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Enzyme
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Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (
p53
)
77,613
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The simian virus 40 large T antigen induces tumors in a wide variety of tissues in transgenic mice, the precise tissues depending on the tissue specificity of the upstream region controlling T-antigen expression. Expression of mutant T antigens that contain a subset of the protein's activities restricts the spectrum of tumors induced. Others showed previously that expression of a mutant large T antigen containing the N-terminal 121 amino acids (T1-121) under control of the lymphotropic papovavirus promoter resulted in slow-growing choroid plexus tumors, whereas full-length T antigen under the same promoter induced rapidly growing
CPR
tumors, T-cell lymphomas, and B-cell lymphomas. In those instances, the alteration in tumor induction or progression correlated with inability of the mutant large T antigen to bind the
tumor suppressor p53
. In the study reported here, we investigated the capacity of an N-terminal T antigen segment (T1-127) expressed in conjunction with small t antigen under control of the rat elastase-1 (E1) promoter to induce pancreatic tumors. The results show that pancreases of transgenic mice expressing T1-127 and small t antigen display acinar cell dysplasia at birth that progresses to neoplasia. The average age to death in these mice is within the range reported for transgenic mice expressing full-length T antigen under control of the E1 promoter. These results indicate that sequestering
p53
by binding is not required for the development of rapidly growing acinar cell carcinomas. In addition, we provide evidence that small t antigen is unlikely to be required. Finally, we show that the
p53 protein
in acinar cell carcinomas is wild type in conformation.
...
PMID:A simian virus 40 large T-antigen segment containing amino acids 1 to 127 and expressed under the control of the rat elastase-1 promoter produces pancreatic acinar carcinomas in transgenic mice. 934 66
The radiation-induced bystander effect (RIBE) refers to a unique process in which factors released by irradiated cells or tissues exert effects on other parts of the animal not exposed to radiation, causing genomic instability, stress responses and altered apoptosis or cell proliferation. Although RIBEs have important implications for radioprotection, radiation safety and radiotherapy, the molecular identities of RIBE factors and their mechanisms of action remain poorly understood. Here we use Caenorhabditis elegans as a model in which to study RIBEs, and identify the cysteine protease
CPR
-4, a homologue of human cathepsin B, as the first RIBE factor in nematodes, to our knowledge.
CPR
-4 is secreted from animals irradiated with ultraviolet or ionizing gamma rays, and is the major factor in the conditioned medium that leads to the inhibition of cell death and increased embryonic lethality in unirradiated animals. Moreover,
CPR
-4 causes these effects and stress responses at unexposed sites distal to the irradiated tissue. The activity of
CPR
-4 is regulated by the
p53
homologue CEP-1 in response to radiation, and
CPR
-4 seems to exert RIBEs by acting through the insulin-like growth factor receptor DAF-2. Our study provides crucial insights into RIBEs, and will facilitate the identification of additional RIBE factors and their mechanisms of action.
...
PMID:Cysteine protease cathepsin B mediates radiation-induced bystander effects. 3166 65
Cisplatin is ranked as one of the most powerful and commonly prescribed anti-tumor chemotherapeutic agents which improve survival in many solid tumors including non-small cell lung cancer. However, the treatment of advanced lung cancer is restricted due to chemotherapy resistance. Here, we developed and investigated survivin promoter regulating conditionally replicating adenovirus (CRAd) for its anti-tumor potential alone or in combination with cisplatin in two lung cancer cells, H23, H2126, and their resistant cells, H23/
CPR
, H2126/
CPR
. To measure the expression of genes which regulate resistance, adenoviral transduction, metastasis, and apoptosis in cancer cells, RT-PCR and Western blotting were performed. The anti-tumor efficacy of the treatments was evaluated through flow cytometry, MTT and transwell assays. This study demonstrated that co-treatment with cisplatin and CRAd exerts synergistic anti-tumor effects on chemotherapy sensitive lung cancer cells and monotherapy of CRAd could be a practical approach to deal with chemotherapy resistance. Combined treatment induced stronger apoptosis by suppressing the anti-apoptotic molecule Bcl-2, and reversed epithelial to mesenchymal transition. In conclusion, cisplatin synergistically increased the tumor-killing of CRAd by (1) increasing CRAd transduction via enhanced CAR expression and (2) increasing
p53
dependent or independent apoptosis of lung cancer cell lines. Also, CRAd alone proved to be a very efficient anti-tumor agent in cancer cells resistant to cisplatin owing to upregulated CAR levels. In an exciting outcome, we have revealed novel therapeutic opportunities to exploit intrinsic and acquired resistance to enhance the therapeutic index of anti-tumor treatment in lung cancer.
...
PMID:Cisplatin Synergistically Enhances Antitumor Potency of Conditionally Replicating Adenovirus via p53 Dependent or Independent Pathways in Human Lung Carcinoma. 3084 20
There is variation in the responsiveness of locally advanced rectal cancer to neoadjuvant chemoradiation, from complete response to total resistance. This study compared genetic variation in rectal cancer patients who had a complete response to chemoradiation versus poor response, using tumor tissue samples sequenced with genomics analysis software. Rectal cancer patients treated with chemoradiation and proctectomy June 2006-March 2017 were grouped based on response to chemoradiation: those with no residual tumor after surgery (CR, complete responders, AJCC-
CPR
tumor grade 0, n = 8), and those with poor response (PR, AJCC-
CPR
tumor grade two or three on surgical resection, n = 8). We identified 195 variants in 83 genes in tissue specimens implicated in colorectal cancer biopathways. PR patients showed mutations in four genes not mutated in complete responders: KDM6A, ABL1, DAXX-ZBTB22, and KRAS. Ten genes were mutated only in the CR group, including ARID1A, PMS2, JAK1, CREBBP, MTOR, RB1, PRKAR1A, FBXW7, ATM C11orf65, and KMT2D, with specific discriminating variants noted in DMNT3A, KDM6A, MTOR, APC, and
TP53
. Although conclusions may be limited by small sample size in this pilot study, we identified multiple genetic variations in tumor DNA from rectal cancer patients who are poor responders to neoadjuvant chemoradiation, compared to complete responders.
...
PMID:Genomic variation as a marker of response to neoadjuvant therapy in locally advanced rectal cancer. 3239 18