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Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (
p53
)
77,613
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Inherited susceptibility to a wide variety of neoplasias (
Li-Fraumeni syndrome)
, has been shown in studies of one cancer-prone family, to have an intriguing association with an aberrant c-raf-1 gene and inheritance of a radioresistant phenotype in their non-cancerous skin fibroblasts. This association together with observations that DNA topoisomerases, when defective, can introduce errors into DNA and that these enzymes are perturbed in vitro by serine/threonine kinases similar to raf encoded proteins, prompted investigation of
DNA topoisomerase
activity of the family's fibroblasts. Since radioresistance was transferred to murine cells (NIH-3T3) when the aberrant c-raf-1 gene from this family was transfected, we also examined transformants containing this and other oncogenes. V-raf/c-myc and EJ-ras transformants were examined, the former because the family's skin fibroblasts also have 3-8-fold elevated myc expression (not apparently relevant to radioresistance) and the latter because ras, like raf, conveys radioresistance. The family members' fibroblasts and the three transfected murine lines, showed a similar perturbation of a spermidine and ATP-dependent DNA catenation activity (typical of DNA topoisomerase II). There was a significant positive correlation (r = 0.93; P = 0.0026) between the degree of activation of
topoisomerase
II and one measure of radioresistance (the Dq value). Relaxation of DNA supercoiling (topoisomerase I activity and other DNA nicking enzymes) was not abnormal. Cytotoxicity assays and evaluation of the influence of
topoisomerase
II inhibitors on DNA/protein complex formation, corroborated the existence of a qualitative
topoisomerase
II defect in the family's cells and transfectants. Although the contention that the qualitative
topoisomerase
II abnormalities observed here may be associated with malfunction is highly speculative, these findings may be relevant to the mechanism of oncogenesis, not only in this family, but with raf and ras type oncogenes.
...
PMID:Aberrant DNA topoisomerase II activity, radioresistance and inherited susceptibility to cancer. 184 52
Nucleotide sequences that are cleaved by calf thymus type I
topoisomerase
have been determined using cloned human Ha-ras and
p53
genes. Localization and relative frequency of single-strand cleavages within these sequences were observed to change in the presence of the cytotoxic alkaloid camptothecin.
...
PMID:[Effect of camptothecin on the DNA-relaxing and DNA-cleavage activity of calf thymus topoisomerase I]. 254 95
Recent developments in the molecular genetics of human cancers shows the importance of multiple genetic alterations in the pathogenesis of these lesions. DNA diagnostic techniques are being introduced rapidly into the clinical laboratory setting. 1) In lung cancer, several oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes, such as ras, myc,
p53
, RB, allelic loss of chromosomes, play very important roles. These genetic changes are being applied to cancer diagnosis, prediction of prognosis or disease metastasis, or response to treatment. 2) Drug resistance is one of the major problems of current lung cancer chemotherapy. Identification of the molecular marker for drug resistance, like
DNA topoisomerase
gene mutation, in clinical samples will be of great help for choosing chemotherapy regimens. 3) Interindividual differences in susceptibility to lung cancer may be screened using genotyping of the P450IA1 and GSTmu genes. To develop newer diagnostic and therapeutic approaches, detailed investigation of the molecular pathogenesis of lung cancer using clinical samples is essential. I review the present status on these applications of genetic markers to lung cancer diagnosis in this article.
...
PMID:[Application of molecular diagnosis to human lung cancer]. 747 38
The highly proliferating phenotype of mammary carcinoma is known to be associated with a particularly aggressive clinical course. We have been interested in the underlying molecular causes that give rise to the increased proliferative activity Proliferative activity was determined immunohistochemically by the detection of
topoisomerase
II-alpha (Ki-S1). The subgroup of highly proliferating tumors with a Ki-S1 index exceeding 30% was characterized by a high frequency of c-myc amplification and aberrant
p53
expression, whereas tumors, with a low mitotic activity rarely exhibited gene amplification or an altered
p53
expression. We conclude, that the highly proliferating phenotype is not capable of regular replication and tends to develop gene amplifications. One of the causes might be a defective cell cycle control by
p53
.
...
PMID:[Proliferative activity and defective replication in breast cancer]. 753 9
DNA topoisomerases are enzymes that regulate DNA topology and are essential for the integrity of the genetic material during transcription, replication and recombination processes. Inhibitors of the mammalian enzymes are widely used antitumor drugs. They stabilize
topoisomerase
-DNA cleavable complexes by hindering the DNA relegating step of the catalytic reaction, thus resulting in DNA cleavage stimulation. Investigations on the sequence selectivity of DNA cleavage stimulated by chemically unrelated compounds established that specific nucleotides flanking strand cuts are required for drug action. Moreover, structure-activity relationship studies have identified structural determinants of drug sequence specificities, thus eventually allowing the design of new agents targeted at selected genomic regions. The initial cellular lesion, i.e., the drug-stabilized cleavable complex, is a reversible molecular event; however, how it may lead to cell death remains to be fully clarified. Several laboratories focused in past years on molecular and genetic aspects of drug-activated apoptosis. Irreversible double-stranded DNA breaks, generated from collisions between cleavable complexes and advancing replication forks, were suggested to increase
p53 protein
levels, thus triggering the cell death program. Other genes were also shown to cooperate in modulating the cell response to drug treatments. Recently, several groups have evaluated the possible prognostic value of
topoisomerase
II levels in solid tumors and hematopoietic neoplasms. Topoisomerase II inhibitors may also have genotoxic effects. Secondary leukemias, characterized by a translocation between chromosomes 11 and 9, have been reported in disease-free patients after treatments with drug regimens that included anti-
topoisomerase
II agents. It has been proposed that an impairment of
topoisomerase
activity may be involved in the molecular pathogenesis of secondary leukemias.
...
PMID:Mechanism of action of DNA topoisomerase inhibitors. 754 96
We have used two different approaches to study the consequences of NAD/poly(ADP-ribose) deficiency on
p53
expression and its activity in V79-derived cell lines. In the first approach, we have used two cell lines that are deficient in poly(ADP-ribose) (pADPR) synthesis because of deficiency in the enzyme poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP). In a second approach, we have used a cell line that is deficient in NAD/pADPR metabolism due to unavailability of NAD, the substrate for PARP. These NAD/PARP-deficient cell lines exhibit a significant reduction in both baseline
p53
expression and its activity compared to their parental V79 cells. Furthermore, etoposide, a
topoisomerase
II inhibitor that was shown to cause an increase in
p53
expression and subsequent apoptosis in V79 cells, failed to produce any significant increase in
p53
expression or apoptotic DNA fragmentation in NAD/PARP-deficient cell lines. Thus, our studies suggest that NAD/pADPR synthesis may be involved in the regulation of
p53
and its dependent pathways.
...
PMID:Involvement of NAD-poly(ADP-ribose) metabolism in p53 regulation and its consequences. 764 Nov 78
The induction of apoptosis following
topoisomerase
inhibitors proceeds in at least three distinct steps: (1) induction of cleavable complexes (potentially lethal damage), (2)
topoisomerase
-induced DNA damage, and (3) a presently unknown sequence of events that must either lead to cell cycle arrest (G2-block, differentiation) or apoptosis. DNA degradation provides a convenient way to quantify apoptosis in HL-60 cells. Extensive apoptosis can be induced rapidly in undifferentiated HL-60 cells without prevention by cycloheximide or actinomycin D. Therefore, HL-60 cells appear to express constitutively the apoptotic machinery that may be kept under control of a yet unknown repressor. The absence of the
tumor suppressor p53
and the presence of bcl-2 are in contrast with the sensitivity of these cells to apoptosis. Agents that modify chromatin structure (zinc, poly[ADPribose] inhibitors, spermine) can block DNA fragmentation without affecting cell survival. By contrast macrophage-like differentiation by phorbol esters suppresses apoptosis without affecting
topoisomerase
-induced DNA damage. Better understanding of the apoptotic regulation in the widely used and characterized HL-60 cell line should allow the identification of new mechanisms and parameters of cellular sensitivity and resistance to the cytotoxic activity of anticancer agents.
...
PMID:Apoptosis induced by DNA topoisomerase I and II inhibitors in human leukemic HL-60 cells. 785
The
p53 protein
is a critical participant in a signal transduction pathway which mediates a G1 cell cycle arrest and apoptotic cell death in mammalian cells after ionizing irradiation. Cells from patients with the cancer-prone, radiation-sensitive disorder, ataxia-telangiectasia (AT), exhibit suboptimal (delayed and/or defective) induction of
p53 protein
after ionizing radiation with some dependence on dose. Other protein products which participate in this signal transduction pathway, including p21WAF1/CIP1, Gadd45, and Mdm2, are also suboptimally induced in AT cells after ionizing radiation. Induction of
p53
is also abnormal in AT cells following treatment with methylmethanesulfonate and bleomycin but appears relatively normal following treatment with UV-C irradiation or the
topoisomerase
inhibitors, etoposide and camptothecin. These results demonstrate a specific defect in this
p53
-dependent signal transduction pathway in AT cells. Potential models for this observed specificity of the AT defect as measured by
p53
induction include problems with responses to: (a) single-strand, but not double-strand, DNA breaks; or (b) chemically, but not enzymatically, generated DNA ends.
...
PMID:The p53-dependent G1 cell cycle checkpoint pathway and ataxia-telangiectasia. 792 16
As an approach to the rational design of combination chemotherapy involving the anti-cancer DNA topoisomerase II poison etoposide (VP-16), we have studied the dynamic changes occurring in small-cell lung cancer (SCLC) cell populations during protracted VP-16 exposure. Cytometric methods were used to analyse changes in target enzyme availability and cell cycle progression in a SCLC cell line, mutant for the tumour-suppressor gene
p53
and defective in the ability to arrest at the G1/S phase boundary. At concentrations up to 0.25 microM VP-16, cells became arrested in G2 by 24 h exposure, whereas at concentrations 0.25-2 microM G2 arrest was preceded by a dose-dependent early S-phase delay, confirmed by bromodeoxyuridine incorporation. Recovery potential was determined by stathmokinetic analysis and was studied further in aphidicolin-synchronised cultures released from G1/S and subsequently exposed to VP-16 in early S-phase. Cells not experiencing a VP-16-induced S-phase delay entered G2 delay dependent upon the continued presence of VP-16. These cells could progress to mitosis during a 6-24 h period after drug removal. Cells experiencing an early S-phase delay remained in long-term G2 arrest with greatly reducing ability to enter mitosis up to 24 h after removal of VP-16. Irreversible G2 arrest was delimited by the induction of significant levels of DNA cleavage or fragmentation, not associated with overt apoptosis, in the majority of cells. Western blotting of whole-cell preparations showed increases in
topoisomerase
II levels (up to 4-fold) attributable to cell cycle redistribution, while nuclei from cells recovering from S-phase delay showed enhanced immunoreactivity with an anti-topoisomerase II alpha antibody. The results imply that traverse of G1/S and early S-phase in the presence of a specific
topoisomerase
II poison gives rise to progressive low-level trapping of topoisomerase II alpha, enhanced topoisomerase II alpha availability and the subsequent irreversible arrest in G2 of cells showing limited DNA fragmentation. We suggest that protracted, low-dose chemotherapeutic regimens incorporating VP-16 are preferentially active towards cells attempting G1/S transition and have the potential for increasing the subsequent action of other
topoisomerase
II-targeted agents through target enzyme modulation. Combination modalities which prevent such dynamic changes occurring would act to reduce the effectiveness of the VP-16 component.
...
PMID:Etoposide-induced cell cycle delay and arrest-dependent modulation of DNA topoisomerase II in small-cell lung cancer cells. 794 97
The present study assessed the role of the
p53 tumor suppressor
gene in cell cycle arrest and apoptosis following treatment of Burkitt's lymphoma and lymphoblastoid cell lines with gamma-rays, etoposide, nitrogen mustard, and cisplatin. Cell cycle arrest was measured by flow cytometry;
p53
and p21Waf1/Cip1 protein levels were measured by Western blotting; cell survival was measured in 72-96-h growth inhibition assays and by trypan blue staining, and apoptotic DNA fragmentation was assessed by either agarose gel electrophoresis or a modified filter elution method. We found that gamma-rays and etoposide induced a strong G1 arrest in the wild-type
p53
lines while nitrogen mustard and cisplatin induced relatively little G1 arrest. All agents failed to induce G1 arrest in cells containing mutant p53 genes. The degree of G1 arrest observed with these agents correlated with the rate of
p53
and p21Waf1/Cip1 protein accumulation: gamma-rays and etoposide induced rapid accumulation of both
p53
and p21Waf1/Cip1; nitrogen mustard and cisplatin induced slow accumulation of
p53
and no major accumulation of the p21Waf1/Cip1 protein. Despite differences in G1 arrest and kinetics of
p53
or p21Waf1/Cip1 protein accumulation, all agents tended to decrease survival to a greater extent in the wild-type
p53
lines compared to the mutant p53 lines. Cell death in the wild-type
p53
lines was associated with intracellular DNA degradation into oligonucleosomal sized DNA fragments, indicative of apoptosis. We also observed an inverse sensitivity relationship between nitrogen mustard/cisplatin and etoposide in the mutant p53 lines and this was found to correlate with
topoisomerase
II mRNA levels in the cells. Our results suggest that
p53
gene status is an important determinant of both radio- and chemosensitivity in lymphoid cell lines and that
p53
mutations are often associated with decreased sensitivity to DNA damaging agents.
...
PMID:p53 gene mutations are associated with decreased sensitivity of human lymphoma cells to DNA damaging agents. 795 9
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