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)

Two prostate carcinoma cell lines, DU-145 and PC-3, were examined for abnormalities in the retinoblastoma (Rb) and the p53 putative tumor suppressor genes. We found an abnormal Rb gene product in DU-145 using Western blot analysis. Polymerase chain reaction amplification followed by direct DNA sequencing demonstrated a base substitution mutation that generates a stop codon in exon 21. On Northern, Southern, and Western blot analysis, the p53 gene and its product appear to be normal in DU-145. PC-3, however, failed to demonstrate expression of either the p53 transcript on Northern blot analysis or the p53 protein on Western blot analysis, while the Rb gene products appeared to be normal on both Northern and Western blot analysis. This work extends the correlation between abnormal expression of putative tumor suppressor genes and human malignancies.
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PMID:Two prostate carcinoma cell lines demonstrate abnormalities in tumor suppressor genes. 198 44

Hormonal treatment of advanced prostatic cancer patients generally results in an initially beneficial response, but the treated patients develop hormonally resistant disease in which no curative therapy is currently available. Recent studies have revealed that interleukin 6 (IL-6) is a growth factor for myeloma, renal cell carcinoma, and certain T-cell lymphomas. Further, IL-6 has been shown to block apoptosis induced by p53, transforming growth factor beta, and certain cancer chemotherapeutic compounds. The objective of the present study was to determine whether IL-6 is a growth factor for two human prostate cancer lines and whether it protects the tumor cells from drug-induced cell death. Two hormone-independent prostate cell lines were used in this study, namely PC-3 and DU145, and these have been shown to be relatively resistant to cis-diamminedichloroplatinum (CDDP), etoposide (VP-16), and adriamycin (ADR). Both cell lines express IL-6 mRNA and secrete IL-6 constitutively. The addition of anti-IL-6 antiserum to the cell lines resulted in a significant inhibition of cell growth up to day 2, and when additional antibody was added at day 2 the inhibition persisted for 4 days. The coaddition of anti-IL-6 antiserum and CDDP or VP-16 resulted in synergy in cytotoxicity in both cell lines, whereas the combination of antibody and ADR or suramin resulted only in additive effects. Sequential treatment revealed that anti-IL-6 antibody was required to achieve synergy, whereas either sequence of pretreatment resulted in synergy with anti-IL-6 and CDDP but not with VP-16. CDDP treatment of tumor cells down-regulated IL-6 mRNA expression and IL-6 secretion. The present findings demonstrate that IL-6 is an autocrine/paracrine growth factor for DU145 and PC-3 prostate lines. Additionally, the secretion of this cytokine protects the tumor cells against the cytotoxic effect of CDDP and VP-16 and its neutralization sensitizes the cells to cytotoxicity. Overall, the studies suggest that agents that can down-regulate or inhibit protective factors in tumors may overcome drug resistance.
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PMID:Endogenous interleukin 6 is a resistance factor for cis-diamminedichloroplatinum and etoposide-mediated cytotoxicity of human prostate carcinoma cell lines. 755 41

beta-Lapachone and certain of its derivatives directly bind and inhibit topoisomerase I (Topo I) DNA unwinding activity and form DNA-Topo I complexes, which are not resolvable by SDS-K+ assays. We show that beta-lapachone can induce apoptosis in certain cells, such as in human promyelocytic leukemia (HL-60) and human prostate cancer (DU-145, PC-3, and LNCaP) cells, as also described by Li et al. (Cancer Res., 55: 0000-0000, 1995). Characteristic 180-200-bp oligonucleosome DNA laddering and fragmented DNA-containing apoptotic cells via flow cytometry and morphological examinations were observed in 4 h in HL-60 cells after a 4-h, > or = 0.5 microM beta-lapachone exposure. HL-60 cells treated with camptothecin or topotecan resulted in greater apoptotic DNA laddering and apoptotic cell populations than comparable equitoxic concentrations of beta-lapachone, although beta-lapachone was a more effective Topo I inhibitor. beta-Lapachone treatment (4 h, 1-5 microM) resulted in a block at G0/G1, with decreases in S and G2/M phases and increases in apoptotic cell populations over time in HL-60 and three separate human prostate cancer (DU-145, PC-3, and LNCaP) cells. Similar treatments with topotecan or camptothecin (4 h, 1-5 microM) resulted in blockage of cells in S and apoptosis. Thus, beta-lapachone causes a block in G0/G1 of the cell cycle and induces apoptosis in cells before, or at early times during, DNA synthesis. These events are p53 independent, since PC-3 and HL-60 cells are null cells, LNCaP are wild-type, and DU-145 contain mutant p53, yet all undergo apoptosis after beta-lapachone treatment. Interestingly, beta-lapachone treatment of p53 wild type-containing prostate cancer cells (i.e., LNCaP) did not result in the induction of nuclear levels of p53 protein, as did camptothecin-treated cells. Like other Topo I inhibitors, beta-lapachone may induce apoptosis by locking Topo I onto DNA, blocking replication fork movement, and inducing apoptosis in a p53-independent fashion. beta-Lapachone and its derivatives, as well as other Topo I inhibitors, have potential clinical utility alone against human leukemia and prostate cancers.
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PMID:Beta-lapachone-mediated apoptosis in human promyelocytic leukemia (HL-60) and human prostate cancer cells: a p53-independent response. 764 Nov 80

The propensity of a cell to undergo apoptosis has been proposed to be a determinant for chemotherapy sensitivity that is not directly dependent on specific drug-target interactions. Androgen-independent prostate cancer is typically refractory to cytotoxic drugs, and we tested whether this is due to a loss of the ability to undergo apoptosis. Exposure of the hormone-insensitive and p53-negative human prostate carcinoma cell line PC-3 to 22 microM cisplatin, 1 microM camptothecin, 10 microM tenoposide, 135 nM vincristine, or 10 microM lovastatin for 72 h caused cell death, internucleosomal DNA fragmentation, and morphological changes typical for apoptosis. One microM cycloheximide prevented anticancer drug-induced apoptosis, whereas high concentration (1 mM) of cycloheximide alone induced apoptosis, indicating that protein synthesis was not needed for these cells to undergo apoptosis. Since cycloheximide affected DNA synthesis and proliferation of PC-3 cells, we tested whether the DNA polymerase inhibitor aphidicolin could also suppress drug-induced apoptosis. In contrast to cycloheximide, aphidicolin inhibited only vincristine-induced apoptosis. Cycloheximide prevented drug-induced changes in cell cycle distribution except for vincristine, while aphidicolin led to an accumulation of cells at the G1-S border independent of the drug used. These data indicate that macromolecular synthesis, active cell cycling, and p53 expression are not required for apoptosis to proceed in this system.
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PMID:Drug-induced apoptosis is not necessarily dependent on macromolecular synthesis or proliferation in the p53-negative human prostate cancer cell line PC-3. 774 12

Previous studies have demonstrated that androgen responsive human prostate cancer cells can be induced to undergo programmed cell death after androgen ablation. By contrast, androgen-independent human prostate cancer cells do not activate this apoptotic pathway in response to androgen ablation. In the present study, two androgen-independent human prostatic cell lines, PC-3 and DU-145, were used as in vitro model systems to investigate the possibility of induction of programmed cell death in response to non-androgen ablative cytotoxic drugs. Treatment of these cells with the fluorinated pyrimidines, 5-fluoro-2-deoxyuridine or trifluorothymidine, resulted in a significant decrease in cell viability, over a period of 96 hr of exposure to the drugs, as determined by the trypan blue exclusion assay. The characteristic DNA fragmentation into a nucleosomal ladder and induction of expression of specific apoptosis-related genes, such as TRPM-2/SGP-2, and TGF-beta 1, but not the growth-related genes, c-myc, c-fos, and p53, temporally correlated with activation of apoptotic cell death in both systems. Simultaneous treatment with exogenous thymidine completely abrogated the fluoropyrimidine-induced cytotoxic effect in both cell lines, as well as the nucleosomal fragmentation of DNA, indicating that this apoptotic process is due to the induction of "thymineless" state. These results suggest that androgen-independent human prostate cancer cells retain the ability to activate the apoptotic cascade, after treatment with cytotoxic drugs that induce a "thymineless" state.
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PMID:Induction of apoptosis in androgen-independent human prostate cancer cells undergoing thymineless death. 803 80

p53 gene structure and chromosome 17p alleles were studied in the three human prostate cancer cell lines, LNCaP, DU-145, and PC-3. Our laboratory has two separate culture lines of the LNCaP human prostate cancer cells. One strain, LNCaP-GW, had a mutation in one of two alleles at position 273 (arg > his). This mutation could not be detected in a second strain of LNCaP, LNCaP-ATCC. Immunohistochemical staining for P53 protein in the cell lines indicated that protein overexpression in LNCaP was heterogeneous, even in clonal isolates derived from LNCaP-GW that contained the codon 273 mutation in every cell. We also performed in vitro and in vivo growth analysis to compare the LNCaP-GW and LNCaP-ATCC cells. LNCaP-GW grew more rapidly than LNCaP-ATCC in vitro. However, LNCaP-ATCC formed tumors efficiently when inoculated into nude mice, whereas LNCaP-GW formed tumors much less efficiently. Consideration must be given to the notion that some of these p53 mutations arose during in vitro passage. We also confirmed published findings with two other human prostate cancer cell lines. In DU-145, two mutations were found in the p53 gene. A mutation at codon 274 (pro > leu) and a second mutation at codon 223 (val > phe) were present. PC-3 cells were hemizygous for chromosome 17p. The single copy of the p53 gene had a base pair deletion at codon 138 that generated a frame shift and a new in-frame stop codon at position 169.
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PMID:p53 oncogene mutations in three human prostate cancer cell lines. 810 29

The RRR-alpha-tocopheryl succinate derivative of vitamin E, referred to as vitamin E succinate (VES), inhibits the proliferation of three metastatic human prostatic cancer cell lines, LNCaP, PC-3, and DU-145. LNCaP is a lymph node-derived androgen-sensitive prostate cell line; these cells are defective for response to transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) but are normal for cell cycle-related tumor suppressor genes: p53 and retinoblastoma (Rb). PC-3 is a bone marrow-derived androgen-insensitive prostate cell line; these cells are defective for both p53 alleles but normal for both Rb alleles. DU-145 is a brain-derived androgen-insensitive prostate cell line; these cells are defective for both p53 and both Rb alleles. VES at 5, 10, and 20 micrograms/ml inhibited DNA synthesis in the three cell lines in a dose-dependent manner. Purified TGF-beta 1 at 1 ng/ml inhibited DNA synthesis of PC-3 cells within 24-72 hours and DU-145 cells at 72 hours but did not inhibit DNA synthesis of LNCaP cells. Previous studies in our laboratory showed that VES growth-inhibited tumor cells secrete biologically active antiproliferative factor TGF-beta s, suggesting that VES's mechanism of growth inhibition may involve the TGF-beta system of growth control.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:RRR-alpha-tocopheryl succinate inhibits the proliferation of human prostatic tumor cells with defective cell cycle/differentiation pathways. 858 52

The lethal phenotypes of advanced prostate cancer are androgen independent (AI) and metastatic to the axial skeleton. Our laboratory has developed an AI mouse model of metastatic human prostate cancer. In this communication, we report the development of tumor suppressor gene therapy in this AI and metastatic (C4-2) cancer model. By using recombinant adenovirus as a delivery vehicle, we introduced a wild-type p53 tumor suppressor gene into prostate cancer cell lines. Despite a silent mutation at codon 152 of the p53 gene, C4-2 cells express functional, but low, levels of p53 protein. However, the other prostatic cell lines, PC-3 and DU145, have a deletion mutation and two point mutations of the p53 gene, respectively. In vitro studies showed that cell growth, as measured by the thymidine incorporation assay, was inhibited in the C4-2, PC-3, and DU145 cells infected with wild-type p53 adenovirus in comparison to control viruses. Recombinant wild-type p53 adenovirus inhibited prostate tumor growth and its production of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) when injected into C4-2 tumors in nude mice. All p53-treated mice were tumor free as long as 12 weeks after cessation of the 8-week treatment regimen. Two of 8 p53-treated mice developed small tumors growing at distant sites after a prolonged period of follow-up observation. Moreover, other AI prostate cancer cells, PC-3 and DU145, treated with Ad5-CMV-p53 failed to develop into tumors in vivo. This gene therapy strategy may be used against AI prostatic cancer regardless of p53 gene mutation status.
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PMID:Molecular therapy with recombinant p53 adenovirus in an androgen-independent, metastatic human prostate cancer model. 888 39

We report a series of new in vitro and in vivo data proving the selective antitumor activity of our somatostatin structural derivative, TT-232. In vitro, it inhibited the proliferation of 20 different human tumor cell lines in the range of 50-95% and induced a very strong apoptosis. In vivo TT-232 was effective on transplanted animal tumors (Colon 26, B16 melanoma, and S180 sarcoma) and on human tumor xenografts. Treatment of MDA-MB-231 human breast cancer xenografted in mice with low submaximal doses of TT-232 [0.25 and 0.5 mg/kg of body weight (b.w.)] caused an average 80% decrease in the tumor volume resulting in 30% tumor-free animals surviving for longer than 200 days. Treatment of prostate tumor (PC-3) xenografted animals with 20 mg/kg of b.w. of TT-232 for 3 weeks resulted in 60% decrease in tumor volume and 100% survival even after 60 days, while 80% of nontreated animals perished. We have demonstrated that TT-232 did not bind to the membrane preparation of rat pituitary and cortex and had no antisecretory activity. TT-232 was not toxic at a dose of 120 mg/kg of b.w. in mice. Long-term incubation (24 h) of tumor cells with TT-232 caused significant inhibition of tyrosine kinases in good correlation with the apoptosis-inducing effect. The level of p53 or KU86 did not change following TT-232 treatment, suggesting a p53-independent apoptotic effect. Preincubation of human breast cancer cells (MDA-MB-453) with TT-232 for 2 h decreased the growth factor receptor autophosphorylation. All of these data suggest that TT-232 is a promising and selective antitumor agent.
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PMID:A tumor-selective somatostatin analog (TT-232) with strong in vitro and in vivo antitumor activity. 890 13

Because of a lack of information of the optimum nutritional requirements, epithelial cells derived from normal human prostate and prostate tumors have been difficult to propagate in vitro, which hinders research in prostate carcinogenesis. In an effort to establish optimum nutritional conditions and differences in growth characteristics of normal human prostate (NP), benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH), and prostatic carcinoma (PCA), we have compared the effects of several growth factors on cell proliferation and elucidated growth properties of low passage epithelial cells derived from NP, BPH, and PCA of an African-American patient. Primary and low passage cultures were propagated in serum-free keratinocyte basal medium (KBM) supplemented with insulin (5 micrograms/ml), hydrocortisone (0.5 microgram/ml), epidermal growth factor (EGF, 10 ng/ml), bovine pituitary extract (BPE; 50 micrograms/ml), cholera toxin (10 ng/ml), and antibiotics. Almost all NP, BPH, and PCA cells were positive for cytokeratins and prostate-specific antigen (PSA). The NP, BPH, and PCA cells were essentially diploid and lacked mutations in c-K-ras and c-Ha-ras oncogenes, and p53 tumor suppressor gene. However, they exhibited progressively accelerating growth parameters. The population doubling times of NP, BPH and PCA were 51 hr, 37 hr, and 29 hr, respectively; their saturation densities were 2.9 x 10(4)/cm2, 3.3 x 10(4)/cm2, and 7.2 x 10(4)/cm2, respectively. The NP and BPH cells required all of the growth factors in the medium, as deletion of any one of the above factors strongly inhibited their growth. The PCA cells, however, were independent of EGF and hydrocortisone. PC-3, an established human prostate cancer cell line, was independent of the growth factors tested. Fetal bovine serum (FBS) inhibited the growth of NP, BPH and PCA cells. In contrast, FBS stimulated the growth of the PC-3 cells in a concentration-dependent manner. These results indicate that in the absence of any apparent karyotype alterations and mutations in c-K-ras, c-Ha-ras and p53 genes, epithelial cells derived from NP, BPH, and PCA exhibit significant differences in their growth properties and responses to growth factors. These variations may represent early changes involved in prostate cancer, while gene mutations and cytogenetic alterations occur in advanced and/or metastatic tumors.
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PMID:Differential growth factor responses of epithelial cell cultures derived from normal human prostate, benign prostatic hyperplasia, and primary prostate carcinoma. 890 94


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