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Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (
p53
)
77,613
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To study the effect of SV40 T-antigen in mammary epithelial cells, a rat beta-casein promoter-driven SV40 early-region construct was stably introduced into the clonal mouse mammary epithelial cell line
HC11
. With the expression of the viral T-antigens under the control of a hormone-inducible promoter, it was possible to dissociate the effects of different levels of T-antigen expression on cell growth, morphology, and gene expression. Following hormonal induction, a rapid but transient induction of T-antigen was observed, followed by a delayed induction of H4 histone mRNA. In T-antigen-positive
HC11
cells cultured in the absence of EGF, the expression of basal levels of T-antigen (in the absence of hormonal induction) led to a decreased doubling time and an increased cell density. In the presence of EGF, T-antigen expression resulted additionally in an altered cell morphology. Despite the effects of T-antigen on cell growth and gene expression, the cells were unable to form colonies in soft agar and were nontumorigenic when transplanted into cleared mammary fat pads. They were, however, weakly tumorigenic in nude mice. Relatively high levels of
p53 protein
synthesis were observed in both the transfected
HC11
cells and the parental COMMA-D cells, as compared to 3T3E fibroblasts and another mammary epithelial cell line. The
HC11
and COMMA-D cells synthesized approximately equal levels of wild-type and mutated
p53
proteins as defined by their reactivities with monoclonal antibodies PAb246 and PAb240, respectively. Interactions between excess
p53
and T-antigen may, in part, explain the failure of these cells to display a completely transformed phenotype.
...
PMID:Differential effects of the simian virus 40 early genes on mammary epithelial cell growth, morphology, and gene expression. 132 45
The
p53 tumor suppressor protein
has been implicated as a mediator of programmed cell death (PCD). A series of nontransformed mammary epithelial cell (MEC) lines were used to correlate
p53
function with activation of PCD. Treatment of MECs expressing mutant, inactive, or no
p53
with DNA-damaging agents did not induce apoptosis. Upon introduction of temperature-sensitive
p53
into
HC11
cells, which lack wild-type (wt)
p53
, PCD was observed after mitomycin treatment at 32 degrees, when the ts
p53 protein
is in wt conformation. Thus, wt
p53
mediates activation of PCD in response to mitomycin in
HC11
cells. Treatment of the MCF10-A cells, which express wt
p53
, with various DNA-damaging agents led to nuclear accumulation of
p53
. Only mitomycin treatment led to an increase in the number of apoptotic nuclei. ErbB-2-transformed MCF10-A cells responded to mitomycin, cisplatin, and 5-Fl-uracil, suggesting that signaling from activated ErbB-2 enhances the cells ability to respond to DNA damage. A combination of high cell density and serum-free medium induces apoptosis in all MECs tested, irrespective of their
p53
status. Under these conditions, EGF or insulin act as survival factors in preventing PCD. These data might elucidate some aspects of breast involution and tumorigenesis.
...
PMID:p53-dependent and p53-independent activation of apoptosis in mammary epithelial cells reveals a survival function of EGF and insulin. 789 81
We examined the status of the
p53
gene in the
HC11
normal mammary epithelial cells. Two mutations were identified: a Cys to Trp change at codon 138 and a microdeletion of codon 123 to 130 resulting from mutation of the splice acceptor site. These two mutations were independent, and no wild-type
p53
allele was found. Introduction of wt-
p53
strongly inhibited growth in monolayer. Thus, the absence of wt-
p53
can be sufficient for the immortalization of mammary cells.
...
PMID:Growth suppression of normal mammary epithelial cells by wild-type p53. 827 47
p53
mutations are frequent in human breast cancer. In order to understand the role of
p53
in the context of the accumulation of mutations in breast cancer, a model of non transformed mammary cells was sought. The
HC11
cells are immortalized, non transformed rodent mammary epithelial cells which synthesize milk proteins following stimulation with lactogenic hormones.
p53 protein
was readily detected in
HC11
protein extracts with the PAb421 antibody. Two mutations were identified in the
p53
cDNA from
HC11
cells: a missense mutation at codon 138, substituting Trp for Cys, and a microdeletion, codon 123 to 130, of exon 5. The latter results from an intronic mutation of the splice acceptor site at the intron 4/exon 5 junction. The mutations affect separate
p53
alleles, and no wt allele was found. Wt
p53
was introduced into
HC11
cells by means of a retroviral vector, under the control of a Cd(++)-inducible promoter. In the presence of CdSO4 a dramatic growth inhibition was observed. A temperature-sensitive mutant p53 gene was also transfected into
HC11
cells. This resulted in a marked inhibition of cells growth at 32 degrees C, when the
p53
is in the wt conformation, while no effect was observed at 37 degrees C, when the mutant conformation is predominant. wt
p53
-mediated inhibition of monolayer growth does not involve induction of programmed cell death and does not activate de novo synthesis of differentiation-specific milk proteins. We conclude that mutations in the
p53
gene likely played a role in their immortalization. The
HC11
cells provide a model for assessing the cooperative action of other mutations in mammary tumorigenesis.
...
PMID:Growth suppression of normal mammary epithelial cells by wild-type p53. 829 Feb 56
We have examined the effects of inhibition of the 26S proteasome in a murine mammary cell line, KIM-2 cells using the peptide aldehyde inhibitor MG132. These studies have demonstrated a clear requirement for proteasome function in cell viability. Induction of apoptosis was observed following MG132 treatment in KIM-2 cells and this death was shown to be dependent on the cell actively traversing the cell cycle. KIM-2 cells were generated using a temperature sensitive T-antigen (Tag) and studies at the permissive temperature (33 degrees C) have shown that a Tag binding protein was essential for this apoptotic response. Studies in two additional cell lines,
HC11
, which is a mammary epithelial cell line carrying mutant p53 alleles and
p53
null ES cells suggest that
p53
is actively required for the apoptosis induced as a consequence of proteasome inhibition. These results suggest a pivotal role for the 26S proteasome degradation pathway in progression through the cell cycle in proliferating cells.
...
PMID:p53-dependent apoptosis induced by proteasome inhibition in mammary epithelial cells. 1131 3
The involvement of
p53
, Bax, cytochrome C and CPP-32 (caspase-3) in the molecular mechanism ofTGF-beta1-induced apoptosis in
HC11
mouse mammary epithelial cells (MEC) was examined. Laser scanning cytometry (LSC) was applied for the quantitative analysis of expression and distribution of examined apoptosis-related proteins in the cytoplasmic (Cf) and nuclear (Nf) area. Maximal pixel of fluorescence (MP) parameter corresponding to aggregation of molecules in the cell was also measured. Confocal and immunoelectron microscopy were used as a complementary methods. Apoptosis induced by TGF-beta1 (2 ng/ml) was associated with the increase of Bax MP observed within 60 min. after cytokine administration, indicating aggregation of Bax in the cell. Immunoelectron microscopy revealed Bax aggregation on mitochondrial membranes, rough endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus, cytoskeleton, nuclear envelope and inside of nucleus. The accumulation of Bax in the nucleus was confirmed by compartmental Bax analysis, showing the increase of cell number with elevated Bax Nf in 2 hr after TGF-beta1 administration to the culture. The redistribution of Bax within the cell was dependent on its activation occurring by the cleavage at N-terminal epitope and exposure of BH3 domain. Bax aggregation on organelles was completely abolished by prolactin or IGF-I. TGF-beta1 increased
p53
MP, evidently after 4 hr of cell culture exposure to this cytokine.
p53
was accumulated first of all in the nucleus, which was shown by significant increase of
p53
Nf/Cf ratio and increase of
p53
-related nuclear fluorescence on confocal images. TGF-beta1 decreased cytochrome C MP, which corresponded to its release from mitochondria and dissipation in the cytosol. It was accompanied by the increase of CPP-32 MP and concentration of 89 kDa product of PARP degradation in the nucleus. In conclusion, TGF-beta1 triggers apoptosis in MEC through mitochondrial pathway involving: activation and translocation of Bax to mitochondrial membranes, release of cytochrome C from mitochondria, activation of CPP-32 and degradation of its substrate - PARP in the nucleus. Activation and subcellular redistribution of Bax is inhibited by lactogenic hormones: prolactin and IGF-I.
...
PMID:Molecular mechanism of TGF-beta1-induced apoptosis in HC11 mouse mammary epithelial cells (MEC). 1193 68
Murine Brca1 is widely expressed during development in different tissues. Why alterations of BRCA1 lead specifically to breast and ovarian cancer is currently not clarified. Here we show that Brca1 protein expression is upregulated during mammary epithelial differentiation of
HC11
cells, during differentiation of C2C12 myoblasts into myotubes and during neuronal differentiation of N1E-115 cells. Ectopic overexpression of BRCA1 and downregulation of endogenous Brca1 expression specifically affect the regulation of mammary epithelial cell differentiation. Accelerated mammary epithelial cell differentiation upon high ectopic BRCA1 expression is not a consequence of the anti-proliferative capacity of this tumor suppressor and independent of functional
p53
. Overexpression of the BRCA1 variant lacking the large central exon 11 has no effects on mammary epithelial cell differentiation. These data provide new insights into the cellular role of Brca1.
...
PMID:Brca1 regulates in vitro differentiation of mammary epithelial cells. 1210 13
Genetically engineered mouse mammary cancer models have been used over the years as systems to study human breast cancer. However, much controversy exists on the utility of such models as valid equivalents to the human cancer condition. To perform an interspecies gene expression comparative study in breast cancer we used a mouse model that most closely resembles human breast carcinogenesis. This system relies on the transplant of
p53
null mouse mammary epithelial cells into the cleared mammary fat pads of syngeneic hosts. Serial analysis of gene expression (SAGE) was used to obtain gene expression profiles of normal and tumor samples from this mouse mammary cancer model (>300,000 mouse mammary-specific tags). The resulting mouse data were compared with 25 of our human breast cancer SAGE libraries (>2.5 million human breast-specific tags). We observed significant similarities in the deregulation of specific genes and gene families when comparing mouse with human breast cancer SAGE data. A total of 72 transcripts were identified as commonly deregulated in both species. We observed a systematic and significant down-regulation in all of the tumors from both species of various cytokines, including CXCL1 (GRO1), LIF, interleukin 6, and
CCL2
. All of the mouse and most human mammary tumors also displayed decreased expression of genes known to inhibit cell proliferation, including NFKBIA (IKBalpha), GADD45B, and CDKN1A (p21); transcription-related genes such as CEBP, JUN, JUNB, and ELF1; and apoptosis-related transcripts such as IER3 and GADD34/PPP1R15A. Examples of overexpressed transcripts in tumors from both species include proliferation-related genes such as CCND1, CKS1B, and STMN1 (oncoprotein 18); and genes related to other functions such as SEPW1, SDFR1, DNCI2, and SP110. Importantly, abnormal expression of several of these genes has not been associated previously with breast cancer. The consistency of these observations was validated in independent mouse and human mammary cancer sets. This is the first interspecies comparison of mammary cancer gene expression profiles. The comparative analysis of mouse and human SAGE mammary cancer data validates this
p53
null mouse tumor model as a useful system closely resembling human breast cancer development and progression. More importantly, these studies are allowing us to identify relevant biomarkers of potential use in human studies while leading to a better understanding of specific mechanisms of human breast carcinogenesis.
...
PMID:From mice to humans: identification of commonly deregulated genes in mammary cancer via comparative SAGE studies. 1552 Jan 79
The STAT3 transcription factor is an important initiator of mammary gland involution in the mouse. This work shows that the STAT3 target gene CCAAT/enhancer binding protein delta (C/EBPdelta) is a crucial mediator of pro-apoptotic gene expression events in mammary epithelial cells. In the absence of C/EBPdelta, involution is delayed, the pro-apoptotic genes encoding
p53
, BAK, IGFBP5 and SGP2/clusterin are not activated, while the anti-apoptotic genes coding for BFL1 and Cyclin D1 are not repressed. Consequently,
p53
targets such as survivin, BRCA1, BRCA2 and BAX are not regulated appropriately and protease activation is delayed. Furthermore, expression of MMP3 and C/EBPdelta during the second phase of involution is perturbed in the absence of C/EBPdelta. In
HC11
cells, C/EBPdelta alone is sufficient to induce IGFBP5 and SGP2. It also suppresses Cyclin D1 expression and cooperates with
p53
to elicit apoptosis. This study places C/EBPdelta between STAT3 and several pro- and anti-apoptotic genes promoting the physiological cell death response in epithelial cells at the onset of mammary gland involution.
...
PMID:C/EBPdelta is a crucial regulator of pro-apoptotic gene expression during mammary gland involution. 1619 6
Glycyrrhiza uralensis (Leguminosae) has long been known as an antiinflammatory agent for gastric ulcers, arthritis, and rheumatism. The flavonoid glycyrol (GC) (10 microg/ml) isolated from G. uralensis dramatically inhibits phorbol ester (phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate)-induced nuclear factor (NF)-kappaB-dependent transcriptional activity, as determined by luciferase reporter activity in human kidney epithelial 293T cells. To investigate global gene expression profiling in cells by GC, we performed high-density oligonucleotide microarrays. Our microarray analyses showed that GC inhibited phorbol ester-induced NF-kappaB-dependent transcriptional activity in inflammatory-related gene expression. RT-PCR analysis, based on microarray data, showed that NF-kappaB-dependent genes (such as
CCL2
, CCL7, CD44, and HSPB8 in addition to NF-kappaB itself) were significantly downregulated by GC. Treatment with GC (10 microg/ml) inhibited I-kappaB degradation induced by phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate. The microarray data also suggested that GC induces gene expression to
p53
-dependent apoptosis through endonuclease G, instead of CAD/DFF and AIF/PDCD8, as a downstream-apoptosis factor in human kidney epithelial 293T tumor cells, and induces oncogenes with a suppressor role as an added function.
...
PMID:Gene induction by glycyrol to apoptosis through endonuclease G in tumor cells and prediction of oncogene function by microarray analysis. 1841 17
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