Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (
p53
)
77,613
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The WAF1 gene, located on chromosome 6p, encodes a M(r) 21,000 protein (p21) that can arrest cell growth by associating with and inhibiting
cyclin-dependent kinase
complexes that are necessary for cells to exit Gr. Transcriptional activation of WAF1 can be accomplished by increasing levels of
p53 protein
induced by various cellular stresses, including DNA damage. Metastatic melanomas are paradoxical in that most overexpress wild-type
p53 protein
, yet cell growth is not inhibited. Thus, it is possible that lack of growth suppression in melanomas is due, in part, to mutations in the WAF1 gene. Therefore, we examined the entire coding region of the WAF1 gene in 24 metastatic melanoma cell lines and three normal melanocyte lines by single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) analysis and direct DNA sequencing. We similarly examined the DNA from lymphoblastoid cell lines, derived from nine individuals belonging to seven melanoma-prone families, in which haplotypes of markers on 6p cosegregate with melanoma for germline mutations in the WAF1 gene. Results indicate that (i) mutation of the WAF1 gene is an infrequent event in individuals with sporadic melanoma or predisposed to familial melanoma and (ii) the uncontrolled growth of melanoma cells is not due to mutation of the WAF1 gene. However, expression studies found a wide variation in the level of p21 protein in melanoma cells, suggesting that aberrant regulation of p21 may play a role in melanoma development. Moreover, there was no predictable relationship between p21 expression and
p53
expression, indicating that other,
p53
-independent, pathways may be important for the regulation of p21 in melanoma cells.
...
PMID:Mutations and defective expression of the WAF1 p21 tumour-suppressor gene in malignant melanomas. 749 59
SDI1 is an inhibitor of DNA synthesis that we isolated by expression screening cDNAs prepared from senescent, terminally nondividing human cells. Other groups then cloned this gene as a
cyclin-dependent kinase
(cdk)-interacting protein (CIP1, p21) that inhibits cdks; the gene was also isolated by screening for genes transactivated by
p53
(WAF1).
p53
levels are low in senescent and quiescent contact-inhibited or serum-deprived normal human cells, which we have found express high levels of SDI1 mRNA. This indicates that alternate pathways for upregulation of message level of this gene may exist. We therefore proceeded with the study presented here, treating human cells with a variety of growth-arrest-inducing agents, including some that damaged DNA, and found that RNA levels of SDI1 were increased in all cases that resulted in growth inhibition. More important, with the exception of gamma-radiation, most of these agents were able to elevate SDI1 message levels in cells lacking wild-type
p53
. At least two distinct kinetic profiles for RNA induction were observed, one that implicated
p53
transactivation and occurred early enough to cause arrest, and another that clearly was
p53
independent and suggested a role for the SDI1 gene product in the maintenance rather than in the cause of inhibition of DNA synthesis.
...
PMID:Evidence for a p53-independent pathway for upregulation of SDI1/CIP1/WAF1/p21 RNA in human cells. 752 62
This review attempts to provide current information on the role played by the
p53
gene in normal and leukemic hematopoiesis with particular emphasis on chronic myeloid leukemia. On the basis of the currently available data we can argue that
p53
acts as a negative regulator of proliferation of myeloid mature cells and CD34+ progenitors, and its action is mediated through changes in cell cycle kinetics, mainly before the S phase. The
p53
-dependent pathway is also regulated by several proteins, including p16, p21, p27 (
cyclin-dependent kinase
[CDK] inhibitors), and a few oncogenes (bcl-2, bax, MDM-2). Although there is some information about the changes in the
p53
gene seen in various types of leukemia, the functions and biological importance of these changes in the pathogenesis of leukemia are still largely elusive. During the past several years, accumulated evidence suggests that changes in the
p53
gene are commonly associated with blast crisis of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) but rarely with chronic phase, and they are represented by rearrangements, deletions and point mutations. As for most of the tumors, the majority of point mutations occur between exons 4 and 8 (hot regions). In patients with CML in blastic crisis the most frequent mechanism of
p53
inactivation is complete deletion of one allele in association with a point mutation in the remaining allele.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Role of p53 in leukemogenesis of chronic myeloid leukemia. 754 4
We introduced the gene for wild-type human
p53
or p21, a critical downstream mediator of
p53
-induced growth suppression, into a
p53
-deficient mouse prostate cancer cell line using a recombinant adenoviral vector (Ad5CMV-
p53
or Ad5CMV-p21). Elevated levels of endogenous mouse p21 mRNA provided evidence for the functional activity of virally transduced
p53
. Functional activity of viral-transduced p21 was demonstrated through immunoprecipitation of cellular protein extracts, which showed that the viral-transduced p21 associates with cyclin-dependent kinase 2 and was sufficient to down-regulate the activity of the
cyclin-dependent kinase
by approximately 65%. In vitro growth assays revealed significantly higher growth suppression after Ad5CMV-p21 infection compared to Ad5CMV-
p53
. In vivo studies in syngeneic male mice with established s.c. prostate tumors demonstrated that the rate of growth and final tumor volume were reduced to a much greater extent in mice that received intratumor injection of Ad5CMV-p21 compared to Ad5CMV-
p53
. In addition, the survival of host animals bearing tumors that were infected with Ad5CMV-p21, but not Ad5CMV-
p53
, was significantly extended. These data suggest that Ad5CMV-p21 may be effective as a therapeutic agent for prostate cancer.
...
PMID:In vivo gene therapy with p53 or p21 adenovirus for prostate cancer. 758 63
Aberrant cyclin expression has been implicated in oncogenesis in a number of human cancers. Since altered function of regulators of
cyclin-dependent kinase
(
CDK
) activity other than cyclins, in particular
CDK
inhibitors, might play a similar role in oncogenesis, we examined the expression and regulation of the
CDK
inhibitors p16INK4, p15INK4B and p21WAF1/CIP1 in human breast cancer cell lines. Both the INK4 and INK4B genes were homozygously deleted in 3 cell lines, while INK4 alone was deleted in 2 cell lines. A further 2 cell lines displayed loss of an allele at this locus, and in 1 of these the remaining allele contained a mis-sense mutation within the coding region of the p16INK4 protein. The majority of cell lines examined, including 2 normal mammary epithelial cell strains, expressed low levels of INK4 mRNA and low or undetectable levels of INK4B mRNA. However, INK4 mRNA was expressed at high levels in 5 cell lines, and this was associated with deletion or inactivation of the retinoblastoma susceptibility gene product pRB but not with mutation of
TP53
. No deletions of the WAF1/CIP1 gene were observed, but WAF1/CIP1 mRNA levels were reduced in cell lines with
TP53
mutation. Transfection of a p16INK4 expression vector into MDA-MB-231 cells lacking the INK4 gene failed to produce any p16INK4-expressing cell lines, suggesting that such cells were selected against in continuous culture. Despite the frequent deletion of INK4 in breast cancer cell lines, no evidence was obtained for INK4 deletions in DNA from 45 primary breast carcinomas. Thus, homozygous deletion of the INK4 gene appears to be a rare event in primary breast cancer.
...
PMID:Expression of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors p16INK4, p15INK4B and p21WAF1/CIP1 in human breast cancer. 759 Dec 70
Central to the role of
p53
in cell regulation are its sequence-specific interactions with genes that control the cell cycle and apoptosis.
p53
response elements contain two or more copies of a somewhat promiscuous consensus sequence: 5'-XXXC(A,T)(T,A)GYY-3' (where X is a purine and Y is a pyrimidine) (ref. 3). The sequence-specific DNA-binding region of
p53
resides in its central conserved region. Although this region itself is not known to be phosphorylated, the amino and carboxy termini of human
p53
contain sites for phosphorylation by several protein kinases. We have examined the role of
cyclin-dependent kinase
(Cdk) shown previously to phosphorylate human
p53
at serine 315 (ref. 5). We report here that
p53
is efficiently and selectively phosphorylated by S and G2/M Cdks. Such phosphorylation markedly stimulates sequence-specific DNA binding by
p53
and also causes a distinctive conformational change in
p53
as revealed by partial protease analysis. Strikingly, Cdk phosphorylation also confers binding-site preference on
p53
. These data suggest a potential regulatory mechanism of
p53
activity.
...
PMID:Increased and altered DNA binding of human p53 by S and G2/M but not G1 cyclin-dependent kinases. 759 41
p21Cip1 is a
cyclin-dependent kinase
(Cdk) inhibitor that is transcriptionally activated by
p53
in response to DNA damage. We have explored the interaction of p21 with the currently known Cdks. p21 effectively inhibits Cdk2, Cdk3, Cdk4, and Cdk6 kinases (Ki 0.5-15 nM) but is much less effective toward Cdc2/cyclin B (Ki approximately 400 nM) and Cdk5/p35 (Ki > 2 microM), and does not associate with Cdk7/cyclin H. Overexpression of P21 arrests cells in G1. Thus, p21 is not a universal inhibitor of Cdks but displays selectivity for G1/S Cdk/cyclin complexes. Association of p21 with Cdks is greatly enhanced by cyclin binding. This property is shared by the structurally related inhibitor p27, suggesting a common biochemical mechanism for inhibition. With respect to Cdk2 and Cdk4 complexes, p27 shares the inhibitory potency of p21 but has slightly different kinase specificities. In normal diploid fibroblasts, the vast majority of active Cdk2 is associated with p21, but this active kinase can be fully inhibited by addition of exogenous p21. Reconstruction experiments using purified components indicate that multiple molecules of p21 can associate with Cdk/cyclin complexes and inactive complexes contain more than one molecule of p21. Together, these data suggest a model whereby p21 functions as an inhibitory buffer whose levels determine the threshold kinase activity required for cell cycle progression.
...
PMID:Inhibition of cyclin-dependent kinases by p21. 762 5
We have previously demonstrated that cells from patients with ataxia-telangiectasia (A-T) fail to show initial delay at several cell cycle checkpoints post-irradiation. In addition a defect in the induction of
p53
by ionizing radiation was evident. We demonstrate here that the radiation signal transduction pathway operating through
p53
, its target gene WAF1, cyclin-dependent kinases and the retinoblastoma (Rb) protein is defective in A-T cells. The defective
p53
induction after ionizing radiation, observed previously in A-T cells, was also reflected at the functional level using
p53
-DNA binding activity, transactivation and transfection with wild type
p53
. Correction of the defect at the G1/S checkpoint was observed when wild type
p53
was constitutively expressed in A-T cells. Exposure of control cells to radiation gave rise to
p53
induction and as a consequence increased expression of WAF1 mRNA and protein, but A-T cells were defective in this response. As expected the WAF1 response in irradiated control cells resulted in an inhibition of
cyclin-dependent kinase
activity including cyclin E-cdk2, which plays an important role in the transition from G1 to S phase. No inhibition of
cyclin-dependent kinase
activity was observed in A-T cells correlating with the delayed WAF1 response. On the contrary an enhancement of
cyclin-dependent kinase
activity was seen in A-T cells post-irradiation. An accumulation of the hypophosphorylated form of Rb protein occurred in irradiated control cells compatible with the G1/S phase delay observed in these cells after exposure to radiation. In unirradiated A-T cells the amount of Rb protein was much higher compared to controls and it was mainly in the hyperphosphorylated (functionally inactive) form. In addition, accumulation of the hypophosphorylated form of Rb in A-T cells post-irradiation was defective, consistent with the lack of cell cycle arrest. Thus the failure of the G1/S checkpoint in A-T cells after exposure to ionizing radiation is consistent with a defective radiation signal transduction pathway operating through
p53
.
...
PMID:Nature of G1/S cell cycle checkpoint defect in ataxia-telangiectasia. 765 23
D-type cyclins and
cyclin-dependent kinase
(cdk-4) are likely involved in regulating passage of cells through the G1 phase of the cell cycle. A decrease in the proportion of cells in G1, a relatively radiation-sensitive phase of the cell cycle, should result in increased resistance to ionizing radiation; however, the effect of such overexpression on X-ray-induced G1-phase arrest is not known. Radiation survival curves were obtained at a dose rate of either 8 cGy/min or 1 Gy/min for subclones of the IL-3-dependent hematopoietic progenitor cell line 32D cl 3 expressing transgenes for either cyclin-D1, D2 or D3 or cdk-4. We compared the results to those with overexpression of the transgene for Bcl-2, whose expression enhances radiation survival and delays apoptosis. Cells overexpressing transgenes for each D-type cyclin or Bcl-2 had an increased number of cells in S phase compared to parent line 32D cl 3; however, overexpression of cdk-4 had no effect on cell cycle distribution. Cell death resulting from withdrawal of IL-3 was not affected by overexpression of cyclins D1 and D3 but was delayed by overexpression of D2, cdk-4 or Bcl-2. Flow cytometry 24 h after 5 Gy irradiation demonstrated that overexpression of each G1-phase regulatory transgene decreased the proportion of cells at the G1/S-phase border. Western analysis revealed induction of cyclin-D protein levels by irradiation, but no change in the levels of cdk-4,
p53
or p21. There was no significant change in the D0, but a significant increase in the n for cyclin-D or cdk-4 transgene-overexpressing clones at 1 Gy/min (P < 0.017). At a lower dose rate of 8 cGy/min, the n for cyclin or cdk-4-overexpressing clones was also increased (P < 0.07). Thus overexpression of cyclin-D or cdk-4 in hematopoietic cells induces detectable effects on hematopoietic cell radiation biology including a broadening of the shoulder on the radiation survival curve and a decrease in radiation-induced G1/S-phase arrest.
...
PMID:Inhibition of G1-phase arrest induced by ionizing radiation in hematopoietic cells by overexpression of genes involved in the G1/S-phase transition. 765 61
This review focuses on genes that have a proven or presumed role in the genesis of astrocytic tumors. A common theme in glioblastoma is the amplification of genes that code for growth factor receptors of the protein-tyrosine kinase family (epidermal growth factor receptor, platelet-derived growth factor receptor-alpha, met). The majority of glioblastomas also have alterations in genes that encode factors that are involved in
cyclin-dependent kinase
activity, which is a critical step in G1-S transition in the cell cycle. These alterations include deletions of negative regulatory elements (
TP53
, CDKN2, MTS2) and amplification of positive factors (MDM2, CDK4). In addition, there are loci on chromosomes 10 and 19q that seem to be involved in tumor progression.
...
PMID:Molecular genetics of human glioma. 765 23
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>