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Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (
p53
)
77,613
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
S100 proteins belong to the EF-hand Ca2+-binding protein family and are involved in the regulation of a variety of cellular processes. Individual S100 proteins are expressed in cell- and tissue-specific manners, and functional deterioration of S100 proteins leads to a number of human diseases, including cancer. We previously demonstrated that S100C/A11 was translocated to nuclei and inhibited DNA synthesis in human keratinocytes when exposed to high Ca2+. In the present study we examined the effects of synthetic partial peptides of S100C/A11 on human carcinoma cell lines. Only an N-terminal peptide with 19 amino acid residues (MAK19) showed cytotoxicity to the cell lines in dose- and time-dependent manners when introduced into cells by flanking the HIV-TAT protein transduction domain (
TAT
-MAK19). Pulse field electrophoresis revealed that DNA of the treated cells was partially degradated. Annexin V, a marker of cellular apoptosis, was detected in the cells treated with
TAT
-MAK19 by immunostaining and flow cytometry. The induction of apoptotic cell death was apparently independent of
p53
, p21WAF1/CIP1, and caspase activity, but treatment with
TAT
-MAK19 resulted in partial translocation of apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF) from the cytoplasm to nuclei. These results indicate that MAK19 induces apoptosis in human cell lines and may therefore lead to the establishment of a new molecular target for the treatment of human cancer.
...
PMID:Introduction of an N-terminal peptide of S100C/A11 into human cells induces apoptotic cell death. 1524
The protein transduction system has been employed for delivery of bioactive proteins into cells via an endocytotic mechanism. However, trapping of endocytosed proteins in the endosome may significantly attenuate biological actions in cells. The present investigation demonstrated that endosomal release of transduced protein could be artificially accelerated by exposure to fluorescent light. Exposure to light at 480 nm stimulated endosomal release of transduced FITC-11 arginine-protein transduction domain (11R-PTD),
TAT
-PTD and Antennapedia-PTD. Moreover, FITC-11R-
p53 protein
was released from endosomes following stimulation with light. These data suggest that photo-acceleration is a more efficient strategy in terms of the protein transduction system.
...
PMID:Photo-acceleration of protein release from endosome in the protein transduction system. 1530 52
Protein transduction domains (PTDs), such as the
TAT
PTD, have been shown to deliver a wide variety of cargo in cell culture and to treat preclinical models of cancer and cerebral ischemia. The
TAT
PTD enters cells by a lipid raft-dependent macropinocytosis mechanism that all cells perform. Consequently, PTDs resemble small-molecule therapeutics in their lack of pharmacologic tissue specificity in vivo. However, several human malignancies overexpress specific receptors, including HER2 in breast cancer, GnRH in ovarian carcinomas, and CXC chemokine receptor 4 (CXCR4) in multiple malignancies. To target tumor cells that overexpress the CXCR4 receptor, we linked the CXCR4 DV3 ligand to two transducible anticancer peptides: a
p53
-activating peptide (DV3-TATp53C') and a cyclin-dependent kinase 2 antagonist peptide (DV3-
TAT
-RxL). Treatment of tumor cells expressing the CXCR4 receptor with either the DV3-TATp53C' or DV3-
TAT
-RxL targeted peptides resulted in an enhancement of tumor cell killing compared with treatment with nontargeted parental peptides. In contrast, there was no difference between DV3 targeted peptide and nontargeted, parental peptide treatment of non-CXCR4-expressing tumor cells. These observations show that a multidomain approach can be used to further refine and enhance the tumor selectivity of biologically active, transducible macromolecules for treating cancer.
...
PMID:Enhanced targeting and killing of tumor cells expressing the CXC chemokine receptor 4 by transducible anticancer peptides. 1632 5
In the Western world cancer is the second leading cause of mortality, and prostate carcinoma represents in men the second most important type of cancer-causing death. We have already shown that resveratrol (200 microM) triggers in DU145, an androgen-resistant prostate cancer cell line, a necrotic-like cell death, while propolis ethanolic extract (100 microg/ml) causes an apoptotic-like cell demise. The present research is aimed to better elucidate the molecular mechanisms activated by the two micronutrients. Vinorelbine bitartrate, a drug widely used in prostate cancer therapy, was utilized as a reference drug, because it is known to induce apoptosis. The combined treatments between the micronutrients and vinorelbine have been studied to test a possible vinorelbine dose reduction, avoiding its side effects without altering its cytotoxic action. In this investigation SEM and
TEM
analyses were performed to examine the morphological modifications induced; our observations confirmed necrotic cell features after treatment with resveratrol, and apoptotic modifications after propolis. We also measured cell cycle progression to study a correlation with p21 and
p53
, two well-known cell cycle checkpoints. The levels of HSP27 and HSP70, two chaperones also exerting antioxidant/antiapoptotic functions, were been also analyzed. Our data indicate that the two micronutrients modulate cell cycle distribution, increasing
p53
levels, without the induced HSPs being able to rescue DU145 from death. The results presented suggest chemotherapy based on resveratrol and propolis, alone or in combination with vinorelbine, as a potential useful tool for prostate cancer therapy; the increase in cell cycle control and the modulation of HSPs expression reinforce this suggestion.
...
PMID:Resveratrol and propolis extract: an insight into the morphological and molecular changes induced in DU145 cells. 1655 47
The
p53
gene is a tumor suppressor gene. It encodes a nuclear phosphoprotein
p53
involved in the regulation of cell cycle arrest and apoptosis to maintain the genomic integrity of the cell. As mutations of
p53
gene are found in most human cancers,
p53 protein
becomes a hot target in the research of anticancer therapy. In the present study, an 11-amino acid domain of TAT protein which has been demonstrated to be able to transduce across cell membranes was fused with
p53
. The result revealed that the fusion protein His-
TAT
-
p53
accumulated in the nucleus and inhibited the growth of the Saos-2 cells. Besides apoptosis, an increased percentage of G2 phase suggested that the transduction of His-
TAT
-
p53
into cells might be associated with a G2 arrest of cell cycle.
...
PMID:The transduction of His-TAT-p53 fusion protein into the human osteogenic sarcoma cell line (Saos-2) and its influence on cell cycle arrest and apoptosis. 1720 71
The use of pharmacologically active short peptide sequences is a better option in cancer therapeutics than the full-length protein. Here we report one such 44-mer peptide sequence of SMAR1 (
TAT
-SMAR1 wild type, P44) that retains the tumor suppressor activity of the full-length protein. The protein transduction domain of human immunodeficiency virus, type 1, Tat protein was used here to deliver the 33-mer peptide of SMAR1 into the cells. P44 peptide could efficiently activate
p53
by mediating its phosphorylation at serine 15, resulting in the activation of p21 and in effect regulating cell cycle checkpoint. In vitro phosphorylation assays with point-mutated P44-derived peptides suggested that serine 347 of SMAR1 was indispensable for its activity and represented the substrate motif for the protein kinase C family of proteins. Using xenograft nude mice models, we further demonstrate that P44 was capable of inhibiting tumor growth by preventing cellular proliferation. P44 treatment to tumor-bearing mice prevented the formation of poorly organized tumor vasculature and an increase in hypoxia-inducible factor-1alpha expression, both being signatures of tumor progression. The chimeric
TAT
-SMAR1-derived peptide, P44, thus has a strong therapeutic potential as an anticancer drug.
...
PMID:SMAR1-derived P44 peptide retains its tumor suppressor function through modulation of p53. 1722 33
Although chemotherapy has revolutionized cancer treatment, the associated side effects induced by lack of specificity to tumor cells remain a challenging problem. We have previously shown that
TAT
-RasGAP(317-326),a cell-permeable peptide derived from RasGAP, specifically sensitizes cancer cells to the action of genotoxins. The underlying mechanisms of this sensitization were not defined however. Here, we report that
TAT
-RasGAP(317-326) requires
p53
, but not the Ras effectors Akt and extracellular signal-regulated kinase, to mediate its tumor sensitization abilities. The
TAT
-RasGAP(317-326) peptide, although not modulating the transcriptional activity of
p53
or its phosphorylation and acetylation status, nevertheless requires a functional
p53
cellular status to increase the sensitivity of tumor cells to genotoxins. Genes regulated by
p53
encode proapoptotic proteins, such as PUMA, and cell cycle control proteins, such as p21. The ability of
TAT
-RasGAP(317-326) to sensitize cancer cells was found to require PUMA but not p21.
TAT
-RasGAP(317-326) did not affect PUMA levels, however, but increased genotoxin-induced mitochondrial depolarization and caspase-3 activation. These results indicate that
TAT
-RasGAP(317-326) sensitizes tumor cells by activating signals that intersect with the
p53
pathway downstream of, or at the level of, proapoptotic p53 target gene products to increase the activation of the mitochondrial death pathway.
...
PMID:TAT-RasGAP317-326 requires p53 and PUMA to sensitize tumor cells to genotoxins. 1751 Mar 15
It is known that
p53
alterations are commonly found in tumour cells. Another marker of tumorigenesis is FAK (focal adhesion kinase), a non-receptor kinase that is overexpressed in many types of tumours. Previously we determined that the N-terminal domain of FAK physically interacted with the N-terminal domain of
p53
. In the present study, using phage display, sitedirected mutagenesis, pulldown and immunoprecipitation assays we localized the site of FAK binding to a 7-amino-acid region(amino acids 65-71) in the N-terminal proline-rich domain of human
p53
. Mutation of the binding site in
p53
reversed the suppressive effect of FAK on
p53
-mediated transactivation ofp21, BAX (Bcl-2-associated X protein) and Mdm2 (murine double minute 2) promoters. In addition, to functionally test this
p53
site, we conjugated
p53
peptides [wild-type (containing the wild-type binding site) and mutant (with a mutated 7-aminoacid binding site)] to a
TAT
peptide sequence to penetrate the cells, and demonstrated that the wild-type
p53
peptide disrupted binding of FAK and
p53
proteins and significantly inhibited cell viability of HCT116 p53+/+ cells compared with the control mutant peptide and HCT116
p53
-/- cells. Furthermore, the
TAT
-
p53
peptide decreased the viability of MCF-7 cells, whereas the mutant peptide did not cause this effect. Normal fibroblast p53+/+ and
p53
-/- MEF (murine embryonic fibroblast) cells and breast MCF10A cells were not sensitive to
p53
peptide. Thus, for the first time, we have identified the binding site of the
p53
andFAK interaction and have demonstrated that mutating this site and targeting the site with peptides affects
p53
functioning and viability in the cells.
...
PMID:The 7-amino-acid site in the proline-rich region of the N-terminal domain of p53 is involved in the interaction with FAK and is critical for p53 functioning. 1821 42
We tested the activity of a
p53
carboxy-terminal peptide containing the PARC-interacting region in cancer cells with wild type cytoplasmic
p53
. Peptide delivery was achieved by fusing it to the
TAT
transduction domain (
TAT
-
p53
-C-ter peptide). In a two-hybrid assay, the tetramerization domain (TD) of
p53
was necessary and sufficient to bind PARC. The
TAT
-
p53
-C-ter peptide disrupted the PARC-
p53
complex. Peptide treatment caused
p53
nuclear relocation,
p53
-dependent changes in gene expression and enhancement of etoposide-induced apoptosis. These studies suggest that PARC-interacting peptides are promising candidates for the enhancement of
p53
-dependent apoptosis in tumors with wt cytoplasmic
p53
.
...
PMID:Activation of p53-dependent responses in tumor cells treated with a PARC-interacting peptide. 1823 Mar 39
The
p53 protein
family is involved in the control of an intricate network of genes implicated in cell cycle, through to germ line integrity and development. Although the role of
p53
is well-established, the intrinsic nature of its homologue p73 has yet to be fully elucidated. Here, the biochemical characterization and homology-based modeling of the p73 protein is presented and the implications for its function(s) examined. The DNA binding domains (DBDs) of
p53
, p63, and p73 bind to the specific target site of a 30-mer gadd45 dsDNA, as tested by EMSA. The monomeric DBDs bind cooperatively forming tetrameric complexes. However, a larger construct consisting of p73 DBD plus
TET
domain (p73 CT) and the corresponding
p53
DBD plus
TET
domain (
p53
CT) bind gadd45 differently than the respective DBDs. Significantly, p73 DBD exhibited enhanced thermodynamic stability relative to the
p53
DBD but not compared to p63 DBD as shown by DSC, CD, and equilibrium unfolding. The p73 CT is less stable than p73 DBD. The modeling data show distinct electrostatic surfaces of p73 and
p53
dimers when bound to DNA. Specifically, the p73 surface is less complementary for DNA binding, which may account for the differences in affinity and specificity for
p53
REs. These stability and DNA binding data for p73 in vitro enhance and complement our understanding of the role of the p73 protein in vivo and could be exploited in designing strategies for cancer therapy in places where
p53
is mutated.
...
PMID:The p73 DNA binding domain displays enhanced stability relative to its homologue, the tumor suppressor p53, and exhibits cooperative DNA binding. 1826 Jun 40
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