Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P05412 (c-Jun)
11,453 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The molecular mode of cell killing by the antiviral drug (E)-5-(2-bromovinyl-2'-deoxyuridine (BVDU) was studied in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells stably transfected with the thymidine kinase gene (tk) of varicella zoster virus (CHO-VZVtk). The colony-forming ability of the cells was reduced to <1% at a concentration of approximately 1 microM BVDU, whereas for nontransfected cells or cells transfected with tk gene of herpes simplex virus type 1 (CHO-HSVtk), a 1000-fold higher dose was required to achieve the same response. BVDU inhibited thymidylate synthase in CHO-VZVtk but not in CHO-HSVtk and control cells. On the other hand, the drug was incorporated into DNA of VZVtk- and HSVtk-expressing cells to nearly equal amounts. Because coexposure of CHO-VZVtk cells to exogenous thymidine protected them from BVDU-induced cell killing, the cells obviously die because of thymidine depletion. At highly cytotoxic BVDU doses (50 microM) and longer exposure times (24-48 h), VZVtk cells were blocked to some extent in S and G2/M phase and underwent apoptosis (48-72 h). Not only apoptosis but also necrosis was induced. The findings also show that the drug causes the induction of c-Jun and the activation of activator protein-1 resulting in increased level of Fas ligand (FasL) and caspase-8/-3 activation. Bid and poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase were cleaved by caspases. Expression of Bax increased, whereas Bcl-2/Bcl-x(L) remained unchanged. Transfection of dominant-negative Fas-associated death domain and inhibition of caspase-8 by N-benzyloxycarbonyl-IETD-fluoromethyl ketone strongly abrogated BVDU-induced apoptosis, indicating Fas/FasL to be crucially involved. Thus, BVDU-triggered apoptosis differs significantly from that induced by ganciclovir, which induces in the same cellular background the mitochondrial damage pathway.
...
PMID:Apoptosis induced by (E)-5-(2-bromovinyl)-2'-deoxyuridine in varicella zoster virus thymidine kinase-expressing cells is driven by activation of c-Jun/activator protein-1 and Fas ligand/caspase-8. 1252 16

Stimulation of the Jun NH(2)-terminal kinase/stress-activated protein kinase (JNK/SAPK) and the p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (p38/MAPK) is part of the stress-related signal transduction pathways conveying signals from the cell surface into the nucleus in order to initiate programmes of gene expression. Here, it was shown that infection by varicella-zoster virus (VZV) caused a 34-fold increase in activation of JNK/SAPK in the early phase of infection and a 2-fold increase in activation of p38/MAPK in the later phase. The phosphorylation of downstream targets c-Jun and ATF-2 was also increased; subsequent cascades to induce pro-inflammatory responses were significantly activated whereas cascades to activate apoptotic events were not. In the late phase of infection, both JNK/SAPK and p38/MAPK activities were reduced to basal levels. The use of specific inhibitors demonstrated that inhibition of JNK/SAPK resulted in a 2-fold increase in VZV replication whereas a strong decrease in virus replication was observed after inhibition of p38/MAPK. In contrast, constitutive activation of JNK/SAPK resulted in a decline in VZV replication. Blocking gene expression by treating cells with actinomycin D or cycloheximide prior to infection resulted in activation of neither JNK/SAPK nor p38/MAPK. It was assumed that the presence of tegument proteins was not sufficient to activate stress pathways, but that expression of viral genes was necessary. This suggests that activation of stress pathways by VZV infection represents a finely regulated system that activates cellular transcription factors for transregulation of VZV-encoded genes, but prevents activation of cellular defence mechanisms.
...
PMID:Replication of varicella-zoster virus is influenced by the levels of JNK/SAPK and p38/MAPK activation. 1555 26

Recently, it was demonstrated that the Varicella-zoster virus (VZV) infection led to an activation of MAP kinases. The viral protein encoded by ORF61 is a major effector of JNK/SAPK and p38/MAPK phosphorylation. ORF61 shows homology to HSV-1 ICP0, a multifunctional protein that influences the activity of c-Jun in infected cells. Stable expression of ORF61 in a MeWo derived cell line gave rise to two specific effects: (i) a major decrease of VZV replication and (ii) a strongly elevated basal JNK/SAPK phosphorylation but a reduced p38/MAPK phosphorylation, which were both altered following infection. A dose-dependent inhibition of JNK/SAPK in MeWo/61 cells resulted in a step-by-step increase of VZV replication. These findings indicate (i) that ORF61 is responsible for the elevated JNK/SAPK phosphorylation and (ii) that the VZV replication and the JNK/SAPK phosphorylation are related inversely. Compared to MeWo cells, the basal phosphorylation of downstream targets c-Jun and ATF-2 was reduced following ORF61 expression but restored after infection. Subsequent cascades to induce inflammatory responses were activated insignificantly; cascades to activate apoptotic events also remained silent. These data point towards an important role of ORF61 in the fine-regulation of activation of the MAPK pathways and their downstream targets to optimize the availability of cellular factors involved in VZV gene expression.
...
PMID:ORF61 protein of Varicella-zoster virus influences JNK/SAPK and p38/MAPK phosphorylation. 1590 10

The transcription factors ATF-2 and c-Jun are important for transactivation of varicella-zoster virus (VZV) genes. c-Jun is activated by the c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK), a member of the mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway that responds to stress and cytokines. To study the effects of VZV on this pathway, confluent human foreskin fibroblasts were infected with cell-associated VZV for 1 to 4 days. Immunoblots showed that phosphorylated JNK and c-Jun levels increased in VZV-infected cells, and kinase assays determined that phospho-JNK was active. Phospho-JNK was detected after 24 h, and levels rose steadily over 4 days in parallel with accumulation of VZV antigen. The two main activators of JNK are MKK4 and MKK7, and levels of their active, phosphorylated forms also increased. The competitive inhibitor of JNK, SP600125, caused a dose-dependent reduction in VZV yield (50% effective concentration, congruent with 8 microM). Specificity was verified by immunoblotting; phospho-c-Jun was eliminated by 18 microM SP600125 in VZV-infected cells. Immunofluorescent confocal microscopy showed that phospho-c-Jun and most of phospho-JNK were in the nuclei of VZV-infected cells; some phospho-JNK was in the cytoplasm. MKK4, MKK7, JNK, and phospho-JNK were detected by immunoblotting in purified preparations of VZV virions, but c-Jun was absent. JNK was located in the virion tegument, as determined by biochemical fractionation and immunogold transmission electron microscopy. Overall, these results demonstrate the importance of the JNK pathway for VZV replication and advance the idea that JNK is a useful drug target against VZV.
...
PMID:Varicella-zoster virus infection of human fibroblast cells activates the c-Jun N-terminal kinase pathway. 1707 91

Varicella-zoster virus (VZV) grows efficiently in quiescent cells in vivo and in culture, and virus infection activates cell cycle and signaling pathways without cell division. VZV ORFs have been identified that determine the tissue tropism for nondividing skin, T cells, and neurons in SCID-Hu mouse models. The normal cell cycle status of human foreskin fibroblasts was characterized and was dysregulated upon infection by VZV. The expression of cyclins A, B1, and D3 was highly elevated but did not correspond with extensive cellular DNA synthesis. Cell cycle arrest may be due to activation of the DNA damage response during VZV DNA replication. Other host regulatory proteins were induced in infected cells, including p27, p53, and ATM kinase. A possible explanation for the increase in cell cycle regulatory proteins is activation of transcription factors during VZV infection. There is evidence that VZV infection activates transcription factors through the mitogen-activated protein kinase pathways extracellular-regulated kinase (ERK) and c-Jun N-terminal (transpose these parts of the compound noun) kinase (JNK), which could selectively increase cyclin levels. Some of these perturbed cell functions are essential for VZV replication, such as cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) activity, and reveal targets for interventions.
...
PMID:Effects of varicella-zoster virus on cell cycle regulatory pathways. 2039 72