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Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (
p53
)
77,613
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
FKHRL1 (FOXO3a) and
p53
are two potent stress-response regulators. Here we show that these two transcription factors exhibit "crosstalk" in vivo. In response to DNA damage,
p53
activation led to FKHRL1 phosphorylation and subcellular localization change, which resulted in inhibition of FKHRL1 transcription activity.
AKT
was dispensable for
p53
-dependent suppression of FKHRL1. By contrast, serum- and glucocorticoid-inducible kinase 1 (SGK1) was significantly induced in a
p53
-dependent manner after DNA damage, and this induction was through extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2-mediated posttranslational regulation. Furthermore, inhibition of SGK1 expression by a small interfering RNA knockdown experiment significantly decreased FKHRL1 phosphorylation in response to DNA damage. Taken together, our observations reveal previously unrecognized crosstalk between
p53
and FKHRL1. Moreover, our findings suggest a new pathway for understanding aging and the age dependency of human diseases governed by these two transcription factors.
...
PMID:p53-dependent inhibition of FKHRL1 in response to DNA damage through protein kinase SGK1. 1538 58
Methionine deprivation imposes a metabolic stress, termed methionine stress, that inhibits mitosis and induces cell cycle arrest and apoptosis. The methionine-dependent central nervous system tumor cell lines DAOY (medulloblastoma), SWB61 (anaplastic oligodendroglioma), SWB40 (anaplastic astrocytoma), and SWB39 (glioblastoma multiforme) were compared with methionine-stress resistant SWB77 (glioblastoma multiforme). The cDNA-oligoarray analysis and reverse transcription-PCR verification indicated common changes in gene expression in methionine-dependent cell lines to include up-regulation/induction of cyclin D1, mitotic arrest deficient (MAD)1, p21, growth arrest and DNA-damage-inducible (GADD)45 alpha, GADD45 gamma, GADD34, breast cancer (BRCA)1, 14-3-3sigma, B-cell CLL/lymphoma (BCL)1, transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta, TGF-beta-induced early response (TIEG), SMAD5, SMAD7, SMAD2, insulin-like growth factor binding protein (IGFBP7), IGF-R2, vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL), TNF-alpha converting enzyme (TACE), TRAIL receptor (TRAIL-R)2, TNFR-related death receptor (DR)6, TRAF interacting protein (I-TRAF), IL-6, MDA7, IL-1B convertase (ICE)-gamma, delta and epsilon, IRF1, IRF5, IRF7, interferon (IFN)-gamma and receptor components, ISG15, p65-NF-kappaB, JUN-B, positive cofactor (PC)4, C/ERB-beta, inositol triphosphate receptor I, and methionine adenosyltransferase II. On the other hand, cyclins A1, A2, B1 and B2, cell division cycle (CDC)2 and its kinase, CDC25 A and B, budding uninhibited by benzimidazoles (BUB)1 and 3, MAD2, CDC28 protein kinase (CKS)1 and 2, neuroepithelial cell transforming gene (NET)1, activator of S-phase kinase (ASK), CDC14B phosphatase, BCL2, TGF-beta activated kinase (TAK)1, TAB1, c-FOS, DNA topoisomerase II, DNA polymerase alpha, dihydrofolate reductase, thymidine kinase, stathmin, and MAP4 were down-regulated. In the methionine stress-resistant SWB77, only 20% of the above genes were affected, and then only to a lesser extent. In addition, some of the changes observed in SWB77 were opposite to those seen in methionine-dependent tumors, including expression of p21, TRAIL-R2, and TIEG. Despite similarities, differences between methionine-dependent tumors were substantial, especially in regard to regulation of cytokine expression. Western blot analysis confirmed that methionine stress caused the following: (a) a marked increase of GADD45alpha and gamma in the wt-
p53
cell lines SWB61 and 40; (b) an increase in GADD34 and p21 protein in all of the methionine-dependent lines; and (c) the induction of MDA7 and phospho-p38 in DAOY and SWB39, consistent with marked transcriptional activation of the former under methionine stress. It was additionally shown that methionine stress down-regulated the highly active phosphatidylinositol 3'-kinase pathway by reducing
AKT
phosphorylation, especially in DAOY and SWB77, and also reduced the levels of retinoblastoma (Rb) and pRb (P-ser780, P-ser795, and P-ser807/811), resulting in a shift in favor of unphosphorylated species in all of the methionine-dependent lines. Immunohistochemical analysis showed marked inhibition of nuclear translocation of nuclear factor kappaB under methionine stress in methionine-dependent lines. In this study we show for the first time that methionine stress mobilizes several defined cell cycle checkpoints and proapoptotic pathways while coordinately inhibiting prosurvival mechanisms in central nervous system tumors. It is clear that methionine stress-induced cytotoxicity is not restricted by the
p53
mutational status.
...
PMID:Modulation of gene expression in human central nervous system tumors under methionine deprivation-induced stress. 1549 78
MDM2 is an E3 ubiquitin ligase which mediates ubiquitylation and proteasome-dependent degradation of the
p53 tumor suppressor protein
. Phosphorylation of MDM2 by the protein kinase
AKT
is thought to regulate MDM2 function in response to survival signals, but there has been uncertainty concerning the identity of the sites phosphorylated by
AKT
. In the present study, we identify Ser-166, a site previously reported as an
AKT
target, and Ser-188, a novel site which is the major site of phosphorylation of MDM2 by
AKT
in vitro. Analysis of MDM2 in cultured cells confirms that Ser-166 and Ser-188 are phosphorylated by
AKT
in a physiological context.
...
PMID:A novel site of AKT-mediated phosphorylation in the human MDM2 onco-protein. 1552 98
Oncogenic transformation leads to cell cycle aberration and apoptosis dysregulation. Targeting cell cycle and apoptosis pathways has emerged as an attractive approach for the treatment of cancer. The activity of cdks can be modulated by targeting these kinases with small molecules that bind to the ATP binding pocket of cdks, or by altering the composition of the cdk/endogenous cdk inhibitor complexes by different mechanisms. Apoptosis can be modulated by targeting pro-apoptotic or pro-survival pathways. Several proteins relevant to oncogenic and proliferative processes, such as
p53
, bcl-2,
AKT
, ras and epidermal growth factor receptor, are also important in blocking apoptosis. Several small molecules that modulate cell cycle control and apoptosis have been approved recently and many will be approved in the near future. Several challenges remain, including finding ways of targeting these agents specifically to tumors (sparing normal cells), and the development of rationales for combining these new agents with standard therapies and for prioritizing the development of an overwhelming number of novel small molecules targeting cell cycle and apoptosis. Novel technologies such as genomics and proteomics will be instrumental in designing combinatorial regimens tailored to patients on the basis of the genetic makeup of tumors. Irrespective of all shortcomings, the future of modulation of apoptosis and cell cycle machinery for oncology therapy is quite exciting.
...
PMID:Targeting cell cycle and apoptosis for the treatment of human malignancies. 1553 Jul 79
According to the author's theory of gene silencing, the key process in aging involves reduced expression of a number of genes. Silencing of genes has a complex mechanism, which involves methylation of DNA, histone modification and chromatin remodeling. In addition to deacetylation of the histones and methylation of DNA, recently described RNAi mechanism could initiate formation of silenced chromatin. Hypermethylation of the promoter will silence the gene. Genome-wide hypomethylation will induce genomic instability, amplification of oncogenes and also silencing of the genes through RNAi mechanism. Studies by different groups, conducted in yeast, worms, flies and mice, confirmed substantial changes in gene expression in aging. Among them, the most important was silencing of tumor suppressors and other genes involved in the control of cell cycle, apoptosis, detoxification, and cholesterol metabolism. There was also increased expression of the smaller group of oncogenes and other genes which are associated with typical diseases of old age. Caloric restriction normalizes expression of a substantial percentage of these genes. Animal studies confirmed importance of caloric restriction, which decreases signaling through the IGF-1/
AKT
pathway and expression of gene
p53
. These studies, however, cannot be directly applied to human aging. It is proposed that age management therapy should attempt to normalize gene expression in the older population to the level typical for young adults. This would require activation of silenced genes and normalization of overexpressed genes. Caloric restriction and exercise are helpful in decreasing the activity of important oncogenes and activation of silenced tumor suppressors, and may have a positive impact, not only on aging, but also on prevention of cancer. Dietary supplements containing phytochemicals should normalize increased expression of oncogenes. Examples are: genistein and EGCG, which effect signaling through the IGF-1/
AKT
pathway and resveratrol and limonen, which do so through the RAS pathway. A group of amino acid derivatives and organic acids of animal and human origin should activate silenced tumor suppressor genes (Aminocare A10, Aminocare Extra). Among them 3-phenylacetylamino-2, 6-piperidinedione intercalates specifically with DNA and protects sequences of tumor suppressor genes, which are vulnerable to the effects of carcinogens. Phenylacetate activates
p53
and p21 through inhibition of methyltransferase and farnesylation of the RAS protein. Phenylbutyrate activates tumor suppressor genes through inhibition of histone deacetylation. Phenylacetylglutamine decreases genomic instability and expression of oncogenes and promotes apoptosis. The application of DNA microarray techniques to human studies should provide more information about differences in gene expression in different age groups and help design more effective age management regimens.
...
PMID:Aging: gene silencing or gene activation? 1553 42
The expression of selected gene products involved in cell differentiation and cell growth and genetic polymorphism of detoxifying genes was examined in 105 surgically resected nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients, and the relationship of these factors was correlated with cigarette smoking and patient survival. Genotyping of peripheral blood lymphocytes from 87 patients was performed for CYP2E1, GSTM1, GSTT1, mEH, and MPO detoxifying genes using polymerase chain reaction. Formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue was immunostained with antibodies to
p53
, p27, phospho-
AKT
, and bcl-2 using the avidin-biotin-peroxidase method and tissue microarray technique. Tumors were assigned a positive or negative score based on more than 10% of tumor cells staining positive with the antibody. The subtypes of NSCLC included 48 adenocarcinomas, 47 squamous cell carcinomas, and 10 large cell undifferentiated carcinomas. A total of 54 tumors were pathologic stage I, 23 were stage II, and 26 were stage III. All subjects smoked (range, 10-175 pack-years; mean, 60 pack-years). The mean overall survival was 112 weeks (median, 129 weeks). Patients with
p53
-positive tumors had significantly fewer pack-years of smoking (52 pack-years vs 72 pack-years; P = 0.021), smoked fewer years (34 years vs 40 years; P = 0.018), and had significantly better survival compared with those with
p53
-negative tumors (P = 0.045). When smoking history was further analyzed, the authors found that
p53
expression was associated with the number of years smoked and not the number of packs smoked per day. Patients with squamous cell carcinoma had smoked longer compared with those with adenocarcinoma (P = 0.011). Significant association was seen between the CYP2E1 wild-type allele and better survival (P = 0.016). Patients with stage I tumors had better survival compared with stages II and III (P = 0.032). No association was found between survival and tumor type; tumor differentiation; expression of phospho-
AKT
, p27, and bcl-2; and polymorphic metabolizing genes other than CYP2E1. The significant association of long duration of smoking (>40 years) with loss of
p53
expression and poor survival suggests inactivation of the protective
p53
pathway in those who had a history of more than 40 years of smoking.
...
PMID:CYP2E1 polymorphism, cigarette smoking, p53 expression, and survival in non-small cell lung cancer: a long term follow-up study. 1553 30
Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is one of the most commonly diagnosed leukemias managed by practicing hematologists. For many years patients with CLL have been viewed as similar, with a long natural history and only marginally effective therapies that rarely yielded complete responses. Recently, several important observations related to the biologic significance of V(H) mutational status and associated ZAP-70 overexpression, disrupted
p53
function, and chromosomal aberrations have led to the ability to identify patients at high risk for early disease progression and inferior survival. Concurrent with these investigations, several treatments including the nucleoside analogues, monoclonal antibodies rituximab and alemtuzumab have been introduced. Combination of these therapies in clinical trials has led to high complete and overall response rates when applied as initial therapy for symptomatic CLL. Thus, the complexity of initial risk stratification of CLL and treatment has increased significantly. Furthermore, when these initial therapies do not work, approach of the CLL patient with fludarabine-refractory disease can be quite challenging. This session will describe the natural history of a CLL patient with emphasis on important decision junctures at different time points in the disease. In Section I, Dr. Stephan Stilgenbauer focuses on the discussion that occurs with CLL patients at their initial evaluation. This includes a review of the diagnostic criteria for CLL and prognostic factors utilized to predict the natural history of the disease. The later discussion of risk stratification focuses on molecular and genomic aberrations that predict rapid progression, poor response to therapy, and inferior survival. Ongoing and future efforts examining early intervention strategies in high risk CLL are reviewed. In Section II, Drs. Ian Flinn and Jesus G. Berdeja focus on the discussion of CLL patients when symptomatic disease has developed. This includes an updated review of monotherapy trials with nucleoside analogs and recent trials that have combined these with monoclonal antibodies and/or alternative chemotherapy agents. Appropriate application of more aggressive therapies such as autologous and allogeneic immunotherapy and less aggressive treatments for appropriate CLL patient candidates are discussed. In Section III, Dr. John Byrd focuses on the discussion that occurs with CLL patients whose disease is refractory to fludarabine. The application of genetic risk stratification in choosing therapy for this subset of patients is reviewed. Available data with conventional combination based therapies and monoclonal antibodies are discussed. Finally, alternative promising investigational therapies including new antibodies, kinase inhibitors (CDK, PDK1/
AKT
, PKC) and alternative targeted therapies (DNA methyltransferase inhibitors, histone deacetylase inhibitors, etc.) are reviewed with an emphasis on the most promising agents for this patient population.
...
PMID:Chronic lymphocytic leukemia. 1556 82
Protein kinase B
, also known as Akt, is a serine/threonine kinase and plays a critical role in the modulation of cell development, growth, and survival. Interestingly, Akt is ubiquitously expressed throughout the body, but its expression in the nervous system is substantially up-regulated during cellular stress, suggesting a more expansive role for Akt in the nervous system that may involve cellular protection. In this regard, a body of recent work has identified a robust capacity for Akt and its downstream substrates to foster both neuronal and vascular survival during apoptotic injury. Cell survival by Akt is driven by the modulation of both intrinsic cellular pathways that oversee genomic DNA integrity and extrinsic mechanisms that control inflammatory microglial activation. A series of distinct pathways are regulated by Akt that include the Forkhead family of transcription factors, GSK-3 beta, beta-catenin, c-Jun, CREB, Bad, IKK, and
p53
. Culminating below these substrates of Akt are the control of caspase mediated pathways that promote genomic integrity as well as prevent inflammatory cell demise. With further levels of progress in defining the cellular role of Akt, the attractiveness of Akt as a vital and broad cytoprotectant for both neuronal and vascular cell populations should continue to escalate.
...
PMID:Activating Akt and the brain's resources to drive cellular survival and prevent inflammatory injury. 1557 47
The angiogenic inducer CYR61 is differentially overexpressed in breast cancer cells exhibiting high levels of Heregulin (HRG), a growth factor closely associated with a metastatic breast cancer phenotype. Here, we examined whether CYR61, independently of HRG, actively regulates breast cancer cell survival and chemosensitivity, and the pathways involved. Forced expression of CYR61 in HRG-negative MCF-7 cells notably upregulated the expression of its own integrin receptor alphavbeta3 (>200 times). Small peptidomimetic alphavbeta3 integrin antagonists dramatically decreased cell viability of CYR61-overexpressing MCF-7 cells, whereas control MCF-7/V remained insensitive. Mechanistically, functional blockade of alphavbeta3 specifically abolished CYR6-induced hyperactivation of ERK1/ERK2 MAPK, whereas the activation status of
AKT
did not decrease. Moreover, CYR61 overexpression rendered MCF-7 cells significantly resistant (>10-fold) to Taxol-induced cytotoxicity. Remarkably, alphavbeta3 inhibition converted the CYR61-induced Taxol-resistant phenotype into a hypersensitive one. Thus, the augmentation of Taxol-induced apoptotic cell death in the presence of alphavbeta3 antagonists demonstrated a strong synergism as verified by the terminal transferase-mediated dUTP nick-end labeling (TUNEL) assay and by flow cytometric analysis for DNA content. Indeed, functional blockade of alphavbeta3, similarly to the pharmacological MAPK inhibitor U0126, synergistically increased both the proportion of CYR61-overexpressing breast cancer cells in the G2 phase of the cell cycle and the appearance of sub-G1 hypodiploid (apoptotic) cells caused by Taxol. Strikingly, CYR61 overexpression impaired the accumulation of wild-type
p53
following Taxol exposure, while inhibition of alphavbeta3 or ERK1/ERK2 MAPK signalings completely restored Taxol-induced upregulation of
p53
. Moreover, antisense downregulation of CYR61 expression abolished the anchorage-independent growth of breast cancer cells engineered to overexpress HRG, and significantly increased their sensitivity to Taxol. Our data provide evidence that CYR61 is sufficient to promote breast cancer cell proliferation, cell survival, and Taxol resistance through a alphavbeta3-activated ERK1/ERK2 MAPK signaling. The identification of a 'CYR61-alphavbeta3 autocrine loop' in the epithelial compartment of breast carcinoma strongly suggests that targeting alphavbeta3 may simultaneously prevent breast cancer angiogenesis, growth, and chemoresistance.
...
PMID:A novel CYR61-triggered 'CYR61-alphavbeta3 integrin loop' regulates breast cancer cell survival and chemosensitivity through activation of ERK1/ERK2 MAPK signaling pathway. 1559 21
The novel synthetic retinoid 6-[3-(1-adamantyl)-4-hydroxyphenyl]-2-naphthalene carboxylic acid (CD437) induces growth arrest and apoptosis in various tumor cell lines including non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) cells. CD437 binds retinoic acid receptor gamma (RARgamma) selectively, and can enhance receptor-dependent transcriptional activation of various genes. However, some of the effects of this retinoid on cell growth inhibition and apoptosis appear to be receptor-independent. To gain a better understanding of the mechanism by which CD437 exerts its effects, we employed a high throughput western blotting method (PowerBlottrade mark) using 760 monoclonal antibodies to compare the levels of their target cellular signaling proteins in untreated and CD437-treated NSCLC H460 cells. CD437 (1 microM, 24 h) increased the levels of 70 proteins and decreased the levels of 28 proteins. These proteins play a role in fundamental cellular processes including: DNA synthesis and repair, transcription and DNA-binding, cell cycle, apoptosis, cytoskeleton assembly, cell adhesion, endocytosis, growth and signal transduction. Some proteins identified by this approach have been implicated previously in the effect of CD437 (e.g.,
p53
, Bax, cyclin B, CDK2). Additionally we identified proteins that are novel candidates for mediating the cellular responses to CD437 (e.g., FAF1, Bid, caspase 8, cdk1, KAP, NDR, RBBP, 53BP2, Grb2, PLCgamma1, p70s6k, PP2Cdelta, PKBalpha/
AKT
, PDK1, and several DNA repair enzymes).
...
PMID:Identification of protein modulation by the synthetic retinoid CD437 in lung carcinoma cells using high throughput immunoblotting. 1564 34
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