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)

Little is known as yet about the role of apoptosis in pancreatic damage. This study evaluated the effects of supraphysiologic concentrations of the cholecystokinin (CCK) analog, cerulein, which causes cell damage in vitro and acute pancreatitis in vivo, on cell proliferation and DNA fragmentation in the rat pancreatic acinar cell line AR4-2J. Cerulein inhibited the cell proliferation of AR4-2J time- and dose-dependently to approximately 60% of the control level at 10(-6) M after 72 h. DNA fragmentation, as assessed by both electrophoresis and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), occurred at cerulein concentrations > or = 10(-8) M. The maximal DNA fragmentation as measured by ELISA was reached after 24 h. Cerulein at concentrations > or = 10(-9) M induced wild-type p53. Glutathione (1 mM) diminished the effects of cerulein on both cell proliferation and DNA fragmentation, whereas spermine (100 microM), which partially attenuated DNA fragmentation, did not have an effect on cell proliferation. The CCK-A-receptor antagonist loxiglumide completely abolished the effect of cerulein on DNA fragmentation. The serine-protease inhibitor FUT-175 (10 microM), the cysteine-protease inhibitor NCO-700 (5 mM), and ethylene glycol tetraacetic acid (EGTA; 500 microM) all had no effects on the changes in cell proliferation and DNA fragmentation induced by cerulein. The data suggest that supraphysiologic concentrations of cerulein rapidly induce apoptosis in AR4-2J cells and only later inhibit cell proliferation. These effects are mediated by CCK-A receptors. Cerulein-induced apoptosis may involve the induction of wild-type p53 or glutathione depletion or both.
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PMID:Supraphysiologic concentrations of cerulein induce apoptosis in the rat pancreatic acinar cell line AR4-2J. 1041 96

Irradiated aortic endothelial cells (EC) exhibit distinct morphological, functional, and physiological responses to ionizing radiation (IR). However, the molecular basis for these responses has not been fully characterized. Cultured bovine and rat aortic endothelial cells were exposed to single fraction doses (0-30 Gy) of gamma radiation. IR caused dose-dependent DNA strand breaks which were repaired to near baseline levels within 30 min. A dose-dependent inhibition of cell growth was noted for IR greater than 1 Gy. At doses greater than 2.5 Gy, morphologic changes consistent with apoptosis and loss of cell viability were present beginning 12-16 h after radiation, with subsequent detachment of EC from the cell monolayer. By Western blot analysis, expression of p53, gadd45, p21, and bax protein increased in a time-and dose-dependent manner; p53 expression was maximal at 3 h after IR, and gadd45, bax and p21 levels peaked at 6 h. By Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction (RT-PCR), levels of p53 mRNA were not significantly increased after IR, whereas gadd45 exhibited time- and dose-dependent increase in mRNA synthesis after IR. Activation of intracellular caspases, manifest by proteolytic poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) and lamin B cleavage, was maximal at 15 h after IR, concident with other indices of EC apoptosis, including oligonucleosomal DNA degradation, TUNEL immunostaining, and morphologic changes. The tripeptide protease inhibitor z-Val-Ala-Asp (zVAD) prevented PARP and lamin cleavage, DNA fragmentation, morphological changes, and cell detachment in irradiated EC. The combined data suggested that gamma radiation induces a dose- and time-dependent sequence of early events in cultured EC with modulate growth arrest, apoptosis, and possibly premature senescence in surviving cells.
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PMID:Early molecular changes in irradiated aortic endothelium. 1138 18

In the previous studies, we have demonstrated that the tumor suppressor gene p53 is required for DNA strand break-induced neuronal apoptosis in organotypic slice cultures of cerebellum as well as in dissociated cerebellar neuron cultures. In this study, we further investigated the role of p53 in neuronal apoptosis, by examining whether caspases and c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) are involved in the DNA strand break-induced apoptosis. The protein level of phospho-JNK increased in p53 wild-type mouse cerebellar granule neurons after exposure to bleomycin. On the other hand, the response was not observed in cerebellar granule neurons of p53-deficient mice. Caspase-3-like protease was activated and poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) was cleaved in the bleomycin-induced apoptosis. Caspase-3-like protease inhibitor decreased the number of TUNEL-positive but not p53- or c-Jun-positive neurons in bleomycin-induced death. These results suggest that JNK and caspase-3-like protease are involved in the signaling cascade of DNA strand break-induced, p53-dependent apoptosis.
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PMID:Involvement of c-Jun N-terminal kinase and caspase 3-like protease in DNA damage-induced, p53-mediated apoptosis of cultured mouse cerebellar granule neurons. 1140 25

The proteasome pathway is important for the turnover of many regulatory proteins. This pathway has recently become a target for antitumor agents and several research groups have demonstrated that inhibitors with specificities for the proteasome are potent apoptosis-inducing agents. Many mechanisms by which proteasome inhibitors exert their effects have been suggested, including inhibition of NF-kappa B activity and stabilization of the p53 tumor suppressor protein. We investigated the ability of inhibitors with specificities for the proteasome and for another protein degradation enzyme, calpain, to sensitize a murine B-cell lymphoma with constitutive NF-kappa B1 homodimer activity and high expression of Bcl-2 protein to radiation-induced apoptosis. Protease inhibitors tested were calpain inhibitor I, calpain inhibitor II, calpeptin, MG132, and Lactacystin. All five inhibitors induced apoptosis and sensitized cells to radiation despite the maintenance of Bcl-2 protein levels throughout the course of treatment. An electrophoretic migration shift assay for NF-kappa B1 activity provided evidence that reversal of NF-kappa B activity was not required for induction of cell death; however, p53 levels were elevated for all inhibitors tested. HL-60 cells, devoid of p53, could not be sensitized to radiation by MG132 treatment, suggesting that p53 was important for cell death induced by combined treatment with protease inhibitors and radiation. We concluded that protease inhibitors are capable of overcoming the protective effects of Bcl-2 to induce apoptosis and suggest that protease inhibitor treatment, when combined with ionizing radiation, leads to p53-mediated apoptosis.
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PMID:Protease inhibitors restore radiation-induced apoptosis to Bcl-2-expressing lymphoma cells. 1174 2

In previous studies, we have shown that human breast and lung carcinoma cells and mouse nontransformed type II lung cells fail to undergo cell-cycle arrest in G(1) phase in response to treatment with hydrocarbon carcinogens but rather accumulate in the S phase with damaged DNA. This situation may lead to replication of DNA on a damaged template and enhance frequency of mutations. The mechanism of this G(1) arrest failure was examined. Western immunoblot analyses of MCF7 human mammary cancer cells exposed to actinomycin D (used as a positive control for G(1) cell-cycle arrest) or hydrocarbon carcinogens revealed that while all of these chemicals caused an increase in p53, only trace levels of p21(waf1/cip1) protein were observed in the hydrocarbon carcinogen-treated samples. Similarly, in murine lung E10 type II cells, p53 but not p21(waf1/cip1) protein increased in response to benzo[a]pyrene dihydrodiol epoxide. Treatment of either MCF7 mammary or E10 lung cells with the protease inhibitor calpain I resulted in increased levels of p21(waf1/cip1) protein and enhancement of arrest of the cells in early phases of the cell cycle (G(1) and early S phase). The results suggest that failure of cell-cycle arrest in carcinogen-treated mammary and lung cells is related to increased protease-mediated degradation of p21(waf1/cip1) and/or related regulatory proteins.
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PMID:Protease inhibitor-induced stabilization of p21(waf1/cip1) and cell-cycle arrest in chemical carcinogen-exposed mammary and lung cells. 1180 52

The tumor suppressor wild-type p53 can induce apoptosis. M1-t-p53 myeloid leukemic cells have a temperature-sensitive p53 protein that changes its conformation to wild-type p53 after transfer from 37 degrees C to 32 degrees C. We have now found that these cells showed an early lysosomal rupture after transfer to 32 degrees C. Mitochondrial damage, including decreased membrane potential and release of cytochrome c, and the appearance of apoptotic cells occurred later. Lysosomal rupture, mitochondrial damage, and apoptosis were all inhibited by the cytokine IL-6. Some other compounds can also inhibit apoptosis induced by p53. The protease inhibitor N-tosyl-l-phenylalanine chloromethyl ketone inhibited the decrease in mitochondrial membrane potential and cytochrome c release, the Ca(2+)-ATPase inhibitor thapsigargin inhibited only cytochrome c release, and the antioxidant butylated hydroxyanisole inhibited only the decrease in mitochondrial membrane potential. In contrast to IL-6, these other compounds that inhibited some of the later occurring mitochondrial damage did not inhibit the earlier p53-induced lysosomal damage. The results indicate that apoptosis is induced by p53 through a lysosomal-mitochondrial pathway that is initiated by lysosomal destabilization, and that this pathway can be dissected by using different apoptosis inhibitors. These findings on the induction of p53-induced lysosomal destabilization can also help to formulate new therapies for diseases with apoptotic disorders.
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PMID:Lysosomal destabilization in p53-induced apoptosis. 1195 17

Ritonavir is an HIV protease inhibitor used in the therapy of HIV infection. Ritonavir has also been shown to inhibit the chymotrypsin-like activity of isolated 20S proteasomes. Here, we demonstrate that ritonavir, like classical proteasome inhibitors, has antitumoral activities. In vitro, ritonavir strongly reduced the rate of proliferation of several tumor cell lines and induced their apoptosis. Nontransformed cell lines and terminally differentiated bone-marrow macrophages were comparatively resistant to the apoptosis-inducing effect. In vivo, ritonavir, administered p.o. for a week at doses of 6-8.8 mg/mouse/day, caused significant growth inhibition (76-79% after 7 days of treatment) of established EL4-T cell thymomas growing s.c. in syngeneic C57BL/6 mice. Unexpectedly, we found that ritonavir activates the chymotrypsin-like activity of isolated 26S proteasomes, in strong contrast to its effect on isolated 20S proteasomes. The net effect of low micromolar concentrations of ritonavir on the chymotrypsin-like activity in cells and cell lysates was a weak inhibition, consistent with marginal alterations of polyubiquitinated proteins, marginal alterations in acid-soluble proteolytic peptide levels, and a small accumulation of the tumor suppressor protein p53, in cells treated with ritonavir. In contrast, we found a relatively strong accumulation of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21(WAF-1), a sign of deregulation of cell-cycle progression typical for apoptosis induction in transformed cells by classical proteasome inhibitors. We demonstrate that p21 accumulation in the presence of ritonavir is attributable to the inhibition of proteolytic degradation. Accumulation of p21 most likely reflects a selective inhibition of proteasomes, in line with the atypical degradation of p21, which does not require ubiquitination. These findings suggest that selective perturbation of proteasomal protein degradation may play a role in the antitumoral activities of ritonavir.
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PMID:Antitumor effect of the human immunodeficiency virus protease inhibitor ritonavir: induction of tumor-cell apoptosis associated with perturbation of proteasomal proteolysis. 1246 Sep 5

Specific radioprotection of normal tissue represents a promising approach to improve radiotherapy. The ultimate feature of a normal tissue selective radioprotector is that tumor tissue is excluded from protection. Radioprotectors of the current generation, such as Ethyol, are not explicit normal tissue specific. In contrast, the Bowman Birk protease inhibitor, which is known to prevent in vitro and in vivo radiation-induced carcinogenesis, was found to be normal tissue specific. Moreover, the molecular restrictions for this specificity were identified. The radioprotective effect is dependent upon the presence of a functional wt. TP53. Since a high amount of tumors have lost TP53 function during tumor development, the clinical application of BBI to protect normal tissue from radiation damage would effectively improve the therapeutic outcome of radiation therapy. We succeeded to identify stimulation of DNA-repair mechanisms, such as nucleotide excision repair (NER) and nonhomologous end joining (NHEJ), as molecular mode of action. These results are in good agreement with the observations that BBI concomitantly exhibits anticarcinogenic effect and radioprotective effects. Taken together, BBI is recommended as a radioprotector for normal tissue expressing wild type TP53 during treatment of tumors characterized by a mutant TP53.
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PMID:Radioprotection of normal tissue to improve radiotherapy: the effect of the Bowman Birk protease inhibitor. 1287 Oct 82

Many fundamental processes, including oncogenesis, have implicated HECT domain proteins with ubiquitin ligase activity. The protein human upstream regulatory element binding protein 1 (hUREB1) is a HECT domain protein whose function is not defined yet. Here, we investigate the function of hUREB1 as a ubiquitin-protein ligase in human colorectal cells. Ectopic expression of the HECT domain of hUREB1 reduces the protein level and transcriptional activity of the p53 tumor suppressor, which is abrogated by the deletion in the HECT domain or point mutations in the essential residues of the HECT domain. The ubiquitination and destabilization of p53 is observed in cells treated with the protease inhibitor MG132, implying that the HECT domain of hUREB1 suppresses the transcriptional activity of p53 through a ubiquitin-dependent degradation pathway. Based on the results of Northern blot analysis, RT-PCR, and immunohistochemical analyses, the over-expression of hUREB1 is associated with colorectal carcinoma. Moreover, protein levels of hUREB1 and p53 were inversely correlated. These findings suggest that hUREB1 can function, at least in part, as a negative regulator of p53 during the colorectal carcinoma progression through the ubiquitination pathway mediated by the HECT domain.
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PMID:Over-expression of human UREB1 in colorectal cancer: HECT domain of human UREB1 inhibits the activity of tumor suppressor p53 protein. 1556 45

Apoptotic loss of CD4+ T cells has been proposed as a mechanism of T cell depletion in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infections resulting in immunodeficiency. The Env glycoprotein has been implicated in apoptosis of uninfected bystander cells via gp120 binding to CD4/CXC chemokine receptor 4 as well as the fusion/hemifusion process mediated by gp41. Using an in vitro model of coculture of Env-expressing cells as effectors and CD4+ T cells as targets, we find that apoptosis mediated by Env glycoprotein in bystander cells in fact correlates with gp41-induced hemifusion. Further, the apoptotic pathway initiated by this interaction involves caspase-3-dependent mitochondrial depolarization and reactive oxygen species production. HIV gp41-induced mitochondrial depolarization is inhibited by protease inhibitor nelfinavir but not by other HIV protease inhibitors or inhibitors of calpain and cathepsin. This "kiss of death" (hemifusion) signaling pathway is independent of p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase and p53, making it distinct from the apoptosis seen in syncytia. We also show that virion-induced apoptosis is gp41-dependent. Our findings provide new insights into the mechanism via which HIV gp41 mediates apoptosis in bystander cells.
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PMID:HIV gp41-induced apoptosis is mediated by caspase-3-dependent mitochondrial depolarization, which is inhibited by HIV protease inhibitor nelfinavir. 1633 May 30


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