Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (Mol)
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Cyclophosphamide (CPA), a widely used oxazaphosphorine anti-cancer prodrug, is inactive until it is metabolized by cytochrome P450 to yield phosphoramide mustard and acrolein, which alkylate DNA and proteins, respectively. Tumor cells transduced with the human cytochrome P450 gene CYP2B6 are greatly sensitized to CPA, however, the pathway of CPA-induced cell death is unknown. The present study investigates the cytotoxic events induced by CPA in 9L gliosarcoma cells retrovirally transduced with CYP2B6, or induced in wild-type 9L cells treated with mafosfamide (MFA) or 4-hydroperoxyifosfamide (4OOH-IFA), chemically activated forms of CPA and its isomer ifosfamide. CPA and MFA were both shown to effect tumor cell death by stimulating apoptosis, as evidenced by the induction of plasma membrane blebbing, DNA fragmentation, and cleavage of the caspase 3 and caspase 7 substrate poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) in drug-treated cells. Caspase 9 was identified as the regulatory upstream caspase activated in 9L cells treated with CPA, MFA, or 4OOH-IFA, implicating the mitochondrial apoptotic pathway in oxazaphosphorine-induced tumor cell death. Correspondingly, expression of the mitochondrial proapoptotic factor Bax enhanced caspase 9 activation, plasma membrane blebbing, and drug-induced cytotoxicity. Conversely, overexpression of the mitochondrial antiapoptotic factor Bcl-2 blocked caspase 9 activation, leading to an inhibition of drug-induced plasma membrane permeability and blebbing, terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase dUTP nick-end labeling positivity, PARP cleavage, Annexin V positivity, and drug-induced cell death. Although Bcl-2 thus blocked the cytotoxic effects of activated CPA, it did not inhibit the drug's cytostatic effects. CPA induced S-phase cell cycle arrest followed by conversion to an apoptotic pre-G1 state in wild-type 9L cells; by contrast, Bcl-2-expressing 9L cells accumulated in G2/M in response to CPA treatment. Intratumoral expression of Bcl-2 and related family members, including both apoptotic and antiapoptotic factors, is thus an important determinant of the responsiveness of tumor cells to CPA and ifosfamide, both in the context of conventional chemotherapy and in patients sensitized to these oxazaphosphorine drugs by the use of cytochrome P450-based gene therapy.
Mol Pharmacol 2001 Dec
PMID:Cyclophosphamide induces caspase 9-dependent apoptosis in 9L tumor cells. 1172 34

We have studied the magnitude of apoptosis in heart, slow-twitch skeletal muscle (soleus) and fast-twitch skeletal muscle (gastrocnemius) of rats exposed to 3 weeks in vivo chronic hypoxia. Apoptosis was evaluated biochemically by DNA laddering and by TUNEL and annexin V-staining. The expression of Bax and Bcl-2 proteins was determined by immunohistochemistry and Western blotting. Western blot analysis revealed only a slight difference in Bax expression among the different tissues under normoxic and hypoxic conditions; therefore we can consider that Bax protein is constitutively expressed in muscle tissues. However a singular pattern of Bcl-2 expression was observed among the different tissues under normoxic conditions. Bcl-2 protein was more expressed in fast-twitch glycolytic muscles than in slow-twitch or oxidative muscles with a highest value found in gastrocnemius (4926 +/- 280 AU), followed by soleus (2138 +/- 200 AU) and a very low expression was displayed in the heart muscle (543 +/- 50 AU). After exposure to hypoxia for 21 days (10% O2), Bcl-2 protein expression markedly increased, (44%) in gastrocnemius, (323%) in soleus and (1178%) in heart, with significant differences (p < 0.05 student t-test), reaching a similar threshold of expression in both types of muscles. Furthermore, no sign of apoptosis was detected by TUNEL assay, annexin V-binding assay or DNA electrophoresis analysis. The latter suggested some indiscriminate fragmentations of DNA without apoptosis. In conclusion, we postulate that these protein modifications could represent a adaptative mechanism allowing a better protection against the lack of oxygen in oxidative muscles by preventing apoptosis.
Mol Cell Biochem 2001 Oct
PMID:Bcl-2/Bax protein expression in heart, slow-twitch and fast-twitch muscles in young rats growing under chronic hypoxia conditions. 1176 44

1. Cell death mode switch of cortical neurons from E17 rats was studied. Cells rapidly died under the serum-free condition. The time-course of cell death was markedly delayed by increasing cell density for primary culture in the trypan blue exclusion, LDH release, and MTT assays. 2. By analyzing cell death by the use of double staining using PI/TUNEL and PI/Annexin V combinations, the mode in the low density culture was found to be necrosis, while that in the high density culture was apoptosis. 3. The intracellular ATP level after the start of serum-free culture rapidly decline to 25% of 0-time level in the low density culture, but it was 60% in the high density culture. Both oligomycin and zVAD-fmk markedly decreased ATP levels and the population of TUNEL-positive neurons, while 3-aminobenzamide slightly increased these indices. 4. Thus. it is strongly suggested that the cell death mode switch from necrosis to apoptosis is closely related to intracellular ATP levels, and some conditioned medium factors observed in the high density culture may affect both ATP level and cell death mode switch.
Cell Mol Neurobiol 2001 Aug
PMID:Cell density-dependent death mode switch of cultured cortical neurons under serum-free starvation stress. 1177 63

Human metallothioneins (MTs) are low-molecular-weight, cysteine-rich, metal ion-binding proteins that constitute the majority of intracellular protein thiols. They are overexpressed in prostate and ovarian cancers and are believed to confer resistance to radiation and cytotoxic anticancer drugs. The aim of this study was to investigate the roles of MTs in prostate and ovarian cancer cells and their possible relationship with other cancer development and progression factors. The main problem in investigating the role of MT, however, is the absence of any known specific inhibitor. To this end, in a previous study, we had developed sequence-specific ribozymes (Rzs) targeting MT and had shown their in cellulo efficacy. Here we show that transient transfection of a vector carrying a hammerhead Rz (Rz4-9), designed to cleave class II MT, in the human prostate cancer cell line PC-3 and the ovarian cancer cell line SKOV-3 resulted in a dose-dependent attenuation of MT-II(a) transcripts and dramatic cell loss. Transient transfection with 2 microg of Rz4-9 vector DNA completely abolished MT-II(a) mRNA levels and induced a 94% and a 67% reduction in cell number in PC-3 cells and SKOV-3 cells, respectively. Fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) showed that the Rz-induced cell loss probably was due to apoptosis, because it was associated with marked increases in the hypodiploid cell population, reaching maximums of 52% and 64% in cultures of PC-3 and SKOV-3, respectively. Additionally, annexin V-propidium iodide double-staining, followed by FACS, confirmed that Rz4-9-induced cell death was due to apoptosis and showed a vector DNA-dependent increase in late apoptotic cell numbers that reached maximums of 80% and 42%, respectively, in PC-3 and SKOV-3 cell cultures transfected with the highest concentration of vector DNA. In parallel experiments, transfection with a vector containing the enzymatically inactive mutant Rz-3-3 or the empty vector was not effective in inducing similar responses. The Rz-induced loss of MT-II(a) mRNA-associated cell death in these cancer cell lines was attended by dose-dependent downregulation of the proto-oncogene c-myc and the apoptosis inhibitory mediator bcl-2, suggesting that these signaling pathways are involved in the process. In conclusion, our data indicate that MT-II(a) is an important cell-survival or anti-apoptotic factor for prostate and ovarian cancer cells and that downregulation of its expression via transgene expression of a sequence-specific Rz is a feasible target for cancer therapy.
Mol Carcinog 2002 Jan
PMID:Ribozyme-mediated downregulation of human metallothionein II(a) induces apoptosis in human prostate and ovarian cancer cell lines. 1180 57

There have so far been no studies on the apoptosis of adult articular chondrocytes after X-ray irradiation. The purpose of this study was to assess the apoptotic resistance of articular chondrocytes in X-ray radiation, in order to examine the possibility of irradiated allogenic chondrocyte implantation. Adult human chondrocytes of the non-degenerated cartilage group without X-ray irradiation did not show positive cells of Annexin V and PI staining in a 48 h culture. The Annexin V positive chondrocytes did not increase in a radiation dose dependent manner, and the PI positive cells were slightly increased at 30 Gy irradiation. In the degenerated cartilage group, the PI positive chondrocytes without irradiation were present, and both the Annexin V and PI positive chondrocytes increased in a radiation dose dependent manner. The Annexin V and PI positive staining of chondrocytes in the non-degenerated cartilage group was less than that of the degenerated cartilage group in the same dose of X-ray irradiation exposure. Loss of the mitochondrial membrane potential, revealed in an early stage of apoptosis, did not show in the irradiated chondrocytes of the non-degenerated cartilage, but were demonstrated in those of the degenerated cartilage. These results demonstrated that the non-degenerated chondrocytes of X-ray irradiation were highly resistant for apoptosis, and this knowledge could be applied to allogenic chondrocytes implantation.
Int J Mol Med 2002 Apr
PMID:The role of apoptotic resistance in irradiated adult articular chondrocytes. 1189 25

Physical and chemical alterations caused by the freezing and thawing and their effects on survivals/developments in vitro were investigated. Of a total of 452 two-cell mouse embryos, the overall survival rate of the frozen-thawed embryos was 76.1% (344/452). The blastocyst formation of the frozen-thawed embryos was 32.6% (44/136) compared to 74.5% (117/157) in the fresh embryos (P<0.05). The total number of cells in a blastocyst also decreased from 96.0 +/- 19.0 (n=26) in the fresh embryos to 42.0 +/- 11 .34 (n=30) in the frozen-thawed embryos (P<0.05). Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) measurement revealed about 5-fold decrease in the cell membrane fluidity with a characteristic time constant (tau) of 1.46 +/- 0.13 sec (n=5) in the frozen-thawed embryos as opposed to 0.28 +/- 0.04 sec (n=5) in the fresh embryos (P<0.05). The relative amount of H(2)O(2) in an embryo as quantified by the fluorescence intensity of 2',7'-dichlorofluorescein (DCF) showed 62.8 +/- 23.5 (n=24) and 34.2 +/- 14.5 (n=20) in the frozen-thawed embryos and in the fresh embryos, respectively (P<0.05). The distribution of actin filaments in the frozen-thawed embryos revealed an uneven distribution, particularly discontinuities at the "actin band," which contrasted to an even distribution shown in the fresh embryos. Mitochondrial staining by Rhodamine 123 showed that there was no significant difference between the two treatments in the number and in the distribution of viable mitochondria, but a marked aggregation was seen in the arrested embryos. No Annexin V binding was detected in two-cell or four-cell embryos while the binding was positive in the arrested embryos. The mitochondrial membrane potential measured by a membrane potential-sensitive fluorescent probe 5,5',6,6'-tetrachloro-1,1',3,3'-tetraethylbenzimidazol- carbocyanine iodide (JC-1) revealed a marked depolarization in the frozen-thawed embryos. Finally, terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT)-mediated dUTP-digoxigenin nick end-labeling (TUNEL) was employed to quantify the DNA fragmentation. In 75.0% cells of blastocysts (n=24) in the frozen-thawed embryos, the DNA fragmentation was detected as opposed to 37.0% in the fresh embryos (n=20) (P<0.05). Taken together, it is proposed that during the cryopreservation, two-cell mouse embryos are subjected to physical and chemical alterations, including destruction of the cell membrane integrity, redistribution of actin fibers, mitochondrial depolarizations, and increased reactive oxygen species (ROS) productions, which then may trigger the apoptotic cascade leading to a decrease in the survival rate and in the developmental rate of the embryos.
Mol Reprod Dev 2002 Apr
PMID:Characteristics of the cell membrane fluidity, actin fibers, and mitochondrial dysfunctions of frozen-thawed two-cell mouse embryos. 1189 18

Annexins are a superfamily of calcium-dependent membrane-associated proteins which interact with phospholipids. The primary structure of Annexins I, III, VII, VIII and XI contain a region enriched in proline, glutamate, serine and threonine (PEST sequences) towards the N-terminal end while annexins II, V and VI possess PEST regions somewhat distal to the N-terminus. These PEST sequences are believed to be the signals for rapid intracellular degradation. Annexin I is known to be cleaved by calpain near its PEST region suggesting that its PEST region might be a possible calpain recognition site. Western blot analysis of annexins V and XI in rat lung homogenates suggest that these proteins are resistant to proteolysis by calpain. Annexin V was found to be stable to intrinsic lung proteases in the presence of either Ca2+ or EGTA while annexin XI was found to be partially degraded by intrinsic lung proteases in the presence of EGTA. Eight of the 10 known mammalian annexins also contain a pentapeptide sequence that is biochemically related to the KFERQ motif which is a known signal that targets protein for lysosomal proteolysis. Our data suggest that the annexins may be regulated by limited proteolysis, most likely at their N-terminal end, while most, if not all, of them might be degraded by the lysosomal pathway.
Mol Cell Biochem 2002 Feb
PMID:Proteolytic signals in the primary structure of annexins. 1195 51

We identified a novel mouse gene, mRTVP-1, as a p53 target gene using differential display PCR and extensive promoter analysis. The mRTVP-1 protein has 255 amino acids and differs from the human RTVP-1 (hRTVP-1) protein by two short in-frame deletions of two and nine amino acids. RTVP-1 mRNA was induced in multiple cancer cell lines by adenovirus-mediated delivery of p53 and by gamma irradiation or doxorubicin both in the presence and in the absence of endogenous p53. Analysis of RTVP-1 expression in nontransformed and transformed cells further supported p53-independent gene regulation. Using luciferase reporter and electrophoretic mobility shift assays we identified a p53 binding site within intron 1 of the mRTVP-1 gene. Overexpression of mRTVP-1 or hRTVP-1 induced apoptosis in multiple cancer cell lines including prostate cancer cell lines 148-1PA, 178-2BMA, PC-3, TSU-Pr1, and LNCaP, a human lung cancer cell line, H1299, and two isogenic human colon cancer cell lines, HCT116 p53(+/+) and HCT116 p53(-/-), as demonstrated by annexin V positivity, phase-contrast microscopy, and in selected cases 4',6'-diamidino-2-phenylindole staining and DNA fragmentation. Deletion of the signal peptide from the N terminus of RTVP-1 reduced its apoptotic activities, suggesting that a secreted and soluble form of RTVP-1 may mediate, in part, its proapoptotic activities.
Mol Cell Biol 2002 May
PMID:mRTVP-1, a novel p53 target gene with proapoptotic activities. 1197 68

Xanthomonas campestris pv. glycines strain AM2 (XcgAM2), the aetiological agent of bacterial pustule disease of soybean, as well as some other strains of Xanthomonas including X. campestris pv. malvacearum NCIM 2310 and X. campestris NCIM 2961, exhibited post-exponential rapid cell death (RCD) in Luria-Bertani (LB) medium. RCD was not displayed by Xanthomonas strains while growing in starch medium. Addition of starch to LB culture of XcgAM2 at any point of incubation during the exponential growth was found to arrest the onset of RCD. RCD in this organism was found to be associated with the synthesis of an endogenous enzyme similar to human caspase-3, a known marker of apoptosis in eukaryotes. On sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel elecrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) the XcgAM2 caspase appeared to run along a 55 kDa protein molecular weight marker. The caspase-3-like protein was detected in all Xanthomonas strains tested. RCD was not detected in Escherichia coli cultures in LB medium. The caspase-3-like enzyme activity or pro-tein was also found to be absent in this bacterium. Caspase-3-like protein or Xanthomonas caspase was detected only in the cells of XcgAM2 growing in LB medium and not in those growing in starch medium. The Xanthomonas caspase protein appeared in cells at around 4 h of incubation, and peaked at around 24 h, before finally disappearing at around 54 h of incubation. However, caspase enzyme activity was detected only 12-13 h after incubation and peaked around 18-20 h. Addition of starch at the beginning or during the period of exponential growth in LB cultures of XcgAM2 terminated the synthesis of this protein. It is presumed that starch acted as the repressor of biosynthesis of the Xanthomonas caspase, thereby preventing the organism from undergoing RCD. The cells undergoing RCD also displayed the other markers of eukaryotic apoptosis. These included binding of annexin V to plasma membrane of cells undergoing RCD and the presence of nicked DNA in culture supernatant as evidenced by the TUNEL (terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase dUTP nick-end labelling) assay. Caspase-negative mutants of XcgAM2 did not display post-exponential RCD. The importance of RCD in Xanthomonas life cycle is not yet clear, however the phenomenon appears to have similarities with eukaryotic apoptosis.
Mol Microbiol 2002 Apr
PMID:Involvement of caspase-3-like protein in rapid cell death of Xanthomonas. 1197 78

We investigated the time-dependence of apoptotic events in EL4 cells by monitoring plasma membrane changes in correlation to DNA fragmentation and cell shrinkage. We applied three apoptosis inducers (staurosporine, tubericidine and X-rays) and we looked at various markers to follow the early-to-late apoptotic events: phospholipid translocation (identified through annexin V-fluorescein assay and propidium iodide), lipid package (via merocyanine assay), membrane fluidity and anisotropy (via fluorescent measurements), DNA fragmentation by the fluorescence-labeling test and cell size measurements. The different apoptotic inducers caused different reactions of the cells: staurosporine induced apoptosis most rapidly in a high number of cells, tubercidine triggered apoptosis only in the S phase cells, while X-rays caused a G2/M arrest and subsequently apoptosis. Loss of lipid asymmetry is promptly detectable after one hour of incubation time. The phosphatidylserine translocation, decrease of lipid package and anisotropy, and the increase of membrane fluidity appeared to be based on the same process of lipid asymmetry loss. Therefore, the DNA fragmentation and the cell shrinkage appear to be parallel and independent processes running on different time scales but which are kinetically inter-related. The results indicate different signal steps to apoptosis dependent on inducer characteristics but the kinetics of "early-to-late" apoptosis appears to be a fixed program.
J Cell Mol Med
PMID:Kinetics of apoptotic markers in exogeneously induced apoptosis of EL4 cells. 1200 71


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