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)

We developed a rapid assay for identifying growth-arrest genes to facilitate studies of cell cycle regulation. A7r5 vascular smooth muscle cells were transiently transfected with two plasmids: (i) a pMSV beta Gal reporter construct expressing beta-galactosidase (beta-gal) under transcriptional control of the murine sarcoma virus long terminal repeat; and (ii) a eukaryotic expression vector driving transcription of a potential growth inhibitory c-DNA under control of the cytomegalovirus promoter/enhancer. Twenty-four hours after transfection, cellular DNA was labeled for an additional 24 h with 5-bromo-2-deoxyuridine (BrdU) to label cellular DNA. After fixation, transfected cells were identified by histochemical staining with a beta-gal substrate, 6-chloro-3-indolyl-beta-D-galactopyranoside (i.e., Red-Gal). Transfected cells (beta-gal-positive) that traversed S phase (i.e., DNA synthesis) were quantified by indirect immunocytochemical staining for BrdU. Since autoradiography was not required to score for DNA synthesis, the length of experiments was much shorter than previously described growth-arrest assays performed with transiently transfected cells. Experiments with two growth-arrest genes, p53 and the p21 cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor, demonstrated the utility of this assay.
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PMID:Rapid characterization of growth-arrest genes in transient transfection assays. 754 21

DNA polymerase fingerprint analysis (DPFA) was employed for identifying DNA-carcinogen adduct formation in the human p53 and lac gene sequence. Two 'hot regions' at codons 223-250 and 257-283 of the p53 gene were easily attacked by nitroso-2-acetylaminofluorene or acetoxy-2-acetylaminofluorene. However, the promutational lesions in lac gene were rather randomly distributed. The chemical treated plasmid (pUC 19) which contains lac gene were transfected into Escherichia coli JM109 cells and the induced lac gene mutants were selected with X-Gal plate as indicated by the appearance of white colonies. No mutational hot regions were found in the lac gene.
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PMID:Preferential promutagenic lesions at exons 7-8 of human p53 genomic DNA induced by the direct-acting hepatocarcinogens N-nitroso-2-acetylaminofluorene and N-acetoxy-2-acetylaminofluorene. 765 42

The use of replication-deficient adenoviral vectors in gene therapy may become a powerful method to achieve efficient but safe transfer of anti-tumor agents. Introduction of the wild-type p53 gene into tumor cells has, in general, been associated with growth suppression. In this study, infection of androgen-independent human prostate Tsu-pr1 cells lacking functional p53 alleles resulted in high levels of p53 protein within 10-15 h. Cells infected with AdCMV.p53 detached from the substratum, condensed, and exhibited fragmentation of nuclear DNA into nucleosomal units consistent with the process of apoptosis. These effects were evident within 24 h after infection, and the majority of cells had undergone apoptosis by 48 h, whereas cells infected with AdCMV.NLS beta Gal continued to proliferate. Uninfected or AdCMV.NLS beta Gal-infected Tsu-pr1 cells formed tumors in nude mice within 3 weeks after implantation, whereas AdCMV.p53-infected cells failed to form tumors during this period. Therefore, adenoviral-mediated antitumor therapy using the p53 gene is an efficient method to inhibit prostate tumor growth, and agents that target the cellular programmed cell death pathway may be useful in clinical applications.
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PMID:Adenovirus-mediated wild-type p53 expression induces apoptosis and suppresses tumorigenesis of prostatic tumor cells. 767 Dec 22

Type 5 adenoviral (Ad) vectors have been the "vector-of-choice" for preclinical studies on p53 tumor suppressor gene therapy of cancer. Previous studies have examined the in vivo efficacy of p53 Ad when given intratumorally. However published information does little to guide clinicians in the design of intraperitoneal (i.p.) dosing trials for i.p. tumors, e.g., ovarian, or clinical trials using regional organ perfusion, e.g., for lung tumors. Therefore, we examined several parameters with special significance for these routes of administration. Lung metastases from p53mut MDA-MB-231 mammary xenografts were treated with therapeutic levels of intravenous buffer, beta-galactosidase (beta-Gal) Ad, or p53 Ad. Treatment with intravenous p53 Ad significantly reduced the number of metastases per lung and there was a dramatic reduction in the surface area occupied by these tumors as compared to control groups. Two types of i.p. tumor xenografts were used for preclinical modeling of i.p. gene therapy, the p53null SK-OV-3 ovarian and the p53mut DU-145 prostate human cancers. In a study examining the effect of different vehicle volumes on the efficacy of a constant drug dose, all mice treated with p53 Ad had reduced tumor burden compared to controls. Dosing volumes between 0.2 and 1 ml were equally effective and all were more effective than a dosing volume of 0.1 ml. However, reduced efficacy was observed when a volume of 1.5 ml was used. When the effect of dosing frequency on antitumor efficacy was examined, fractionated doses of p53 Ad had somewhat greater efficacy than fewer, bolus injections. One of the significant elements in the emerging toxicology associated with recombinant adenoviruses is the hepatocyte pathology caused by high systemic concentrations of adenovirus. For recombinant Ad used in this study, there was a pronounced dose-dependence for the liver response, with very high, repeated doses causing significant hepatocellular insult. Expression of cytoplasmic beta-Gal protein coincided with areas of greatest damage in mice treated with high doses of beta-Gal Ad. Ultrastructural examination of hepatocyte intranuclear inclusions revealed moderately electron-dense, tightly packed granular material interspersed with more electron-dense nuclear material. Human tumor xenografts, but not mouse tissues, expressed viral hexon protein. In summary, hepatic toxicity caused by high concentrations of recombinant adenovirus was observed in murine cancer models. However, therapeutic levels of p53 Ad could be achieved which had dramatic efficacy without significant pathology.
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PMID:Recombinant E1-deleted adenovirus-mediated gene therapy for cancer: efficacy studies with p53 tumor suppressor gene and liver histology in tumor xenograft models. 955 16

Tumor cell (TC) contamination of stem cell products can contribute to relapse after high dose chemotherapy and stem cell rescue. A new purging technology using replication-deficient recombinant adenovirus (Adv) containing the p53 tumor suppressor gene (Adv-p53) has been suggested to reduce tumor contamination of autologous stem cell product. We demonstrate herein a safe and effective Adv-p53 purging procedure using four human breast cancer TC lines. Multiple parameters need to be achieved to successfully purge stem cell products, including a high cell:virus ratio, a small incubation volume, a long incubation time and 37 degrees C rather than room temperature. These parameters are all interrelated and equally important for the inhibition of TC clonogenic growth. In our studies, we also observed that Adv could nonspecifically inhibit TC clonogenic growth, although Adv-p53 treatment led to a significantly greater inhibition of clonogenic growth by cells expressing mutated p53. The presence of peripheral stem cell (PSC) products was found to decrease the effect of Adv-p53 on TC clonogenic growth, suggesting that PSC products could compete with TC for infection by recombinant Adv. However, X-Gal staining after incubation with Adv containing-galactosidase demonstrated that PSC products were 2, 000-fold more resistant to Adv infection than TC. We conclude that a 4-hour incubation of stem cell products (2 x 10(8)/ml) with 4 x 10(11) Adv-p53 particles is sufficient to completely purge TC with no effect on hematopoietic cell function.
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PMID:Adenovirus p53 purging for human breast cancer stem cell products. 1020 40

A recombinant adenovirus with deleted E1 and E3, and E4-inactivated by replacing the E4 promoter with a synthetic promoter composed of a minimal TATA box and five consensus yeast GAL4-binding site elements was developed and used to express the human tumor suppresser gene p53. The toxicity and immunogenicity of this vector and vector-mediated p53 gene expression in vivo were studied in immunocompetent C3H and C57BL/6 mice. Expression of the late viral gene product, hexon protein, was observed in C3H and C57BL/6 mice injected with E4 wild-type adenovirus constructs Adv-cmv-beta-Gal (BG), Adv-cmv-hp53 (WT), and empty E1- vector Adv-E4 (EW) 3 to 28 days after injection, but was undetectable in mice treated with E4 modified empty E1- vector Adv-GAL4 (EG) or Adv-cmv-hp53-GAL4 (G4). Expression of the p53 gene was observed in both WT- and G4-injected C3H and C57BL/6 mouse livers from days 3 to 28. Ten weeks after injection, p53 gene expression was still detected in G4-treated C57BL/6 mice at similar levels, but was not detectable in WT-treated mice. Vector-induced liver toxicity was evaluated by analyzing serum transaminases (SGOT and SGPT) activities. In all cases, SGOT and SGPT activities were markedly decreased in EG-treated C3H and C57BL/6 mice compared with those in EW-treated mice on days 3, 7 and 14 after injection. In C57BL/6 mice, the total anti-adenoviral CTL activities were two- to three-fold higher in animals treated with EW vector than in those treated with EG vector. These results suggest that inactivation of the E4 promoter efficiently diminished the viral replication and the late viral gene expression, reduced host immune response and consequently reduced toxicity and prolonged the duration of transgene expression in vivo.
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PMID:Reduced toxicity, attenuated immunogenicity and efficient mediation of human p53 gene expression in vivo by an adenovirus vector with deleted E1-E3 and inactivated E4 by GAL4-TATA promoter replacement. 1043 89

Gene transfer was performed using asialo-oroso-mucoid-polylysine (ASOR-PL) conjugates to allow targeted expression of the gene in cells of hepatic origin. In a gel-electrophoretic analysis, the ASOR-PL conjugate produced a complete DNA retardation effect at the optimal ratio of 222:1 (ASOR-PL conjugate/pCMV beta-gal plasmid). The gene-transfer efficiency of the ASOR-PL conjugate was evaluated in HepG2 cells that express asialoglycoprotein receptor and NIH 3T3 cells that do not. The expression was assayed by 5-bromo-4-chloroindol-3-yl beta-D-galactopyranoside ('X-Gal') staining and Chlorophenol Red beta-D-galactopyranoside. When an expression vector for the tumour-suppressor gene p53, pCMVp53, complexed to ASOR-PL conjugate, was transfected into HepG2 cells, the exogenously provided p53 gene was detected in the HepG2 cells by PCR. To improve the efficiency of DNA delivery and expression of the therapeutic proteins poloxamer 407, a fusogenic peptide, influenza-virus haemagglutinin HA2 and chloroquine were individually incorporated into the system. The expression level of beta-galactosidase in HepG2 cells was increased by about four times by the presence of poloxamer 407, whereas the fusogenic peptide HA2 and chloroquine had no effects. When HepG2 cells were transfected with pCMVp53 in the presence of poloxamer 407, the mRNA of transfected p53 could be detected by reverse transcriptase PCR. The current findings open the possibility that a receptor-mediated gene-delivery system for hepatic gene therapy using ASOR-PL conjugate in combination with poloxamer 407 may be developed in the future.
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PMID:Improvement of receptor-mediated gene delivery to HepG2 cells using an amphiphilic gelling agent. 1091 34

The present study assessed the role of adenoviral vector-mediated wild-type p53 gene transfer in B lymphoma cells. Deficiency of p53-mediated cell death is common in human cancer contributing to both tumorigenesis and chemoresistance. Lymphoma cells are being considered as suitable targets for gene therapy protocols. Recently, we reported an adenoviral protocol leading to highly efficient gene transfer to B lymphoma cells. All lymphoma cell lines (n=5) tested here showed mutations in the p53 gene locus. The aim of this work was to transduce lymphoma cells with the wild-type p53 gene. Using this protocol, 88% of Raji, 75% of Daudi, and 45% of OCI-Ly8-LAM53 cells were transfected with the reporter gene green fluorescent protein at a multiplicity of infection of 200. The expression of green fluorescent protein in CA46 and BL41 cells was 27% and 42%, respectively. At this multiplicity of infection, growth characteristics of lymphoma cell lines were not changed significantly. In contrast, cells transduced with wild-type p53 gene showed an inhibition of proliferation as well as an increase in apoptosis. Cell loss by apoptosis after p53 gene transfer was up to 40% as compared to transduction with an irrelevant vector. In addition, we determined the effects of DNA damage produced by the DNA topoisomerase II inhibitor etoposide on wild-type p53 transfected lymphoma cells. In Ad-p53-transfected Raji cells, treatment with the drug resulted in a marked increase of cell loss in comparison to Ad-beta-Gal-transfected cells (45% vs. 77%). Interestingly, performing cytotoxicity studies, we could show an increased sensitivity of Raji and Daudi cells against immunological effector cells. In conclusion, transduction of wild-type p53 into lymphoma cells expressing mutated p53 was efficient and led to inhibition of proliferation and increase in apoptotic rate in some cell lines dependent on p53 mutation. This protocol should have an impact on the use of lymphoma cells in cancer gene therapy protocols.
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PMID:Effects of adenoviral wild-type p53 gene transfer in p53-mutated lymphoma cells. 1149 63

Primary human embryo lung fibroblasts and adult diploid fibroblasts infected by the human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) display beta-galactosidase (beta-Gal) activity at neutral pH (senescence-associated beta-Gal [SA-beta-Gal] activity) and overexpression of the plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 (PAI-1) gene, two widely recognized markers of the process designated premature cell senescence. This activity is higher when cells are serum starved for 48 h before infection, a process that speeds and facilitates HCMV infection but that is insufficient by itself to induce senescence. Fibroblasts infected by HCMV do not incorporate bromodeoxyuridine, a prerequisite for the formal definition of senescence. At the molecular level, cells infected by HCMV, beside the accumulation of large amounts of the cell cycle regulators p53 and pRb, the latter in its hyperphosphorylated form, display a strong induction of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor (cdki) p16(INK4a), a direct effector of the senescence phenotype in fibroblasts, and a decrease of the cdki p21(CIP1/WAF). Finally, a replicative senescence state in the early phases of infection significantly increased the number of cells permissive to virus infection and enhanced HCMV replication. HCMV infection assays carried out in the presence of phosphonoformic acid, which inhibits the virus DNA polymerase and the expression of downstream genes, indicated that immediate-early and/or early (alpha) genes are sufficient for the induction of SA-beta-Gal activity. When baculovirus vectors expressing HCMV IE1-72 or IE2-86 proteins were inoculated into fibroblasts, the increase of p16(INK4a) (observed predominantly with IE2-86) was similar to that observed with the whole virus, as was the induction of SA-beta-Gal activity, suggesting that the viral IE2 gene leads infected cells into senescence. Altogether our results demonstrate for the first time that HCMV, after arresting the cell cycle and inhibiting apoptosis, triggers the cellular senescence program, probably through the p16(INK4a) and p53 pathways.
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PMID:Cell cycle arrest by human cytomegalovirus 86-kDa IE2 protein resembles premature senescence. 1241 54

Efficient gene delivery of a baculovirus-derived vector (BV-p53-lacZ) to a human osteogenic sarcoma cell line, Saos-2, was serendipitously found while evaluating the vector for gene delivery to human p53-null tumour cells in a previous study. Therefore, we investigated other human, rat and mouse osteogenic sarcoma and other types of tumour cell lines for transduction efficiency via baculovirus vectors containing a lacZ reporter gene under the control of either a cytomegalovirus or Rous sarcoma virus promoter. The expression of beta-galactosidase protein, assessed by X-Gal staining and beta-galactosidase ELISA, demonstrated an extremely high level of transduction efficiency in some osteogenic sarcoma cell lines, such as U-2OS, Saos-2 and Saos-LM2. These human osteogenic sarcoma cell lines showed levels of beta-galactosidase expression 5-40 times greater than HepG2 cells, which were previously thought to be the mammalian cells most susceptible to baculovirus-mediated gene delivery. The level of acetylated histone proteins in these tumour lines did not correlate well with the high level of reporter gene expression. These results strongly suggest that some osteogenic sarcoma cells are highly susceptible to baculovirus-mediated gene delivery and that a baculovirus-derived vector is an efficient gene delivery vehicle into human osteogenic sarcoma cells.
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PMID:Effective transduction of osteogenic sarcoma cells by a baculovirus vector. 1260 22


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