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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (
Mol
)
630,302
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Doxorubicin
(Dox), a cardiotoxic antineoplastic drug, disrupts the cardiac-specific program of gene expression (Kurabayashi, M., Dutta, S., Jeyaseelan, R., and Kedes, L. (1995)
Mol
. Cell. Biol. 15, 6386-6397; Jeyaseelan, R., Poizat, C., Wu, H. Y., and Kedes, L. (1997) J. Biol. Chem. 272, 5828-5832). To determine whether this drug might interfere with the function of cardiac-specific regulatory pathways, we used a differential display strategy to clone from neonatal rat cardiomyocyte candidate mRNAs that were rapidly sensitive to Dox. We report here the identification of a constitutively expressed, cardiac-restricted, nuclear protein whose mRNA level is exquisitely sensitive to Dox. Hence we have named this protein cardiac adriamycin-responsive protein (CARP). CARP mRNA is present at the earliest stages of cardiac morphogenesis. It was detected by in situ hybridization within the cardiogenic plate of 7. 5-day post coitum (p.c.) embryos, and in 8.5-day p.c. embryos CARP transcripts are present in uniformly high levels in the myocardium. Throughout cardiac development, CARP expression is specific for the myocardium; endocardial cushions and valves exhibit only background levels of signal. Transcript levels persist but gradually decrease in neonatal, 2-week-old, and adult hearts. There were no stages when CARP mRNA could not be detected. The pattern and timing of CARP mRNA expression, including transient expression in the tongue at 14.5 days p.c., coincides with that of Nkx2.5/Csx (a putative homolog of tinman, the Drosophila melanogaster gene responsible for cardiac development). The cloned full-length 1749 nucleotide CARP cDNA encodes a 319-amino acid 40-kDa polypeptide containing five tandem ankyrin repeats. CARP appears to be the rat homolog of a previously reported human single-copy gene (C-193; Chu, W., Burns, D. K., Swerlick, R. A., and Presky, D. H. (1995) J. Biol. Chem. 270, 10236-10245), whose mRNA is inducible by cytokines only in human endothelial cells. CARP appears to function as a negative regulator of cardiac-specific gene expression. Overexpression of CARP in cardiomyocytes suppresses cardiac troponin C and atrial natriuretic factor transcription. Cotransfection experiments in HeLa cells indicate that CARP inhibits Nkx2.5 transactivation of atrial natriuretic factor promoter. When fused to a GAL4 DNA-binding domain, CARP has transcriptional inhibitory properties in noncardiac cells. CARP thus represents the first example of a cardiac-restricted transcriptional regulatory protein that is sensitive to Dox.
...
PMID:A novel cardiac-restricted target for doxorubicin. CARP, a nuclear modulator of gene expression in cardiac progenitor cells and cardiomyocytes. 927 41
Histologic, nick end labeling for apoptosis and electron microscopic studies were made of the heart, kidney and small intestine in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) treated for 12 weeks with doxorubicin (1 mg/kg/week), mitoxantrone (0.5 or 0.25 mg/kg/week) or saline (controls). Semiquantitative scoring showed that the severity of the cardiac lesions produced by doxorubicin was comparable to that resulting from 0.5 mg/kg mitoxantrone, but greater than that induced by 0.25 mg/kg mitoxantrone (to which it is therapeutically equivalent). The nephropathy and the intestinal toxicity produced by doxorubicin were also more severe than those resulting from either dose of mitoxantrone. Apoptosis of cardiac myocytes was not induced by either drug, but involved cardiac dendritic cells in SHR given doxorubicin. Apoptosis in renal tubular epithelium was comparable in SHR given doxorubicin and the higher dose of mitoxantrone.
Doxorubicin
induced more frequent apoptosis in intestinal epithelium than did the higher dose of mitoxantrone. We also show that mitoxantrone and iron(III) form a strong 2:1 complex, in which the drug may be acting as a tridentate ligand. This complex, like the iron(III)-doxorubicin complex, may be capable of redox cycling and producing reactive oxygen intermediates (ROI) that damage tissue. Decreased formation of ROI by mitoxantrone may account for its reduced cardiotoxicity compared to that of doxorubicin.
J
Mol
Cell Cardiol 1997 Sep
PMID:Comparison of the structural changes induced by doxorubicin and mitoxantrone in the heart, kidney and intestine and characterization of the Fe(III)-mitoxantrone complex. 929 65
Doxorubicin
is a therapeutically useful anticancer drug that exerts multiple biological effects. Its antitumor and cardiotoxic properties have been ascribed to anthracycline-mediated free radical damage to DNA and membranes. Evidence for this idea comes in part from the selection by doxorubicin from stationary phase yeast cells of mutants (petites) deficient in mitochondrial respiration and therefore defective in free radical generation. However, doxorubicin also binds to DNA topoisomerase II, converting the enzyme into a DNA damaging agent through the trapping of a covalent enzyme-DNA complex termed the 'cleavable complex.' We have used yeast to determine whether stabilization of cleavable complexes plays a role in doxorubicin action and cytotoxicity. A plasmid-borne yeast TOP2 gene was mutagenized with hydroxylamine and used to transform drug-permeable yeast strain JN394t2-4, which carries a temperature-sensitive top2-4 mutation in its chromosomal TOP2 gene. Selection in growth medium at the nonpermissive temperature of 35 degrees in the presence of doxorubicin resulted in the isolation of plasmid-borne top2 mutants specifying functional doxorubicin-resistant DNA topoisomerase II. Single-point changes of Gly748 to Glu or Ala642 to Ser in yeast topoisomerase II, which lie in and adjacent to the CAP-like DNA binding domain, respectively, were identified as responsible for resistance to doxorubicin, implicating these regions in drug action. None of the mutants selected in JN394t2-4, which has a rad52 defect in double-strand DNA break repair, was respiration-deficient. We conclude that topoisomerase II is an intracellular target for doxorubicin and that the genetic background and/or cell proliferation status can determine the relative importance of topoisomerase II- versus free radical-killing.
Mol
Pharmacol 1997 Oct
PMID:Identification of yeast DNA topoisomerase II mutants resistant to the antitumor drug doxorubicin: implications for the mechanisms of doxorubicin action and cytotoxicity. 938 29
Quinones undergo redox cycling and/or arylation reactions with key biomolecules involved with cellular Ca2+ regulation. The present study utilizes nanomolar quantities of the fluorogenic maleimide 7-diethylamino-3-(4'-maleimidylphenyl)-4-methylcoumarin (CPM) to measure the reactivity of hyperreactive sulfhydryl moieties on sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) membranes in the presence and absence of quinones by analyzing the kinetics of forming CPM-thioether adducts and localization of fluorescence by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis.
Doxorubicin
, 1,4-naphthoquinone (NQ), and 1, 4-benzoquinone (BQ) are found to selectively and dose-dependently interact with a class of hyperreactive sulfhydryl groups localized on ryanodine-sensitive Ca2+ channels [ryanodine receptor (RyR)], and its associated protein, triadin, of skeletal type channels. NQ and BQ are the most potent compounds tested for reducing the rate of CPM labeling of hyperreactive SR thiols (IC50 = 0.3 and 1.8 microM, respectively) localized on RyR and associated protein. The reduced forms of quinone, tert-butylhydroquinone, and 5-imino-daunorubicin do not alter significantly the pattern or kinetics of CPM labeling up to 100 microM, demonstrating that the quinone group is essential for modulating the state of hyperreactive SR thiols. Nanomolar NQ is shown to enhance the association of [3H]ryanodine for its high-affinity binding site and directly enhance channel-open probability in bilayer lipid membrane in a reversible manner. By contrast, micromolar NQ produces a time-dependent biphasic action on channel function, leading to irreversible channel inactivation. These results provide evidence that nanomolar quinone selectively and reversibly alters the redox state of hyperreactive sulfhydryls localized in the RyR/Ca2+ channel complex, resulting in enhanced channel activation. The Ca2+-dependent cytotoxicities observed with reactive quinones formed at the microsomal surface by oxidative metabolism may be related to their ability to selectively modify hyperreactive thiols regulating normal functioning of microsomal Ca2+ release channels.
Mol
Pharmacol 1999 May
PMID:Site-selective modification of hyperreactive cysteines of ryanodine receptor complex by quinones. 1022 May 60
Doxorubicin
and idarubicin are very effective anticancer drugs in the treatment of human hematological malignancies and solid tumors. These agents are well known topoisomerase II poisons; however, some anthracycline analogs recently have been shown to poison topoisomerase I. In the present work, we assayed novel disaccharide analogs and the parent drug, idarubicin, for their poisoning effects of human topoisomerase I and topoisomerases IIalpha and IIbeta. Drugs were evaluated with a DNA cleavage assay in vitro and with a yeast system to test whether the agents were able to poison the enzymes in vivo. We have found that the test agents are potent poisons of both topoisomerases IIalpha and IIbeta. The axial orientation of the second sugar relative to the first one of the novel disaccharide analogs was shown to be required for poisoning activity and cytotoxicity. Interestingly, idarubicin and the new analogs stimulated topoisomerase I-mediated DNA cleavage at low levels in vitro. As expected, the cytotoxic level of the drug was highly affected by the content of topoisomerase II; nevertheless, the test agents had a yeast cell-killing activity that also was weakly dependent on cellular topoisomerase I content. The results are relevant for the full understanding of the molecular mechanism of topoisomerase poisoning by anticancer drugs, and they define structural determinants of anthracyclines that may help in the rational design of new compounds directed against topoisomerase I.
Mol
Pharmacol 1999 Jul
PMID:Topoisomerase poisoning activity of novel disaccharide anthracyclines. 1038 86
Although the synthesis of angiogenic factors in hypoxic regions of solid tumors is recognized as one of the critical steps in tumor growth and metastasis, the signal transduction pathway involved in hypoxic induction of basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) gene expression is still obscure. In the study described here, we investigated the intracellular responses to hypoxia and the mechanisms triggering the initiation of angiogenic activity in drug-resistant human breast carcinoma MCF-7/
ADR
cells. Northern blots showed an increase in the level of c-jun, c-fos, and bFGF mRNA during hypoxia. Gel mobility-shift analysis of nuclear extracts from hypoxia-exposed cells showed an increase in AP-1 binding activity. In addition, hypoxic treatment strongly activated c-Jun N-terminal kinase 1 (JNK1), leading to phosphorylation and activation of c-Jun. Expression of a dominant negative mutant of JNK1 suppressed hypoxia-induced JNK1 activation as well as bFGF gene expression. Taken together, hypoxia-induced bFGF gene expression is mediated through the stress-activated protein kinase (SAPK) signal transduction pathway.
Mol
Cell Biochem 1999 Dec
PMID:Hypoxia-induced bFGF gene expression is mediated through the JNK signal transduction pathway. 1070 89
Mdm2 is a nuclear phosphoprotein which functions as a negative feedback regulator of the p53 tumor suppressor gene. In this study, we investigated the alteration of Mdm2 and p53 in three human cancer cell lines containing either a wild-type or mutant p53 gene after treatment with Adriamycin (doxorubicin,
ADR
), a DNA damaging agent. We found that human breast cancer MCF-7 cells containing wild-type p53 were much more susceptible to
ADR
compared to human breast cancer MDA-MB-231 and human prostate cancer Du-145 cells which contain mutant p53.
ADR
resulted in a significant dose-dependent accumulation of p53 protein in MCF-7 cells, whereas little or no influence was observed on p53 protein of the two mutant p53 cell lines. However, a significant down-regulation of Mdm2 at protein and mRNA levels was observed in these three cell lines following
ADR
treatment. Moreover, the decrease of Mdm2 was in both a dose- and time-dependent manner. It is interestingly noted that 5 microM is a critical dose for significant down-regulation of the Mdm2 protein. Selected proteasome inhibitors did not rescue the
ADR
-caused decline in the expression of Mdm2 protein. Therefore, our present results reveal that
ADR
can induce a down-regulation of Mdm2 via a p53-independent pathway in human cancer cells and the ubiquitin-proteasome degradation mechanism may not be involved in the decreased expression of Mdm2 protein.
Mol
Cell Biol Res Commun 2000 Feb
PMID:P53-independent down-regulation of Mdm2 in human cancer cells treated with adriamycin. 1077 10
Doxorubicin
(Dox), an anthracyclin antineoplastic agent, causes dilated cardiomyopathy. CARP has been identified as a nuclear protein whose mRNA levels are exquisitely sensitive to Dox. In this study we investigated the molecular mechanisms underlying the repression of CARP expression by Dox in cultured neonatal rat cardiac myocytes. Dox (1 micromol/l)-mediated decrease in CARP mRNA levels was strongly correlated with BNP but not with ANP mRNA levels. Hydrogen peroxide scavenger catalase (1 mg/ml) but not hydroxyl radical scavengers dimethylthiourea (10 mmol/l) or mannitol (10 mmol/l) blunted the Dox-mediated decrease in CARP and BNP expression. Superoxide dismutase inhibitor diethyldithiocarbamic acid (10 mmol/l), which inhibits the generation of hydrogen peroxide from superoxide metabolism, attenuated the repression. PD98059 (MEK1 inhibitor, 50 micromol/l), SB203580 (p38 MAP kinase inhibitor, 10 micromol/l), calphostin C (protein kinase C (PKC) inhibitor, 1 micromol/l), non-selective protein tyrosine kinase inhibitors genistein (50 micromol/l) or herbimycin A (1 micromol/l) failed to abrogate the downregulation of CARP and BNP expression by Dox. In contrast, H7 (30 micromol/l), a potent inhibitor of serine/threonine kinase, significantly blocked Dox-mediated downregulation of CARP and BNP expression. Transient transfection of a series of 5'-deletion and site-specific mutation constructs revealed that M-CAT element located at -37 of the human CARP promoter mediates Dox-induced repression of CARP promoter activity. These results suggest that a genetic response to Dox is mediated through the generation of hydrogen peroxide, which is selectively linked to the activation of H7-sensitive serine/threonine kinase distinct from PKC and well characterized mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases (ERK and p38MAP kinase). Furthermore, our data implicated M-CAT element as a Dox-response element within the CARP promoter in cardiac myocytes.
J
Mol
Cell Cardiol 2000 Aug
PMID:Doxorubicin represses CARP gene transcription through the generation of oxidative stress in neonatal rat cardiac myocytes: possible role of serine/threonine kinase-dependent pathways. 1090 Jan 67
The transcription of tissue-specific genes is controlled by regulatory factors and cofactors and is suppressed in cardiac cells by the antineoplastic agent doxorubicin. Here we show that exposure of cultured cardiomyocytes to doxorubicin resulted in the rapid depletion of transcripts for MEF2C, dHAND, and NKX2.5, three pivotal regulators of cardiac gene expression. Delivery of exogenous p300, a coactivator of MEF2C and NKX2.5 in cardiomyocytes, restored cardiac transcription despite the presence of doxorubicin. Furthermore, p300 also restored the accumulation of transcripts for MEF2C itself. Importantly, cardiocytes exposed to doxorubicin displayed reduced levels of p300 proteins. This was not due to alterations in the level of p300 transcripts; rather, and surprisingly, doxorubicin promoted selective degradation of p300 mediated by the 26S-proteasome machinery.
Doxorubicin
had no effect on the general level of ubiquitinated proteins or on the levels of beta-catenin, a protein known to be degraded by proteasome-mediated degradation. These results provide evidence for a new mechanism of transcriptional repression caused by doxorubicin in which the selective degradation of p300 results in reduced p300-dependent transcription, including production of MEF2C mRNA.
Mol
Cell Biol 2000 Dec
PMID:Proteasome-mediated degradation of the coactivator p300 impairs cardiac transcription. 1107 66
Hepatocyte growth factor (scatter factor) (HGF/SF) is a pleiotrophic mediator of epithelial cell motility, morphogenesis, angiogenesis, and tumorigenesis. HGF/SF protects cells against DNA damage by a pathway from its receptor c-Met to phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) to c-Akt, resulting in enhanced DNA repair and decreased apoptosis. We now show that protection against the DNA-damaging agent adriamycin (
ADR
; topoisomerase IIalpha inhibitor) requires the Grb2-binding site of c-Met, and overexpression of the Grb2-associated binder Gab1 (a multisubstrate adapter required for epithelial morphogenesis) inhibits the ability of HGF/SF to protect MDCK epithelial cells against
ADR
. In contrast to Gab1 and its homolog Gab2, overexpression of c-Cb1, another multisubstrate adapter that associates with c-Met, did not affect protection. Gab1 blocked the ability of HGF/SF to cause the sustained activation of c-Akt and c-Akt signaling (FKHR phosphorylation). The Gab1 inhibition of sustained c-Akt activation and of cell protection did not require the Gab1 pleckstrin homology or SHP2 phosphatase-binding domain but did require the PI3K-binding domain. HGF/SF protection of parental MDCK cells was blocked by wortmannin, expression of PTEN, and dominant negative mutants of p85 (regulatory subunit of PI3K), Akt, and Pak1; the protection of cells overexpressing Gab1 was restored by wild-type or activated mutants of p85, Akt, and Pak1. These findings suggest that the adapter Gab1 may redirect c-Met signaling through PI3K away from a c-Akt/Pak1 cell survival pathway.
Mol
Cell Biol 2001 Aug
PMID:The multisubstrate adapter Gab1 regulates hepatocyte growth factor (scatter factor)-c-Met signaling for cell survival and DNA repair. 1143 54
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