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)
(S)-1-[3-Hydroxy-2-(phosphonylmethoxy)propyl]cytosine (HPMPC) is a nucleoside phosphonate analog which in its active diphosphorylated form is known to inhibit herpesvirus
DNA polymerase
. In this study, we have demonstrated that, in a dose-dependent manner, this compound irreversibly suppressed proliferation of cells infected with human papillomavirus (HPV), which does not possess a viral
DNA polymerase
. To elucidate the mechanism of cell growth inhibition, cell cycle indicator-regulator expression, thymidine incorporation, transcript levels of apoptosis factors, and anabolic products of HPMPC following drug treatment were evaluated. HPMPC treatment reduced WAF1 (p21) levels independent of those of
p53
, while proliferating cell nuclear antigen increased. However, in comparison to controls, HPMPC-treated cells displayed a decrease in thymidine incorporation, indicating an inhibition of host
DNA polymerase
activity. In normal primary keratinocytes, HPMPC predominantly accumulated in the form of the choline adduct HPMPCp-choline. However, in HPV type 16-transformed keratinocytes, HPMPCpp was the most abundant anabolic product, with little HPMPCp-choline having formed. The data imply that an unrecognized viral factor is modulating the conversion of nucleotides, including HPMPC, to the triphosphorylated form.
...
PMID:Selective inhibition of human papillomavirus-induced cell proliferation by (S)-1-[3-hydroxy-2-(phosphonylmethoxy)propyl]cytosine. 1022 36
The Epstein-Barr Virus (EBV) immediate-early protein BRLF1 is one of two transactivators which mediate the switch from latent to lytic replication in EBV-infected cells. DNA viruses often modulate the function of critical cell cycle proteins to maximize the efficiency of virus replication. Here we have examined the effect of BRLF1 on cell cycle progression. A replication-deficient adenovirus expressing BRLF1 (AdBRLF1) was used to infect normal human fibroblasts and various epithelial cell lines. BRLF1 expression induced S phase entry in contact-inhibited fibroblasts and in the human osteosarcoma cell line U-2 OS. AdBRLF1 infection produced a dramatic increase in the level of E2F1 but not E2F4. In contrast, the levels of Rb, p107, and p130 were decreased in AdBRLF1-infected cells. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays confirmed an increased level of free E2F1 in the AdBRLF1-infected human fibroblasts. Consistent with the previously described effect of E2F1, AdBRLF1-infected fibroblasts had increased levels of
p53
and p21 and died by apoptosis. BRLF1-induced activation of E2F1 may be required for efficient EBV lytic replication, since at least one critical viral replication gene (the viral
DNA polymerase
) is activated by E2F (C. Liu, N. D. Sista, and J. S. Pagano, J. Virol. 70:2545-2555, 1996).
...
PMID:The Epstein-Barr virus protein BRLF1 activates S phase entry through E2F1 induction. 1040 Jul 50
Cells that have been irradiated with ultraviolet light (UV) suffer damage to their DNA, primarily in the form of covalent linkage between adjacent pyrimidines. Such photoproducts represent blocks to RNA and DNA polymerases and are potentially mutagenic. Blockage of RNA polymerase II by a photoproduct in the transcribed strand of an active gene leads to induction of the
p53 protein
, which induces pleiotropic responses that may include apoptotic cell death. If a cell survives, the blocked polymerase targets the nucleotide excision repair machinery to the site of the lesion, which is repaired in an error-free manner. Repair coupled to transcription in this manner strongly influences the mutation spectrum induced by UV, reducing the proportion of base substitutions that arise from photoproducts on the transcribed strand. If the damage persists when the DNA is replicated in S-phase, either because the cell is unable to repair the damage or because there is insufficient time between the induction of damage and the onset of S-phase. To do so, the replicative
DNA polymerase
complex may be blocked. In this situation, lesion bypass can be accomplished using an error-free mechanism, or using an error-prone mechanism that involves the newly described, non-processive DNA polymerase zeta encoded by the human homolog of the yeast REV3 gene.
...
PMID:DNA repair, DNA replication, and UV mutagenesis. 1053 99
The telomere
DNA polymerase
(telomerase) and the
tumor suppressor protein p53
are frequently associated with human cancers, and activation of telomerase and inactivation of
p53
involved in cancer cell immortalization. In this report, we demonstrate a direct interaction of telomerase with
p53
in the nuclear lysates of human breast cancer cells, and with recombinant human
p53
, by affinity chromatography and immunoprecipitation. On activity criteria, the interaction is between the carboxyl-terminal region of
p53
and a region close to the amino-terminus of human telomerase-associated protein 1 (hTEP1). Incubation of recombinant
p53
with nuclear telomerase extracts results in inhibition of telomerase activity, with the C-terminal region of
p53
being essential for inhibition. This effect is not mediated by binding to telomerase substrate DNA, but requires the region near the N-terminus of hTEP1, in that a synthetic peptide derived from this region of hTEP1 similarly inhibits telomerase activity. Together, these in vitro interactions between telomerase and
p53
suggest that the activity of telomerase may be regulated by
p53
, down-regulation of which in turn would favor up-regulation of telomerase activity in cancer cell development.
...
PMID:Molecular interactions between telomerase and the tumor suppressor protein p53 in vitro. 1059 87
Chloroacetaldehyde (CAA) reacts with DNA bases, forming hydroxyethano derivatives of different stability, which are subsequently converted into etheno (epsilon) adducts: epsilon A, epsilon C, epsilon G.
DNA polymerase
fingerprint analysis was used to study the distribution of CAA-induced modifications in the
p53
sequence. A plasmid bearing cDNA containing the human
p53
gene was reacted in vitro with CAA, then dehydrated for conversion of hydroxyethano into etheno adducts, and primer extension by T7
DNA polymerase
in the presence of four dNTPs was performed. The DNA repair enzymes methylpurine-DNA glycosylase and Escherichia coli exonuclease III were used to convert epsilon A residues in the template into DNA strand breaks, which enabled precise localization of the epsilon A residues within the
p53
gene. Hydroxyethano derivatives of adenine and cytosine in a template blocked T7
DNA polymerase
and caused premature chain termination opposite adenine or one base before cytosine. After dehydration, both epsilon A and epsilon C were much more easily by-passed by T7
DNA polymerase
. Formation of epsilon G was identified as 'stop bands' one base before guanine residues. Modification of cytosine and guanine was additionally recognized by weakening or disappearance of non-specific stops on an undamaged template, probably due to steric hindrance by the tertiary DNA structure for polymerase. Etheno adduction of cytosine and guanine relaxed the compact DNA structure and enabled
DNA polymerase
to by-pass. In exons 5-8 of
p53
, 143 out of 500 sites appeared to be damaged by CAA, with four particularly densely modified regions between codons 135-147, 218-222, 234-255 and 284-292. The pattern of modification followed the pattern of
p53
mutations found in vinyl chloride-associated liver angiosarcomas in humans and rats, but only in regions that showed 100% homology with the human sequence. The factors that influence DNA damage and induction of mutations in the
p53
gene by CAA and vinyl chloride are discussed.
...
PMID:Localization of chloroacetaldehyde-induced DNA damage in human p53 gene by DNA polymerase fingerprint analysis. 1062 28
MDM2 is induced by
p53
in response to cellular insults such as DNA damage and can have effects upon the cell cycle that are independent or downstream of
p53
. We used a yeast two-hybrid screen to identify proteins that bind to MDM2 and which therefore might be involved in these effects. We found that MDM2 can bind to the C-terminus of the catalytic subunit of
DNA polymerase
epsilon (DNA pol epsilon), to a region that is known to be essential in yeast. In an in vitro system we confirmed that MDM2 could bind to the homologous regions of both mouse and human DNA pol epsilon and to full-length human DNA pol epsilon. DNA pol epsilon co-immunoprecipitated with MDM2 from transfected H1299 cells and also from a HeLa cell nuclear extract. We show here that the DNA pol epsilon-interacting domain of MDM2 is located between amino acids 50 and 166. Our studies provide evidence that MDM2 interacts with a region of DNA pol epsilon that plays a critical role in the function of DNA pol epsilon.
...
PMID:MDM2 interacts with the C-terminus of the catalytic subunit of DNA polymerase epsilon. 1098 79
Poly(ADP-ribose) is formed in possibly all multicellular organisms by a familiy of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerases (PARPs). PARP-1, the best understood and until recently the only known member of this family, is a DNA damage signal protein catalyzing its automodification with multiple, variably sized ADP-ribose polymers that may contain up to 200 residues and several branching points. Through these polymers, PARP-1 can interact noncovalently with other proteins and alter their functions. Here we report the discovery of a poly(ADP-ribose)-binding sequence motif in several important DNA damage checkpoint proteins. The 20-amino acid motif contains two conserved regions: (i) a cluster rich in basic amino acids and (ii) a pattern of hydrophobic amino acids interspersed with basic residues. Using a combination of alanine scanning, polymer blot analysis, and photoaffinity labeling, we have identified poly(ADP-ribose)-binding sites in the following proteins:
p53
, p21(CIP1/WAF1), xeroderma pigmentosum group A complementing protein, MSH6, DNA ligase III, XRCC1,
DNA polymerase
epsilon, DNA-PK(CS), Ku70, NF-kappaB, inducible nitric-oxide synthase, caspase-activated DNase, and telomerase. The poly(ADP-ribose)-binding motif was found to overlap with five important functional domains responsible for (i) protein-protein interactions, (ii) DNA binding, (iii) nuclear localization, (iv) nuclear export, and (v) protein degradation. Thus, PARPs may target specific signal network proteins via poly(ADP-ribose) and regulate their domain functions.
...
PMID:Poly(ADP-ribose) binds to specific domains in DNA damage checkpoint proteins. 1101 34
Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (KSHV), or human herpesvirus 8, is associated with three proliferative diseases ranging from viral cytokine-induced hyperplasia to monoclonal neoplasia: multicentric Castleman's disease (CD), Kaposi's sarcoma (KS), and primary effusion lymphoma (PEL). Here we report a new latency-associated 1,704-bp KSHV spliced gene belonging to a cluster of KSHV sequences having homology to the interferon regulatory factor (IRF) family of transcription factors. ORFK10.5 encodes a protein, latency-associated nuclear antigen 2 (LANA2), which is expressed in KSHV-infected hematopoietic tissues, including PEL and CD but not KS lesions. LANA2 is abundantly expressed in the nuclei of cultured KSHV-infected B cells. Transcription of K10.5 in PEL cell cultures is not inhibited by
DNA polymerase
inhibitors nor significantly induced by phorbol ester treatment. Unlike LANA1, LANA2 does not elicit a serologic response from patients with KS, PEL, or CD as measured by Western blot hybridization. Both KSHV vIRF1 (ORFK9) and LANA2 (ORFK10.5) appear to have arisen through gene duplication of a captured cellular IRF gene. LANA2 is a potent inhibitor of
p53
-induced transcription in reporter assays. LANA2 antagonizes apoptosis due to
p53
overexpression in
p53
-null SAOS-2 cells and apoptosis due to doxorubicin treatment of wild-type
p53
U2OS cells. While LANA2 specifically interacts with amino acids 290 to 393 of
p53
in glutathione S-transferase pull-down assays, we were unable to demonstrate LANA2-
p53
interaction in vivo by immunoprecipitation. These findings show that KSHV has tissue-specific latent gene expression programs and identify a new latent protein which may contribute to KSHV tumorigenesis in hematopoietic tissues via
p53
inhibition.
...
PMID:Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus LANA2 is a B-cell-specific latent viral protein that inhibits p53. 1111 11
The carcinogenic plant extract aristolochic acid (AA) is thought to be the major causative agent in the development of urothelial carcinomas found in patients with Chinese herb nephropathy (CHN). These carcinomas are associated with overexpression of
p53
, suggesting that the
p53
gene is mutated in CHN-associated urothelial malignancy. To investigate the relation between AA-DNA adduct formation and possible
p53
mutations, we mapped the distribution of DNA adducts formed by the two main components of AA, aristolochic acid I (AAI) and aristolochic acid II (AAII) at single nucleotide resolution in exons 5-8 of the human
p53
gene in genomic DNA. To this end, an adduct-specific polymerase arrest assay combined with a terminal transferase-dependent PCR (TD-PCR) was used to amplify DNA fragments. AAI and AAII were reacted with human mammary carcinoma (MCF-7) DNA in vitro and the major DNA adducts formed were identified by the (32)P-postlabeling method. These adducted DNAs were used as templates for TD-PCR. Sites at which
DNA polymerase
progress along the template was blocked were assumed to be at the nucleotide 3' to the adduct. Polymerase arrest spectra thus obtained showed a preference for reaction with purine bases in the human
p53
gene for both activated compounds. For both AAs, adduct distribution was not random; the strongest signals were seen at codons 156, 158-159 and 166-167 for exon 5, at codons 196, 198-199, 202, 209, 214-215 and 220 for exon 6, at codons 234-235, 236-237 and 248-249 for exon 7 and at codons 283-284 and 290-291 for exon 8. Overall guanines at CpG sites in the
p53
gene that correspond to mutational hotspots observed in many human cancers seem not to be preferential targets for AAI or II. We compared the AA-DNA binding spectrum in the
p53
gene with the
p53
mutational spectrum of urothelial carcinomas found in the human mutation database. No particular pattern of polymerase arrest was found that predicts AA-specific mutational hotspots in urothelial tumors of the current
p53
database. Thus, AA is not a likely cause of non-CHN-related urothelial tumors.
...
PMID:Sequence-specific detection of aristolochic acid-DNA adducts in the human p53 gene by terminal transferase-dependent PCR. 1115 51
Normal somatic cells have a defined number of divisions, a limited capacity to proliferative. The telomeres, sequences of TTAGGG repeats at the ends of chromosomes, are considered the direct responsible of the control of the cellular cycle. In fact, the progressive shortening of telomere length at each cellular division, causes the entrance of the cells in a phase of senescence and than apoptosis. The maintenance of the length of telomeres is carried out through: the telomerase, a
DNA polymerase
reverse transcriptase that extends sequence TTAGGG repeats, or the alternative lengthening of telomeres (ALT), between which the adaptive mechanisms, inactivation of TRF1, a protein bound to the telomeres with the functions of inhibiting the telomerase activity and Tankirase-PARP, an enzymatic complex that ADP-ribosylate TRF1 and reduce its binding to DNA. The alteration of the mechanism of maintenance of the telomeres length (Telomerase, TRF1, Tankirase-PARP) may represent a first step toward the cell immortalization and cancerogenesis. Together with the alteration of the control mechanisms of the telomere length, also the cell genic contest should be considered. In fact, the oncogene activation and/or oncosuppressor gene inactivation (
p53
, Rb, ras) may allow or reduce the cancerogenesis. From this point of view, the telomerase, the TRF1, Tanchirase-PARP and other proteins involved in telomere length could be, in a near future, used as new indicators of prognosis and as markers for new anti-cancer therapies.
...
PMID:[The role of telomere-binding proteins in carcinogenesis]. 1125 11
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>