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Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (
p53
)
77,613
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Down syndrome is caused by over-expression of genes located within a segment of chromosome 21, termed the Down locus. Down syndrome is associated with developmental abnormalities of the central nervous system that result in mental retardation and age-dependent Alzheimer-type neurodegeneration. Some of the neurodegenerative lesions, including A beta amyloid deposition, apoptotic cell death, and aberrant dendritic arborization, are in part due to constitutively increased expression of genes that encode the amyloid precursor protein, superoxide dismutase I, and S100-beta, and located within the Down locus. However, neurodegeneration in Down syndrome is also associated with aberrant expression of genes that are not linked to the Down locus, including the growth associated protein, GAP-43,
nitric oxide synthase 3
, neuronal thread protein, and pro-apoptosis genes such as
p53
, Bax, and interleukin-1 beta-converting enzyme. Increased expression of these non-Down locus genes correlates with proliferation of dystrophic neurites and apoptotic cell death, two important correlates of cognitive impairment in Alzheimer's disease. This article reviews the functional importance of abnormal gene expression in relation to Alzheimer-type neurodegeneration in brains of individuals with Down syndrome.
...
PMID:Molecular abnormalities of the brain in Down syndrome: relevance to Alzheimer's neurodegeneration. 1066 65
There is growing evidence that nitric oxide (NO) has an important role in tumor growth. However, information on the expression of NO synthase (NOS) in colorectal cancers is scanty. We therefore investigated the distribution and expression of NOS in human colorectal cancers. The expression of three types of NOS, inducible (iNOS), endothelial (
eNOS
) and neuronal (nNOS), was examined by immunohistochemistry in 25 cases of colorectal cancer. The expression of iNOS was also investigated at the mRNA level using the reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) in 6 cases. Correlations were made between iNOS expression and the histopathological findings. Immunoreactive iNOS was detected in the tumor cells in 22 cases (88%) with diffuse cytoplasmic reactions. Expression of iNOS-mRNA detected by RT-PCR in three tumor tissues was over five-fold that in normal mucosa. Intensified immunoreactivity of iNOS was associated with vascular invasion. iNOS expression did not correlate with pathological staging, tumor size, lymph node metastasis,
p53
expression or tumor vessel density. Immunoreactive
eNOS
stained more strongly in the endothelial cells of microvessels within and around the tumor than in the areas remote from the tumor. There is enhanced expression of iNOS and
eNOS
in human colorectal cancers, which may correlate with tumor growth and vascular invasion.
...
PMID:Increased in situ expression of nitric oxide synthase in human colorectal cancer. 1075 99
Alzheimer's disease (AD) has heterogeneous pathology, in part due to the large subset of cases (AD+CVD) with superimposed vascular lesions that are sufficient in number and distribution to accelerate the clinical course of dementia. Brains with AD+CVD have lower densities of neurofibrillary tangles and A beta-amyloid diffuse plaques, and increased numbers of cerebral vessels exhibiting
p53
-associated apoptosis relative to brains with uncomplicated AD. AD and AD+CVD both exhibit altered expression of the
nitric oxide synthase 3
(NOS-III) gene; however, in AD+CVD, reduced NOS-III expression in cerebral vessels is associated with an increased frequency of vascular lesions, vascular smooth muscle cell apoptosis, and A beta-amyloid plaques. In contrast, experimental and spontaneous focal acute and subacute cerebral infarcts are associated with increased NOS-III expression in perifocal neurons, glial cells, cerebrovascular smooth muscle and endothelial cells, and diffuse A beta-amyloid plaque formation. This suggests that ischemic injury and oxidative stress can precipitate NOS-III-mediated cell loss and neurodegeneration. A role for aging-associated impaired mitochondrial function as a contributing factor in AD and CVD is suggested by the reduced levels of mitochondrial protein observed in AD and AD+CVD cortical neurons and vascular smooth muscle and endothelial cells. The aggregate findings suggest that cell loss and neurodegeneration may be mediated by somewhat distinct but overlapping mechanisms in AD and AD+CVD.
...
PMID:Aberrant expression of nitric oxide synthase III in Alzheimer's disease: relevance to cerebral vasculopathy and neurodegeneration. 1086 16
Diabetic vasculopathy is central to the development of diverse cardiovascular, renal, retinal, and neurological complications of diabetes. We previously demonstrated that growth of endothelial cells on glycated extracellular matrix proteins (collagen and matrigel) results in a significant decrease in cell proliferation. In the present study, we show that early-passage human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) grown on glycated collagen (GC) express hallmarks of premature cell senescence, ie, increase in the proportion of cells expressing senescence-associated beta-galactosidase activity, apoptotic rate, and
p53
and p14(AFR) expression, but in contrast to replicative senescence, display neither attrition of telomeres nor decrease in telomerase activity. An increased frequency of prematurely senescent cells was similarly observed in vivo in aortae of young Zucker diabetic rats, compared with lean controls. NO production by HUVECs grown on GC was decreased, despite a 3-fold increase in
eNOS
expression and was associated with the increased nitrotyrosine-modified proteins. Development of premature senescence of HUVECs on GC could be prevented and reversed by treatments with the peroxynitrite scavenger, ebselen,
eNOS
intermediate N(omega)-hydroxy-L-arginine (NOHA), or superoxide dismutase mimetic Mn-TBAP. Concomitant with the reversal of senescence, ebselen, and NOHA each restored NO production to levels observed with HUVECs grown on unmodified collagen. Our findings indicate that diabetes mellitus in vivo and GC exposure in vitro elicit premature senescence of the vascular endothelium, a process with distinct pathogenetic mechanisms. Premature senescence of the vascular endothelium is hypothesized to be an important contributor to diabetic vasculopathy and a consequence of reduced NO availability, peroxynitrite, and/or superoxide excess.
...
PMID:Glycated collagen I induces premature senescence-like phenotypic changes in endothelial cells. 1208 67
Cell loss and neuritic/cytoskeletal lesions represent two of the major categories of dementia-associated structural abnormalities in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Cell loss is ultimately mediated by apoptosis and mitochondrial DNA damage due to enhanced sensitivity to oxidative stress, but the mechanism responsible for the neuritic/cytoskeletal lesions including the abnormal proliferation of cortical neurites is not known. This study examines the potential role of oxygen free radical injury as a factor contributing to both cell death and neuritic sprouting cascades in AD. PNET2 human neuronal cells were treated with H2O2 (8 micro M to 88 micro M) for 24 hours and then analyzed for viability, DNA damage, and pro-apoptosis, survival, and sprouting gene expression and signaling. H2O2-treatment resulted in dose-dependent increases in cell death due to genomic and mitochondrial DNA damage associated with increased levels of 8-OHdG and the
p53
and CD95 pro-apoptosis genes, reduced levels of the Bcl-2 survival gene, activation of JNK and p38 stress kinases, and inhibition of PI3 kinase survival signaling. However, the H2O2-treated cells also manifested increased expression of growth and sprouting molecules, including GAP-43,
nitric oxide synthase 3
, neuronal thread protein (NTP; approximately 17 kD and approximately 21 kD forms), proliferating cell nuclear antigen, and phospho-Erk MAPK, and normal levels of the AD-associated approximately 41 kD NTP species, cyclin dependent kinase 5 (cdk-5), and phospho-tau. In addition, the H2O2-treated cells had increased levels of p25, the catalytically active and stable cleavage product of p35, which regulates cdk-5 activity. Previous studies demonstrated p25 accumulation in AD brains and p25-induced hyperphosphorylation of tau and neuronal apoptosis. The findings herein suggest that oxygen free radical injury in human CNS neuronal cells is sufficient to cause some but not all of the pro-death and pro-sprouting molecular abnormalities that occur in AD.
...
PMID:Oxygen free radical injury is sufficient to cause some Alzheimer-type molecular abnormalities in human CNS neuronal cells. 1221 88
Nitric oxide (NO) is a pleiotropic regulator, critical to numerous biological processes, including vasodilatation, neurotransmission and macrophage-mediated immunity. The family of nitric oxide synthases (NOS) comprises inducible NOS (iNOS), endothelia (
eNOS
), and neuronal NOS (nNOS). Interestingly, various studies have shown that all three isoforms can be involved in promoting or inhibiting the etiology of cancer. NOS activity has been detected in tumour cells of various histogenetic origins and has been associated with tumour grade, proliferation rate and expression of important signaling components associated with cancer development such as the oestrogen receptor. It appears that high levels of NOS expression (for example, generated by activated macrophages) may be cytostatic or cytotoxic for tumor cells, whereas low level activity can have the opposite effect and promote tumour growth. Paradoxically therefore, NO (and related reactive nitrogen species) may have both genotoxic and angiogenic properties. Increased NO-generation in a cell may select mutant p53 cells and contribute to tumour angiogenesis by upregulating VEGF. In addition, NO may modulate tumour DNA repair mechanisms by upregulating
p53
, poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) and the DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PK). An understanding at the molecular level of the role of NO in cancer will have profound therapeutic implications for the diagnosis and treatment of disease.
...
PMID:The role of nitric oxide in cancer. 1252 89
Dementia in Alzheimer's disease (AD) is correlated with cell loss that is mediated by apoptosis, mitochondrial (Mt) dysfunction, and possibly necrosis. Previous studies demonstrated increased expression of the
nitric oxide synthase 3
(
NOS3
) gene in degenerating neurons of AD brains. For investigating the role of
NOS3
overexpression as a mediator of neuronal loss, human PNET2 central nervous system-derived neuronal cells were infected with recombinant adenovirus vectors that expressed either human
NOS3
or green fluorescent protein cDNA under the control of a CMV promoter.
NOS3
overexpression resulted in apoptosis accompanied by increased levels of
p53
, p21/Waf1, Bax, and CD95. In addition,
NOS3
overexpression impaired neuronal Mt function as demonstrated by the reduced levels of 3-[4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl]-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide and nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (reduced form)-tetrazolium reductase activities and MitoTracker Red fluorescence. These adverse effects of
NOS3
were associated with increased cellular levels of reactive oxygen species and impaired membrane integrity and were not produced in cells that were transfected with a cDNA encoding catalytically inactive
NOS3
. Importantly, modest elevations in
NOS3
expression, achieved by infection with low multiplicities of adenovirus-
NOS3
infection, did not cause apoptosis but rendered the cells more sensitive to oxidative injury by H(2)O(2) or diethyldithiocarbamate. In contrast, treatment with NO donors did not enhance neuronal sensitivity to oxidative injury. These results suggest that
NOS3
-induced neuronal death is mediated by Mt dysfunction, oxidative injury, and impaired membrane integrity, rather than by NO production, and that neuroprotection from these adverse effects of
NOS3
may be achieved by modulating intracellular levels of oxidative stress.
...
PMID:Nitric oxide synthase-3 overexpression causes apoptosis and impairs neuronal mitochondrial function: relevance to Alzheimer's-type neurodegeneration. 1259 42
The gene expressions for macrophage chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1), interleukin (IL)-1 beta, IL-2 and
p53
were examined by semi-quantitative RT-PCR in corpora lutea (CL) of rabbits during spontaneous luteolysis at days 13, 15, 18 and 22 of pseudopregnancy. In the same luteal tissue, total activity of nitric oxide (NO) synthase (NOS) and genes for both endothelial (
eNOS
) and inducible (iNOS) isoforms were also analysed. From day 13 to 15, MCP-1 and IL-1 beta mRNA levels rose (P < or = 0.01) almost 2-fold, and the transcript for
p53
almost 8-fold, but then all dropped (P < or = 0.05) from day 18 onward. IL-2 mRNA abundance was higher (P < or = 0.01) on day 13 and then gradually declined. During luteolysis,
eNOS
mRNA decreased 40% (P < or = 0.05) by day 15, but thereafter remained unchanged, while iNOS mRNA was barely detectable and did not show any clear age-related pattern throughout the late luteal stages. Total NOS activity progressively increased (P < or = 0.01) from day 13 to 18 of pseudopregnancy and then dropped to the lowest (P < or = 0.01) levels on day 22. Luteal progesterone content also declined during CL regression from 411 to 17 pg/mg found on days 13 and 22 respectively, in parallel with the decrease in blood progesterone concentrations. These data further support a physiological role of NO as modulator of luteal demise in rabbits. Locally, luteal cytokines may be involved in the up-regulation of NOS activity, while downstream NO may inhibit steroroidogenesis and induce expression of
p53
gene after removal of the protective action of progesterone.
...
PMID:Expression patterns of cytokines, p53 and nitric oxide synthase isoenzymes in corpora lutea of pseudopregnant rabbits during spontaneous luteolysis. 1505 89
Apoptosis has been shown to be an important regulator of endometrial function during the menstrual cycle and implantation. Recently, some possible implantation defects were identified in patients with unexplained infertility. In this study, we investigated the role of spontaneous apoptosis, which is regulated by death regulatory genes, such as Bcl-2, Bax,
p53
, and isoenzymes of nitric oxide synthases;
eNOS
and iNOS during the implantation window in women with unexplained infertility. Endometrial samples were evaluated from fertile (n=15) and unexplained-infertile women (n=15) during post-ovulatory 7th or 8th day of their menstrual cycles. Apoptotic cells were detected using the dUTP nick-end labelling assay and Bcl-2, Bax,
p53
, iNOS and
eNOS
were assessed immunohistochemically. Reduced apoptotic cells, weak immunoreactivity of
p53
and strong immunoreactivity of Bcl-2 were observed in the unexplained-infertile group compared with the fertile group (p<0.001). Bax intensity was similar in both groups. While weak iNOS immunoreactivity was detected in both groups, moderately increased
eNOS
immunoreactivity was observed in infertile cases. Spontaneous apoptosis is reduced in the endometrium of unexplained-infertile women, and is associated with the changed Bcl-2:Bax ratio. This finding may be a contributing factor to defective implantation causing infertility in this group of patients.
...
PMID:Changed Bcl:Bax ratio in endometrium of patients with unexplained infertility. 1613 38
Adrenomedullin 2 (ADM2) is a recently discovered member of the calcitonin/calcitonin gene-related peptide family with an exon-intron structure similar to that of ADM. The mRNA of ADM2 is expressed in several tissues, including uterus and ovary. The present study was designed to assess the effects of ADM2 antagonist (ADM2(17-47)) infusion to pregnant rats on fetal and placental growth. On Day 15 of gestation, rats were implanted s.c. with osmotic minipumps delivering 50 and 200 mug per rat per day of ADM2(17-47) and were killed on Gestational Day 18. In ADM2(17-47)-treated rats, placental weights were significantly inhibited in a dose-related manner, with an 11% reduction in the group of rats receiving 200 microg/day, whereas the fetal weights were reduced by 17% without significant differences between the two doses. 2 In ADM2(17-47)-infused rats, increased apoptosis was demonstrated in the labyrinth and junctional zones of rat placenta by the TUNEL method compared with the control animals. Western blot analysis demonstrated that in ADM2(17-47)-treated rats Bcl-2, mitochondrial cytochrome c, and active caspase-9 and caspase-3 were significantly increased compared with the controls. No significant treatment-associated changes were observed in Bax, Bid,
p53
, and caspase-8 and caspase-10 proteins in the treated placentas. In addition, infusion of ADM2(17-47) caused a significant decline in the transcripts of
nitric oxide synthase 3
(
NOS3
) and NOS2. These findings show that ADM2(17-47) infusion in rats during midpregnancy cause fetoplacental growth restriction through the activation of mitochondrial apoptotic pathways. This study demonstrates for the first time (to our knowledge) a potential role for ADM2 in placental functions during pregnancy.
...
PMID:Adrenomedullin 2 antagonist infusion to rats during midgestation causes fetoplacental growth restriction through apoptosis. 1697 58
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