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Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (
p53
)
77,613
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The Hepatocyte growth factor is the most potent mitogen for hepatocytes in primary culture and is involved in liver regeneration. The expression of the gene appears to be tightly controlled by various humoral factors. To understand the molecular mechanism of the gene expression, we cloned and determined the nucleotide sequence of the 5'-flanking region of the gene. In this region, there are sequences homologous to responding elements of
P53
, Rb, IL-1,
IL-6
, glucocorticoids, TPA and TGF-beta. We also identified three major transcriptional initiation sites by primer extension analysis of this region. Functional analyses of this region by constructing CAT reporter plasmids indicate that the sequence functions in a tissue specific manner and there is a negative regulatory region which suppresses the gene expression in rat transformed kidney cells.
...
PMID:Characterization of the 5'-flanking region of the hepatocyte growth factor gene. 768 37
This review concentrates on growth autonomy of tumor cells in relation to tumor progression. Human malignant melanoma serves as an example for progressive growth factor independence at subsequent stages of tumor progression. Mechanisms by which malignant cells acquire growth factor independence are discussed. In melanoma, deregulation of growth regulatory pathways has been described on four levels: 1) aberrant production of autocrine growth factors that substitute for exogenous growth factors (basic fibroblast growth factor [bFGF]); 2) alterations in the response to negative autocrine growth factors (interleukin [IL]-6 and transforming growth factor [TGF]-beta); 3) overexpression of epidermal growth factor receptors (EGF-R); and 4) alterations of cellular protooncogenes involved in signal transduction (RAS, MYB) and growth suppression (
p53
). In addition to bFGF and
IL-6
, multiple other growth factor genes are activated in malignant melanoma cells but not normal melanocytes. These include both chains of platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF), TGF-alpha, IL-1, IL-8, and tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha. Of these, PDGF-B has been investigated in more detail. Melanoma-derived PDGF clearly does not act in a direct autocrine mode, but has important paracrine effects on normal tissue constituents, notably fibroblasts and endothelial cells, that are essential for tumor development in vivo. It is speculated that other melanoma-derived growth factors with as yet undefined functions similarly exert such paracrine or 'indirect' autocrine effects that cannot be sufficiently addressed in studies on cultured cells.
...
PMID:Growth factor independence and growth regulatory pathways in human melanoma development. 828 9
The binding of interleukin 2 (IL-2) to the IL-2 receptor (IL-2R) induces a rapid increase in tyrosine phosphorylation of cellular proteins. In a previous study, we have shown that p56lck (lck), a src-family protein tyrosine kinase (src-PTK), physically and functionally associates with the IL-2R beta chain (IL-2R beta). To further investigate a role of src-PTKs in IL-2 signaling, we analyzed a mouse pro-B-cell line, in which lck is not expressed detectably. We observed that in this cell line, IL-2 induces activation of at least two src-PTKs, p59fyn (fyn) and
p53
/56lyn (lyn). Interestingly, stimulation of this cell line with IL-3 also induces activation of src-PTKs. The activation of fyn or lyn seems to be selective for stimulation with IL-2 or IL-3 since stimulation with
IL-6
fails to activate them. Furthermore, we provide evidence for the physical association of fyn with IL-2R beta. Taken together with previous results, our current study suggests that different src-PTKs, each of which is expressed in a cell-type-specific manner, can participate in the IL-2 signal transduction.
...
PMID:Functional coupling of the src-family protein tyrosine kinases p59fyn and p53/56lyn with the interleukin 2 receptor: implications for redundancy and pleiotropism in cytokine signal transduction. 848 35
The concept that lymphomagenesis is a multistep process is now widely accepted. Various factors are involved in the development and malignant progression of B-cell lymphoproliferative disorders. The most frequently recognized alterations in these disorders are chromosomal translocations which lead to the activation of proto-oncogenes (c-myc) or genes encoding for proteins involved in the control of the cell cycle (cyclin D1), differentiation (bcl-6) and apoptosis (bcl-2). In addition, genetic changes that inactivate tumor suppressor genes (
p53
, Rb, p16) have recently been identified. Infectious agents may also play a role in lymphomagenesis either by directly driving B-cell proliferation (EBV) or by inducing a chronic antigenic stimulation (EBV, HCV, HBV, helicobacter pylori). Finally, several data indicate that local cytokine networks and, in particular, autocrine (
IL-6
, IL-10) and/or paracrine (IL-2, IL-4,
IL-6
) loops probably play a contributory role in the development and evolution of B-cell lymphoproliferation. In the last few years, the advent of molecular biology techniques has allowed important advances in the definition of the events involved i the earlier phases of lymphoma development. This has been made possible, in particular, by the study of a series of oligoclonal or monoclonal lymphoproliferative disorders characterized by an indolent or "smoldering" clinical course, such as follicular lymphoma and the lymphoproliferation associated with autoimmune diseases, which are at high risk of evolution to a highly malignant lymphoma. In nearly all of these conditions, the clonal B-cells responsible for the early stages of the disease are probably not fully transformed and retain various degrees of responsiveness to a wide variety of microenvironmental stimuli (antigen or autoantigen stimulation, interactions with "reactive" T lymphocytes, local cytokine networks). These latter in turn may induce the regression of pathological lesions, maintain the disease in an active state or contribute to the evolution towards an overtly malignant lymphoma. These findings open new avenues for the design of unconventional strategies of intervention aimed at preventing the malignant evolution of pre-lymphomatous lesions and controlling the clinical course of certain low-grade B-cell lymphomas.
...
PMID:Cellular and molecular bases of B-cell clonal expansions. 872 94
Although considerable progress has been made towards understanding many aspects of myeloma, the myeloma stem cell and the factors that drive the disease remain elusive. Recent developments in the molecular analysis of clonality have helped to confirm the presence of pre-switch B cells that are of the same clone as the myeloma plasma cells. The role of these cells in myelomagenesis has not been demonstrated, and the isotypic heterogeneity of the clonally-relevant cells suggests that the pre-switch B cells are pre-malignant progenitors of the tumour cells. Thus, the circulating clonal B cells appear to be the earliest progenitors of the mature, monoclonal plasma cells.
IL-6
, and possibly other cytokines, are involved in driving this process. The role of
IL-6
in myeloma is complex and more involved than its proposed growth factor function. In the absence of
IL-6
, dependent cells become apoptotic. Increased
IL-6
signalling also leads to apoptosis of myeloma cells, possibly as a result of terminal differentiation. In the presence of exogenous
IL-6
, the
IL-6
receptor appears to be the rate-limiting factor in the pathway's activity.
IL-6
may regulate the survival of myeloma cells by stimulating c-myc transcription, possibly from the P0 promoter. The high levels of c-myc transcripts and protein could regulate myeloma cell proliferation and apoptotic death by controlling
p53
expression and, through it, the expression of the Rb and BAX genes. Proliferative signalling in myeloma cells is likely to be intrinsic, within the tumour cell compartment. Molecules such as CD28 and B7, both expressed by less mature myeloma cells, could represent one such self-self stimulatory mechanism, with
IL-6
, possibly through stimulation of c-myc expression, providing the signals for survival and differentiation.
...
PMID:Biological aspects of multiple myeloma. 884 69
Human T-cell leukemia virus type-I (HTLV-I), the etiologic agent of adult T-cell leukemia (ATL) transforms human T cells both in vivo and in vitro. However, the long latency period between infection and development of ATL, as well as the small fraction of the infected population that actually develops this disease, suggest that factors in addition to the virus are involved in its pathogenesis. Mutation of tumor suppressor gene
p53
has been found in both HTLV-I-transformed T-cell lines and ATL cases at relatively low frequency. However, increasing evidence supports
p53
functional impairment in HTLV-I-transformed T cells. Tax, the major transactivator of HTLV-I, is critical for the initial events involved in transformation. We have considered the possibility that
p53
may regulate transcription of viral and cellular genes important for viral replication and transformation. Inactivation of
p53
function might then permit constitutive expression of these viral and cellular genes. We have investigated the effects of wild-type and mutant p53 on Tax-mediated activation of the HTLV-I long terminal repeat (LTR) and the promoters of several cellular genes including the interleukin (IL)-1alpha,
IL-6
, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF ), and IL-2 receptor alpha chain gene. Jurkat, HuT78, and U937 cells were cotransfected with plasmids containing a chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT ) reporter gene under viral or cellular promoter control and the Tax expression vector, in addition to vectors for a wild-type or mutant p53. Wild-type
p53
is a potent repressor of viral and cellular activation by Tax. Mutations within
p53
severely inhibit this downregulation. We also show that wild-type
p53
suppresses transcription from the HTLV-I LTR in Jurkat-Tax, a T-cell line stably expressing Tax, and MT-2, a HTLV-I-transformed T-cell line. Wild-type, but not mutant,
p53
interfered with the binding of TATA-binding protein (TBP) to the TATA motif of the HTLV-I LTR. These results suggest that
p53
inactivation may lead to upregulation of viral and cellular genes and may also be important for establishment of productive viral infection and development of ATL.
...
PMID:Repression of transcription from the human T-cell leukemia virus type I long terminal repeat and cellular gene promoters by wild-type p53. 938 10
Ovarian carcinoma is often associated with overexpression of cytokines that may exert autocrine and paracrine growth effects, as well as genetic alterations in (proto)oncogenes and tumour suppressor genes, such as
p53
. The
p53 protein
is not only involved in the regulation of cell cycle and apoptosis, it is also involved in the in vitro regulation of
IL-6
gene expression. In this study, 30 tumours of patients with a primary diagnosis of human ovarian carcinoma were characterised for
p53
expression with immunohistochemistry and analysed for the expression of M-CSF,
IL-6
, IL-1 beta, IL-11 and TNF-alpha with Northern blotting. Nuclear and cytoplasmic
p53
staining was observed in 27% (8/30), cytoplasmic staining in 30% (9/30), and no
p53
staining in 43% (13/30) of the tumours. In 70% (21/30) of the tumours, M-CSF mRNA was expressed, in 40% (12/30) TNF-alpha, and in 30% (9/30)
IL-6
. None of the tumours expressed IL-1 beta or IL-11. The expression of TNF-alpha occurred more frequently in M-CSF positive tumours compared to M-CSF negative tumours (52% (11/21) versus 11% (1/9), P < 0.05). TNF-alpha expression was also associated with better responses to chemotherapy (P < 0.02). M-CSF expression was associated with nuclear
p53
staining (P < 0.05). The
p53
positive tumours more frequently expressed one or more cytokines (88%) compared with
p53
negative tumours (54%, P < 0.05). This study suggests that mutations in the
p53
gene might be associated with cytokine overexpression, especially M-CSF.
...
PMID:Expression of macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF), interleukin-6, (IL-6), interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta), interleukin-11 (IL-11) and tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) in p53-characterised human ovarian carcinomas. 947 Aug 14
p53
mutation is commonly associated with high-grade, high-stage human urothelial carcinomas. Recent studies suggest that
p53
mutation in low-grade, low-stage bladder carcinomas may be correlated with the progression of the disease. In the present study, we used antisense RNA methodology in vitro to evaluate the significance of the loss of
p53
function at an early stage of urinary bladder carcinogenesis. An immortalized nontumorigenic rat urothelial cell line (MYP3) that strongly expresses wild-type (WT)
p53
was transfected with a plasmid (pcDL-SR alpha-296) containing a rat WT
p53
cDNA in antisense orientation. The transfection resulted in a significant reduction in
p53 mRNA
expression and protein synthesis, in stimulation of anchorage-dependent growth, and in acquisition of anchorage-independent growth potential. Three such clones, when tested in athymic nude mice, all formed muscle-invasive, high-grade transitional cell carcinomas at s.c. injection sites. When cells were inoculated into an orthotopic site (urinary bladder), one of two antisense transfectants tested formed bulky tumors in the bladder in all seven nude mice and metastases to lungs in three of the seven mice. Analysis of these cells revealed a decrease in the expression of p21 (WAF1, sdi1, or CIP1) and retinoblastoma (Rb) gene product. Phosphorylation of Rb protein was not inhibited when the cells were starved. No significant difference was observed in the expression of p16 protein. In cell cycle analysis, all antisense transfectants tested escaped from G1 arrest by starvation. Furthermore, secretion of interleukin (IL)-6 into culture medium was increased significantly. Treatment with anti-
IL-6
antibody suppressed anchorage-dependent growth. This study directly demonstrates that the loss of
p53
function at an early stage of urothelial carcinogenesis may result in acquisition of a malignant phenotype by regulating
IL-6
production as well as cell cycle related genes.
...
PMID:Antisense RNA-mediated reduction of p53 induces malignant phenotype in nontumorigenic rat urothelial cells. 947 96
The influence of
p53
on cytokine-triggered Janus kinase-STAT signaling was investigated in human hepatoma Hep3B cell lines engineered to constitutively express the temperature-sensitive Val135 mutant of
p53
. In comparison to the parental
p53
-free Hep3B cells, these
p53
-Val135-containing Hep3B cell lines displayed a reduced response to
IL-6
at the wild-type-like
p53
temperature (32.5 degrees C). In these cells,
IL-6
induced a marked reduction in the immunologic accessibility of cytoplasmic and nuclear STAT3 and STAT5 within 20 to 30 min that lasted 2 to 4 h (STAT-masking) provided that the cells had been previously cultured at 32.5 degrees C for at least 18 to 20 h. The onset of
IL-6
-induced STAT-masking required protein tyrosine kinase, protein tyrosine phosphatase, proteasomal, phospholipase C, and mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase 1 activities. The maintenance of
IL-6
-induced STAT-masking was dependent on continued signaling through the phosphatidylinositol-dependent phospholipase C pathway. Despite a reduction in
IL-6
-induced STAT3 DNA binding activity in the nuclear compartment during STAT-masking, there was increased and prolonged accumulation of tyrosine-phosphorylated STAT3 in both the cytoplasmic and nuclear compartments, indicating that the capacity of tyrosine-phosphorylated STAT3 to bind DNA was reduced during STAT-masking. Thus,
IL-6
-induced STAT-masking, as dramatically evident on immunomicroscopy, is a visible consequence of a novel cellular process by which a
p53
-Val135-induced gene product(s) regulates the association of masking protein(s) with and the DNA-binding capacity of STAT3.
...
PMID:Regulation of IL-6 signaling by p53: STAT3- and STAT5-masking in p53-Val135-containing human hepatoma Hep3B cell lines. 964 40
We have previously shown that interleukin-1 (IL-1) and
IL-6
are constitutively produced by human oral squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) and some derived cell lines but not by cultured normal oral keratinocytes. To elucidate possible cytokine regulatory pathways that may contribute to oral SCC growth and/or progression, we tested the hypotheses that exogenous and/or endogenous IL-1 regulates
IL-6
production in vitro. We investigated the effects of exogenous IL-1 and
IL-6
on secondary cytokine secretion. Our studies revealed that IL-1 strongly up-regulated
IL-6
protein secretion in all three cell lines tested. This effect was completely abrogated by IL-1 receptor antagonist. IL-1 receptor antagonist also inhibited the secretion of IL-1alpha and IL-1beta in two of three cell lines. These data show for the first time that IL-1 strongly up-regulates
IL-6
and support the notion of autocrine regulation of IL-1 in certain oral SCC cell lines. Additionally, because human papillomavirus (HPV) infection and
p53
mutation have been implicated in the malignant transformation of SCC, we explored a second hypothesis, that HPV and/or
p53
mutation contribute to cytokine dis-regulation. We investigated HPV DNA presence, transcriptional activation of HPV E6/E7 (in HPV DNA-positive cell lines), and
p53
gene status in our cell lines. No association between HPV DNA and cytokine expression was found. However, the oral SCC cell lines secreting the most
IL-6
had mutant rather than wild-type
p53
.
...
PMID:Interleukin-1 regulates interleukin-6 secretion in human oral squamous cell carcinoma in vitro: possible influence of p53 but not human papillomavirus E6/E7. 967 82
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