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Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (
p53
)
77,613
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Macrophages are a major source of cytokines and proinflammatory radicals such as superoxide. These mediators can be both produced and utilized by macrophages in autocrine-regulatory pathways. Therefore, we studied the potential role of oxygen radical-regulatory mechanisms in reprogramming macrophage apoptosis. Preactivation of RAW 264.7 cells with a nontoxic dose of the redox cycler 2,3-dimethoxy-1,4-naphthoquinone (5 microM) for 15 h attenuated S-nitrosoglutathione (1 mM)-initiated apoptotic cell death and averted accumulation of the
tumor suppressor p53
, which is indicative for macrophage apoptosis. Preactivation with superoxide promoted cyclooxygenase-2 induction that was NF-kappa B and
AP-1
mediated. NF-kappa B activation was confirmed by p50/p65-heterodimer formation, I kappa B-alpha degradation, and stimulation of a NF-kappa B luciferase reporter construct. Furthermore, a NF-kappa B decoy approach abrogated cyclooxygenase-2 (Cox-2) expression as well as inducible protection. The importance of
AP-1
for superoxide-mediated Cox-2 expression and cell protection was substantiated by using the extracellular signal-regulated kinase-inhibitor PD98059 and the p38-inhibitor SB203580, which blocked Cox-2 expression. In corroboration, Cox-2 expression was hindered by a dominant-negative c-jun mutant (TAM67). Protection from apoptosis was verified in human macrophages with the notion that superoxide promoted Cox-2 expression, which in turn attenuated nitric oxide-evoked caspase activation. We conclude that the sublethal generation of oxygen radicals reprograms macrophages by NF-kappa B and
AP-1
activation. The resulting hyporesponsiveness reveals an attenuated apoptotic program in association with Cox-2 expression.
...
PMID:Superoxide attenuates macrophage apoptosis by NF-kappa B and AP-1 activation that promotes cyclooxygenase-2 expression. 1045 32
GADD45 has been suggested to coordinate cell cycle regulation with the repair of DNA damage following ionizing radiation (IR). Although the GADD45 gene is transcriptionally up-regulated in response to IR, alterations in in vivo transcription factor (TF) binding or chromatin structure associated with up-regulation have not been defined. To understand how chromatin structure might influence TF binding and GADD45 up-regulation, key regulatory regions of the gene were identified by in vivo DNase I hypersensitivity (HS) analysis. Chromatin structure and in vivo TF binding in these regions were subsequently monitored in both non-irradiated and irradiated human ML-1 cells. In non-irradiated cells expressing basal levels of GADD45, the gene exhibited a highly organized chromatin structure with distinctly positioned nucleosomes. Also identified in non-irradiated cells were DNA-protein interactions at octamer binding motifs and a CCAAT box in the promoter and at consensus binding sites for
AP-1
and
p53
within intron 3. Upon irradiation and a subsequent 15-fold increase in GADD45 mRNA levels, neither the chromatin structure nor the pattern of TF binding in key regulatory regions was altered. These results suggest that the GADD45 gene is poised for up-regulation and can be rapidly induced independent of gross changes in chromatin structure or TF binding.
...
PMID:Presetting of chromatin structure and transcription factor binding poise the human GADD45 gene for rapid transcriptional up-regulation. 1048 Oct 28
The nitrosamine 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone (NNK) present in tobacco smoke is a major carcinogen involved in tobacco-induced lung cancer. Its complex bioactivation along two pathways, which leads to methylation and pyridyloxobutylation of DNA, makes the study of NNK-induced DNA damage difficult. We selected two nitroso compounds, N-methyl-N-nitrosourea (MNU) and N-nitroso(acetoxymethyl)methylamine (NDMAOAc), with which to map NNK-induced DNA methylation frequency at every nucleotide position. We address the issue of how sequence context and complex chromatin structures, present in living cells, regulate the formation of modified purines through methylation generated by MNU and NDMAOAc. For comparison purposes, purified DNA was treated with dimethyl sulfate (DMS). We used ligation-mediated polymerase chain reaction to map and conduct a high-resolution footprinting analysis of the DNA damage along the
p53
gene (exons 5-8), the ras gene family (exons 1 and 2 of H-, K-, and N-ras genes), and the c-jun promoter in living cells. The distribution of piperidine-sensitive DNA damage induced in cellular DNA and purified DNA by MNU or NDMAOAc was identical. MNU and NDMAOAc methylate more frequently the central guanines in a run of guanines, suggesting a regioselective mechanism for DNA methylation. In contrast, DMS methylates more frequently guanines at the 5'-end of a guanine run; this frequency decreased from the 5'- to the 3'-end. While the presence of adenines in a guanine run does not affect the distribution pattern, the presence of pyrimidines does change said pattern. Our data lead us to suggest that NNK would also methylate DNA sequences in a way similar to that of MNU or NDMAOAc. Footprinted areas of DNA methylated with MNU or NDMAOAc correspond to a consensus sequence for transcription factors
AP-1
, NF-Jun, CCAAT box, SP-1, and RSRF, as observed in c-jun promoters. Our results are in line with the fact that NNK metabolites, generated through the alpha-hydroxylation pathways, could potentially be mutagenic, since these activated metabolites can methylate guanines. In
p53
and ras genes, the frequency of methylation of guanines parallels the frequency of mutations of those same guanines in lung cancer.
...
PMID:Treatment of human cells with N-Nitroso(acetoxymethyl)methylamine: distribution patterns of piperidine-sensitive DNA damage at the nucleotide level of resolution are related to the sequence context. 1049 May 6
MEN1 is a syndrome of parathyroid adenomas, gastrinomas, prolactinomas, and other endocrine tumors. Collagenomas and facial angiofibromas are newly recognized but common skin expressions. Many tumors in MEN1 are benign; however, many entero-pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors and foregut carcinoid tumors are malignant. MEN1 is thus the expression of a cancer gene but without available prevention or cure for malignancy. Hereditary (as compared to sporadic) endocrine tumors show early onset age and multiplicity, because each cell of the body has "one hit" by inheritance. Multiple neoplasia syndromes with endocrine tumor(s) all include nonendocrine components; their known defective genes seem mainly to disturb cell accumulation. Hereditary neoplasia/hyperplasia of one endocrine tissue reflects a defect that is tissue selective and directed at cell secretion. Though the hereditary endocrine neoplasias are rare, most of their identified genes also contribute to common sporadic endocrine neoplasms. Hereditary tumors may be caused by activation of an oncogene (e.g., RET) or, more often, by inactivation of a tumor suppressor gene (e.g.,
P53
, MEN1). Recently, MEN1 was identified by positional cloning. This strategy included narrowing the gene candidate interval, identifying many or all genes in that interval, and testing the newly identified candidate genes for mutation in MEN1 cases. MEN1 was identified because it showed mutation in 14 of 15 MEN1 cases. NIH testing showed germline MEN1 mutations in 47 of 50 MEN1 index cases and in seven of eight cases with sporadic MEN1. Despite proven capacity to find germline MEN1 mutation, NIH testing found no MEN1 mutation among five families with isolated hyperparathyroidism, suggesting that this often arises from mutation of other gene(s). Analogous studies in Japan found that familial isolated pituitary tumors also did not show MEN1 germline mutation. MEN1 mutation testing can now be considered for cases of MEN1 and its phenocopies and for asymptomatic members of families with known MEN1 mutation. Germline MEN1 testing does not have the urgency of RET testing in MEN2a and 2b, as MEN1 testing does not commonly lead to an important intervention. Somatic MEN1 mutation was found in sporadic tumors: parathyroid adenoma (21%), gastrinoma (33%), insulinoma (17%), and bronchial carcinoid (36%). For each of these, MEN1 was the known gene most frequently mutated. MEN1 has a widely expressed mRNA that encodes a protein (menin) of 610 amino acids. The protein sequence is not informative about domains or functions. The protein was mainly nuclear. Menin binds to JunD, an
AP-1
transcription factor, inhibiting JunD's activation of transcription. Most of the germline and somatic MEN1 mutations predict truncation of menin, a likely destructive change. Inactivating MEN1 mutations in germline and in sporadic neoplasms support prior predictions that MEN1 is a tumor suppressor gene. Germline MEN1 mutation underlies all or most cases of MEN1 (familial or sporadic). Somatic MEN1 mutation is the most common gene mutation in many sporadic endocrine tumor types.
...
PMID:Multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1: clinical and genetic features of the hereditary endocrine neoplasias. 1054 85
Recent investigation further defines the role of
p53
and of signaling events upstream and downstream of
p53
in apoptosis following drug-induced DNA damage. The transcription factors NF-kappaB and
AP-1
can be activated, and then directly transactivate FasL in response to chemotherapeutic agents. Death receptors for FasL (Fas) and for TRAIL (DR4, DR5) are emerging as important regulators of drug-induced apoptosis in human cancers, mediated by caspase activation. Apoptosis has been accepted as the predominant mechanism of drug-induced cell death in preclinical experimental models and in clinically sensitive tumors. However, drug-induced cell death can include acute or delayed apoptosis, necrosis, or a delayed mitotic death, and require further delineation for their relative contribution to tumor responses in vivo.
...
PMID:Apoptosis and drug response. 1055 11
The
tumor suppressor protein p53
exerts its cell cycle-regulatory effects through its ability to function as a sequence-specific DNA-binding transcription factor. Herein, we show that
p53
physically interacts with specific subregions of steroid receptor coactivator-1 (SRC-1) and its family members, p/CIP (p300/CBP interacting protein), xSRC-3, and AIB1 (amplified in breast cancer), originally isolated as transcription coactivators of nuclear receptors, as demonstrated by the yeast and mammalian two-hybrid tests as well as glutathione S-transferase pull-down assays. Interestingly, cotransfection of HeLa cells with SRC-1- or p/CIP expression vector potentiated the
p53
-mediated transactivation, whereas AIB1 and xSRC-3 were repressive. All of these SRC-1 members, however, similarly stimulated transactivation mediated by nuclear receptors and
AP-1
, as previously described. These results suggest that SRC-1 and its family members may differentially modulate the
p53
transactivation in vivo.
...
PMID:Steroid receptor coactivator-1 and its family members differentially regulate transactivation by the tumor suppressor protein p53. 1055 85
Determinants of differentiation and apoptosis in myelomonocytic leukemia cells (U937) exposed to the novel hybrid polar compound SAHA (suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid) have been examined. In contrast to hexamethylenbisacetamide (HMBA), SAHA-related maturation was limited and accompanied by marked cytoxicity. SAHA-mediated apoptosis occurred within the G0G1 and S phase populations, and was associated with decreased mitochondrial membrane potential, caspase-3 activation, PARP degradation, hypophosphorylation/cleavage of pRB, and down-regulation of c-Myc, c-Myb, and B-Myb. Enforced expression of Bcl-2 or Bcl-XL inhibited SAHA-induced apoptosis, but only modestly potentiated differentiation. While SAHA induced the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21CIP1, antisense ablation of this CDKI increased, rather than decreased, SAHA-related lethality. In contrast, conditional expression of wild-type
p53
failed to modify SAHA actions, but markedly potentiated HMBA-induced apoptosis. Finally, SAHA modestly increased expression/activation of the stress-activated protein kinase (SAPK/JNK); moreover, SAHA-related lethality was partially attenuated by a dominant-negative c-Jun mutant protein (TAM67). SAHA did not stimulate mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK), nor was lethality diminished by the specific MEK/MAPK inhibitor PD98059. These findings indicate that SAHA potently induces apoptosis in human leukemia cells via a pathway that is
p53
-independent but at least partially regulated by Bcl-2/Bcl-XL, p21CIP1, and the c-Jun/
AP-1
signaling cascade.
...
PMID:Induction of apoptosis in U937 human leukemia cells by suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid (SAHA) proceeds through pathways that are regulated by Bcl-2/Bcl-XL, c-Jun, and p21CIP1, but independent of p53. 1059 2
The present study evaluated whether nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB) activation contributes to the apoptotic-like death of striatal neurons induced by kainic acid (KA) receptor stimulation. Intrastriatally infused KA (1.25-5.0 nmol) produced substantial neuronal loss as indicated by an 8-73% decrease in 67-kDa glutamic acid decarboxylase (p<0.05). KA (1.25-5.0 nmol) elicited internucleosomal DNA fragmentation that was inhibited by the AMPA/KA receptor antagonist NBQX (1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-6-nitro-2,3-dibenzo[f]quinoxaline-7-sulfonamide) but not by the NMDA receptor antagonist MK-801. A decrease in IkappaB-alpha protein levels, which was accompanied by an increase in NF-kappaB binding activity, was found from 6 to 72 h after KA (2.5 nmol) infusion. NF-kappaB was composed mainly of p65 and c-Rel as revealed by supershift assay. In addition, c-Myc and
p53
increased from five- to sevenfold from 24 to 72 h after KA (2.5 nmol) administration. Immunohistochemistry revealed high levels of c-Myc and
p53
immunoreactivity, mainly in medium-sized striatal neurons. Pretreatment with the cell-permeable recombinant peptide NF-kappaB SN50 (5-20 microg) blocked NF-kappaB nuclear translocation, but had no effect on
AP-1
binding. NF-kappaB SN50 also inhibited the KA-induced up-regulation of c-Myc and
p53
, as well as internucleosomal DNA fragmentation. The apoptotic-like destruction of rat striatal neurons induced by KA receptor stimulation thus appears to involve biochemical mechanisms similar to those mediating the excitotoxic response to NMDA receptor stimulation. The present results provide additional support for the view that NF-kappaB activation contributes to c-Myc and
p53
induction and subsequent apoptosis in an excitotoxic model of Huntington's disease.
...
PMID:Kainic acid-induced apoptosis in rat striatum is associated with nuclear factor-kappaB activation. 1064 16
We investigated whether a novel mitotic inhibitor, taxotere can activate the transcription factor AP-1 in association with apoptotic cell death in 8 gastric cancer cell lines. Apoptotic cell death was analyzed by DNA ladder formation assay, and
AP-1
binding activity was assessed by gel mobility-shift assay. The activation of
AP-1
binding was induced in accordance with the sensitivity to taxotere in gastric cancer cell lines. The relationship between the increase of
AP-1
binding and the formation of internucleosomal DNA ladders induced by taxotere was significant (p < 0.05). Furthermore, the activation of
AP-1
binding was induced following the treatment of taxotere in a dose and -time dependent manner. Although the sensitivity to taxotere was correlated with the formation of internucleosomal DNA ladders in apoptotic cell death, its sensitivity was not influenced by their
p53
genomic states in gastric cancer cell lines. Rather, the activation of
AP-1
binding was correlated with the induction of a growth arrest and DNA damage inducible gene, gadd153 (p < 0.05). These results indicate that the activation of
AP-1
binding by taxotere seems to be an important factor in determining its sensitivity in association with internucleosomal DNA ladders, and suggest that the induction of gadd153 gene could be a downstream target of
AP-1
-regulated genes involved in signal transduction pathways leading to apoptosis in gastric cancer cells.
...
PMID:Taxotere activates transcription factor AP-1 in association with apoptotic cell death in gastric cancer cell lines. 1069 68
The predominant pathway for the repair of O(6)-methylguanine in DNA is via the activity of an alkyltransferase protein that transfers the methyl group to a cysteine acceptor site on the protein itself. This review article describes recent studies on this alkyltransferase. The protein repairs not only methyl groups but also 2-chloroethyl-, benzyl- and pyridyloxobutyl-adducts. It acts on double-stranded DNA by flipping the O(6)-guanine adduct out of the DNA helix and into a binding pocket. The free base, O(6)-benzylguanine, is able to bind in this pocket and react with the cysteine, rendering it an effective inactivator of mammalian alkyltransferases. The alkylated form of the protein is rapidly degraded by the ubiquitin/proteasomal system. Some tumor cells do not express alkyltransferase despite having an intact gene. Methylation of key sites in CpG-rich islands in the promoter region are involved in this silencing and a change in the nuclear localization of an enhancer binding protein may also contribute. The alkyltransferase promoter contains Sp1, GRE and
AP-1
sites and is slightly inducible by glucocorticoids and protein kinase C activators. There is a complex relationship between
p53
and alkyltransferase expression with
p53
mediating a rise in alkyltransferase in response to ionizing radiation but having no clear effect on basal levels. DNA adducts at the O(6)-position of guanine are a major factor in the carcinogenic, mutagenic, apoptopic and clastogenic actions of methylating agents and chloroethylating agents. Studies with transgenic mice in which alkyltransferase levels are increased or decreased confirm the importance of this repair pathway in protecting against carcinogenesis. Alkyltransferase activity in tumors protects them from therapeutic agents such as temozolomide and BCNU. This resistance is abolished by O(6)-benzylguanine and this drug is currently in clinical trials to enhance cancer chemotherapy by these agents. Studies are in progress to reduce the toxicity of such therapy towards the bone marrow by gene therapy to express alkyltransferases with mutations imparting resistance to O(6)-benzylguanine at high levels in marrow stem cells. Several polymorphisms in the human alkyltransferase gene have been identified but the significance of these in terms of alkyltransferase action is currently unknown.
...
PMID:Repair of O(6)-alkylguanine by alkyltransferases. 1076 20
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