces a massive increase in the Cdk2 protein inhibitors p27 and p21, whereas AG 555 appears to have a different mechanism of action, inhibiting the activation of Cdk2. Growth arrest induced by AG 1478 and AG 555 is accompanied by up to 20% of cells undergoing apoptosis. Following AG 1478 treatment but not AG 555 treatment, up to 50% of cells undergo terminal keratinocyte differentiation as determined by filaggrin expression and by the decline in the expression of cytokeratin 14. The growth-arresting properties of AG 1478 and AG 555 identifies them as possible lead antipapilloma agents.
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PMID:Inhibitors of epidermal growth factor receptor kinase and of cyclin-dependent kinase 2 activation induce growth arrest, differentiation, and apoptosis of human papilloma virus 16-immortalized human keratinocytes. 928 82

Transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta) is a potent inhibitor of the proliferation of many cell types. We investigated the effects of TGF-beta1 on cyclin D1, cyclin A, p21, p27, and p53 mRNA expressions in primary cultured rat hepatocytes by the reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) method. TGF-beta1 decreased the level of cyclin A mRNA in a dose-dependent manner, while it had little effect on the level of cyclin D1 mRNA. p21 mRNA expression was greatly induced by TGF-beta1 in a p53-independent mechanism, while p27 mRNA expression was not affected by TGF-beta1. These results suggest that TGF-beta1 may inhibit liver cell proliferation by regulating p21 and cyclin A mRNAs.
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PMID:Regulation of cell cycle-related genes in rat hepatocytes by transforming growth factor beta1. 929 47

Arterial injury results in exposure of medial smooth muscle cells and adventitial fibroblasts to multiple growth factors that bind to specific cell surface receptors. These in turn activate second messengers and induce expression of immediate-early genes within minutes to hours after ligand binding to the receptor. Activation of the immediate-early genes results in passage of the stimulated cell from its nonproliferating, quiescent G0 state to the first phase of the cell cycle (G1). Coordination of the events that occur during the cell cycle is effected by a series of cyclin-dependent kinases and requires inactivation of several "tumor suppressor genes," including p53, p21, p16, p15, p27, and the retinoblastoma gene Rb, that inhibit the kinase activity of the cyclin/Cdk complexes. An understanding of the factors that regulate signal transduction, cell cycle progression, and programmed cell death has suggested several novel therapeutic strategies including (1) antisense oligonucleotide inhibition of proto-oncogene expression, (2) the use of molecular decoys or pharmacological therapies to block specific steps required for cell cycle progression, and (3) gene transfer of tumor suppressor genes. The apparent success of several of these strategies in animal models of restenosis suggests that these molecular therapies may play a valuable role in preventing intimal hyperplasia and restenosis after balloon angioplasty and vascular stenting.
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PMID:The role of proto-oncogenes in coronary restenosis. 932 28

The proliferation of most cells is strictly dependent on cell-matrix interactions, a phenomenon called anchorage dependence. Because tumor cells often are independent of this regulation, it is important to characterize the molecular pathways that control cellular proliferation after detachment of cells from their matrix. In this report, we investigated a possible role of p53 and one of its target genes, p21(waf1/cip1), as components of anchorage-dependent cell growth control. We found that p53 protein is rapidly activated upon the disruption of cellular attachment. This led to p21 transcriptional activation via two p53-binding sites in its promoter. Elevated p21 protein levels blocked transcription and activity of the cell cycle-regulator cyclin A, and cells became arrested in G1 of the cell cycle. Under the same conditions, fibroblasts from p53 knock-out mice did not activate p21 and did not down-regulate cyclin A expression but rather induced another cell cycle inhibitor, p27. Thus, our results characterize a chain of events, starting from the activation of p53 and proceeding via p21 to cyclin A, that is activated in response to the loss of cellular adherence. This p53-regulated pathway may constitute one of a few redundant systems to ensure proper cell control in multicellular organisms.
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PMID:Activation of p53-p21waf1 pathway in response to disruption of cell-matrix interactions. 936 Sep 84

It has been proposed that the functions of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors p21(Cip1/Waf1) and p27Kip1 are limited to cell cycle control at the G1/S-phase transition and in the maintenance of cellular quiescence. To test the validity of this hypothesis, p21 was expressed in a diverse panel of cell lines, thus isolating the effects of p21 activity from the pleiotropic effects of upstream signaling pathways that normally induce p21 expression. The data show that at physiological levels of accumulation, p21, in addition to its role in negatively regulating the G1/S transition, contributes to regulation of the G2/M transition. Both G1- and G2-arrested cells were observed in all cell types, with different preponderances. Preponderant G1 arrest in response to p21 expression correlated with the presence of functional pRb. G2 arrest was more prominent in pRb-negative cells. The arrest distribution did not correlate with the p53 status, and proliferating-cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) binding activity of p21 did not appear to be involved, since p27, which lacks a PCNA binding domain, produced similar arrest distributions [corrected], DNA endoreduplication occurred in pRb-negative but not in pRb-positive cells, suggesting that functional pRb is necessary to prevent DNA replication in p21 G2-arrested cells. These results suggest that the primary target of the Cip/Kip family of inhibitors leading to efficient G1 arrest as well as to blockade of DNA replication from either G1 or G2 phase is the pRb regulatory system. Finally, the tendency of Rb-negative cells to undergo endoreduplication cycles when p21 is expressed may have negative implications in the therapy of Rb-negative cancers with genotoxic agents that activate the p53/p21 pathway.
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PMID:Effects of p21(Cip1/Waf1) at both the G1/S and the G2/M cell cycle transitions: pRb is a critical determinant in blocking DNA replication and in preventing endoreduplication. 941 9


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