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Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (
p53
)
77,613
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Many conventional anticancer treatments kill cells irrespective of whether they are normal or cancerous, so patients suffer from adverse side effects due to the loss of healthy cells. Anticancer insights derived from cell cycle research has given birth to the idea of cell cycle G2 checkpoint abrogation as a cancer cell specific therapy, based on the discovery that many cancer cells have a defective G1 checkpoint resulting in a dependence on the G2 checkpoint during cell replication. Damaged DNA in humans is detected by sensor proteins (such as hHUS1, hRAD1, hRAD9, hRAD17, and hRAD26) that transmit a signal via ATR to CHK1, or by another sensor complex (that may include gammaH2AX, 53BP1, BRCA1, NBS1, hMRE11, and hRAD50), the signal of which is relayed by ATM to CHK2. Most of the damage signals originated by the sensor complexes for the G2 checkpoint are conducted to CDC25C, the activity of which is modulated by 14-3-3. There are also less extensively explored pathways involving
p53
, p38, PCNA, HDAC,
PP2A
, PLK1, WEE1, CDC25B, and CDC25A. This review will examine the available inhibitors of CHK1 (Staurosporin, UCN-01, Go6976, SB-218078, ICP-1, and CEP-3891), both CHK1 and CHK2 (TAT-S216A and debromohymenialdisine), CHK2 (CEP-6367), WEE1 (PD0166285), and
PP2A
(okadaic acid and fostriecin), as well as the unknown checkpoint inhibitors 13-hydroxy-15-ozoapathin and the isogranulatimides. Among these targets, CHK1 seems to be the most suitable target for therapeutic G2 abrogation to date, although an unexplored target such as 14-3-3 or the strategy of targeting multiple proteins at once may be of interest in the future.
...
PMID:G2 checkpoint abrogators as anticancer drugs. 1507 95
Okadaic acid (OA) is a protein phosphatase (PP) inhibitor and induces hyperphosphorylation of
p53
. We investigated whether the inhibition of PP1 by OA promotes the phosphorylation of the serine 15 of
p53
. In vitro dephosphorylation assay showed that PP1 dephosphorylated ultraviolet C (UVC)-induced phospho-ser15 of
p53
, and that OA treatment inhibited it. One of the PP1 regulators, growth arrest and DNA damage 34 (GADD34), disturbed PP1 binding with
p53
, interfered with the dephosphorylation of
p53
and increased the amount of phospho-
p53
after UVC-treatment. This report provides the first evidence that PP1, but not
PP2A
, dephosphorylates phospho-serine 15 of
p53
.
...
PMID:Protein phosphatase 1, but not protein phosphatase 2A, dephosphorylates DNA-damaging stress-induced phospho-serine 15 of p53. 1517 17
Under serum-free conditions, rapamycin, an inhibitor of mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR), induces a cellular stress response characterized by rapid and sustained activation of the apoptosis signal-regulating kinase 1 (ASK1) signaling pathway and selective apoptosis of cells lacking functional
p53
. Here we have investigated how mTOR regulates ASK1 signaling using
p53
-mutant rhabdomyosarcoma cells. In Rh30 cells, ASK1 was found to physically interact with protein phosphatase 5 (PP5), previously identified as a negative regulator of ASK1. Rapamycin did not affect either protein level of PP5 or association of PP5 with ASK1. Instead, rapamycin caused rapid dissociation of the
PP2A
-B" regulatory subunit (PR72) from the PP5-ASK1 complex, which was associated with reduced phosphatase activity of PP5. This effect was dependent on expression of eukaryotic initiation factor 4E-binding protein 1 (4E-BP1). Down-regulation of PP5 activity by rapamycin coordinately activated ASK1, leading to elevated phosphorylation of c-Jun. Amino acid deprivation, which like rapamycin inhibits mTOR signaling, also inhibited PP5 activity, caused rapid dissociation of PR72, and activated ASK1 signaling. Overexpression of PP5, but not the
PP2A
catalytic subunit, blocked rapamycin-induced phosphorylation of c-Jun, and protected cells from rapamycin-induced apoptosis. The results suggest that PP5 is downstream of mTOR, and positively regulated by the mTOR pathway. The findings suggest that in the absence of serum factors, mTOR signaling suppresses apoptosis through positive regulation of PP5 activity and suppression of cellular stress.
...
PMID:Inhibition of mammalian target of rapamycin activates apoptosis signal-regulating kinase 1 signaling by suppressing protein phosphatase 5 activity. 1521 33
Recent evidence suggests that human cells require more genetic changes for neoplastic transformation than do their murine counterparts. However, a precise enumeration of these differences has never been undertaken. We have determined that perturbation of two signaling pathways-involving
p53
and Raf-suffices for the tumorigenic conversion of normal murine fibroblasts, while perturbation of six pathways-involving
p53
, pRb,
PP2A
, telomerase, Raf, and Ral-GEFs-is needed for human fibroblasts. Cell type-specific differences also exist in the requirements for tumorigenic transformation: immortalized human fibroblasts require the activation of Raf and Ral-GEFs, human embryonic kidney cells require the activation of PI3K and Ral-GEFs, and human mammary epithelial cells require the activation of Raf, PI3K, and Ral-GEFs.
...
PMID:Species- and cell type-specific requirements for cellular transformation. 1532
Activation of the ARF-
p53 tumor suppressor
pathway is one of the cell's major defense mechanisms against cancer induced by oncogenes. The ARF-
p53
pathway is dysfunctional in a high proportion of human cancers. The regulation of the ARF-
p53
signaling pathway has not yet been well characterized. In this study polyoma virus (Py) is used as a tool to better define the ARF-
p53
signaling pathway. Py middle T-antigen (PyMT) induces ARF, which consequently up-regulates
p53
. We show that Py small T-antigen (PyST) blocks ARF-mediated activation of
p53
. This inhibition requires the small T-antigen
PP2A
-interacting domain. Our results reveal a previously unrecognized role of
PP2A
in the modulation of the ARF-
p53 tumor suppressor
pathway.
...
PMID:Role for PP2A in ARF signaling to p53. 1538 68
Identifying the molecular lesions that are 'mission critical' for tumorigenesis and maintenance is one of the burning questions in contemporary cancer biology. In addition, therapeutic strategies that trigger the lytic and selective death of tumor cells are the unfulfilled promise of cancer research. Fortunately, viruses can provide not only the necessary 'intelligence' to identify the critical players in the cancer cell program but also have great potential as lytic agents for tumor therapy. Recent studies with DNA viruses have contributed to our understanding of critical tumor targets (such as EGFR,
PP2A
, Rb and
p53
) and have an impact on the development of novel therapies, including oncolytic viral agents, for the treatment of cancer.
...
PMID:DNA tumor viruses -- the spies who lyse us. 1566 29
The small DNA tumor viruses encode proteins that subvert many of the pivotal growth regulatory pathways within the cell to facilitate their own replication. The cell responds to viral infection/proteins by activating the
p53 tumor suppressor
pathway. Activation of
p53
could impair a productive viral infection at many levels, including the inhibition of viral DNA replication and/or the premature death of infected cells. Therefore, DNA viruses encode proteins that inactivate the
p53 tumor suppressor
pathway. Understanding how DNA viral proteins activate/inactivate the
p53
pathway has provided invaluable insights into tumorigenesis. Recent studies with polyoma virus have identified a viral protein (PyST) that inhibits ARF-mediated activation of
p53
, and revealed a novel role for
PP2A
in the regulation of the ARF-
p53 tumor suppressor
pathway.
...
PMID:Modulation of the ARF-p53 pathway by the small DNA tumor viruses. 1573 54
The
p53
pathway responds to stresses that can disrupt the fidelity of DNA replication and cell division. A stress signal is transmitted to the
p53 protein
by post-translational modifications. This results in the activation of the
p53 protein
as a transcription factor that initiates a program of cell cycle arrest, cellular senescence or apoptosis. The transcriptional network of
p53
-responsive genes produces proteins that interact with a large number of other signal transduction pathways in the cell and a number of positive and negative autoregulatory feedback loops act upon the
p53
response. There are at least seven negative and three positive feedback loops described here, and of these, six act through the MDM-2 protein to regulate
p53
activity. The
p53
circuit communicates with the Wnt-beta-catenin, IGF-1-AKT, Rb-E2F, p38 MAP kinase, cyclin-cdk, p14/19 ARF pathways and the cyclin G-
PP2A
, and p73 gene products. There are at least three different ubiquitin ligases that can regulate
p53
in an autoregulatory manner: MDM-2, Cop-1 and Pirh-2. The meaning of this redundancy and the relative activity of each of these feedback loops in different cell types or stages of development remains to be elucidated. The interconnections between signal transduction pathways will play a central role in our understanding of cancer.
...
PMID:The p53 pathway: positive and negative feedback loops. 1583 23
The microbial toxin okadaic acid (OA) specifically inhibits PPP-type ser/thr protein phosphatases. OA is an established tumor promoter with numerous cellular effects that include
p53
-mediated cell cycle arrest. In T51B rat liver epithelial cells, a model useful for tumor promotion studies,
p53
activation is induced by tumor-promoting (low nanomolar) concentrations of OA. Two phosphatases sensitive to these concentrations of OA,
PP2A
and protein phosphatase 5 (PP5), have been implicated as negative regulators of
p53
. In this study we examined the respective roles of these phosphatases in
p53
activation in non-neoplastic T51B cells. Increases in
p53
activity were deduced from levels of p21 (cip1) and/or the rat orthologue of mdm2, two
p53
-regulated gene products whose induction was blocked by siRNA-mediated knockdown of
p53
. As observed with 10 nM OA, both phospho-ser15-
p53
levels and
p53
activity were increased by 10 microM fostriecin or SV40 small t-antigen. Both of these treatments selectively inhibit
PP2A
but not PP5. siRNA-mediated knockdown of
PP2A
, but not PP5, also increased
p53
activity. Finally, adenoviral-mediated over-expression of an OA-resistant form of PP5 did not prevent increased phospho-ser15-
p53
,
p53 protein
, or
p53
activity caused by 10 nM OA. Together these results indicate that PP5 blockade is not responsible for OA-induced
p53
activation and G1 arrest in T51B cells. In contrast, specific blockade of
PP2A
mimics
p53
-related responses to OA in T51B cells, suggesting that
PP2A
is the target for this response to OA.
...
PMID:Inhibition of PP2A, but not PP5, mediates p53 activation by low levels of okadaic acid in rat liver epithelial cells. 1659 89
The aim of this study was to test the possibility of using human antibodies to study the pathogenic mechanism of SV40 and asbestos in a hamster mesothelioma model. The cellular lysates from human and hamster primary mesothelial cells were tested by Western blot analysis. All of the antibodies we tested (HGF, Notch, VEGF, Sp1,
p53
,
PP2A
, p-ERK1, p-c-jun, Fra1, Fra2, MMP1, MMP9, NFkappaB p65, IkappaB, GAPDH) cross-reacted with their hamster counterparts. These data indicate that hamster mesothelioma model and more in general hamster experimental model, can be used for functional studies because many mouse, rabbit, and goat monoclonal antibodies prepared against human antigens cross-react with their hamster counterparts.
...
PMID:Cross reactivity between many anti-human antibodies for their hamster homologs provide the tools to study the signal transduction pathway activated by asbestos and SV40 in the malignant mesothelioma model. 1664 49
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