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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (Mol)
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We characterized the basis for the follicular lymphoproliferation in transgenic mice bearing a Bcl-2-immunoglobulin (Bcl-2-Ig) minigene representing the t(14;18) of human follicular lymphoma. Discriminatory S1 nuclease protection assays revealed that the Bcl-2-Ig transgene was overexpressed relative to endogenous mouse Bcl-2 in spleen and thymus. Western (immunoblot) analysis demonstrated the overproduction of the human 25-kilodalton Bcl-2 protein, which arose from the transgene, in spleen, thymus, and the expanded B-cell subset. Despite the generalized lymphoid pattern of deregulation, two-color flow cytometry and density gradient centrifugation indicated that the expanded lymphocytes were predominantly small, resting B cells coexpressing B220, immunoglobulin M (IgM), IgD, Ia, and kappa. Cell cycle analysis confirmed that about 97% of these expanded B cells reside in G0/G1. An extensive characterization of transgenic lines revealed a fourfold excess of IgM-IgD-expressing B cells in spleen and dramatically increased numbers in bone marrow. While resting, these cells proliferated in response to lipopolysaccharide and anti-IgM and demonstrated normal B-cell colony formation in soft agar. Moreover, these B cells, which demonstrated an extended survival in vitro even in the absence of stroma, were also resting in G0, yet were capable of proliferative responses. These findings provide consistent evidence that the accumulation of B cells after Bcl-2 overproduction is secondary to prolonged cell survival and not increased cell cycling. This suggests a unique role for Bcl-2 as a proto-oncogene that enhances cell survival independent of promoting cell division.
Mol Cell Biol 1990 May
PMID:Deregulated Bcl-2-immunoglobulin transgene expands a resting but responsive immunoglobulin M and D-expressing B-cell population. 218 11

We have identified a 24-kilodalton protein that is the product of the human bcl-2 gene, implicated as an oncogene because of its presence at the site of t(14;18) translocation breakpoints. The Bcl-2 protein was detected by specific, highly sensitive rabbit antibodies and was shown to be present in a number of human lymphoid cell lines and tissues, as well as in mouse B cells transfected with a bcl-2 cDNA construct. Characterization of the Bcl-2 protein demonstrated that it has a lipophilic nature and is associated with membrane structures, probably by means of its hydrophobic carboxy-terminal membrane-spanning domain. In t(14;18)-carrying cell lines, the protein is predominantly localized to the perinuclear endoplasmic reticulum, with a minor fraction in the plasma membrane. These properties, together with the observations that Bcl-2 does not have a characteristic signal peptide and is not glycosylated, suggest that it is an integral-membrane protein that spans the bilayer at its C-terminal hydrophobic region but is exposed only at the cytoplasmic surface. The relative abundance of the Bcl-2 protein in various human lymphoid cell lines correlated with transcription of the bcl-2 gene. The protein was abundant in all t(14;18)-carrying cell lines and lymphomas and was also found at lower levels in pre-B-cell lines and nonmalignant lymphoid tissues that do not carry t(14;18) translocations. These results suggest that the Bcl-2 protein is functional in normal B lymphocytes and that a quantitative difference in its expression may play a role in the pathogenesis of lymphomas carrying the t(14;18) translocation.
Mol Cell Biol 1989 Feb
PMID:The bcl-2 candidate proto-oncogene product is a 24-kilodalton integral-membrane protein highly expressed in lymphoid cell lines and lymphomas carrying the t(14;18) translocation. 265 3

Bcl-2 can rescue neurons from death and might, therefore, exert its action by associating with neuron-specific proteins. Using LexA-Bcl-2 as bait, we find that the cellular prion protein (PrP) interacts with Bcl-2, but not Bax, in the yeast two-hybrid system. Since the PrP gene has been implicated in neurodegenerative disorders, this preliminary observation suggests a potential pathogenic mechanism for these conditions.
Brain Res Mol Brain Res 1995 May
PMID:The cellular prion protein (PrP) selectively binds to Bcl-2 in the yeast two-hybrid system. 760 38

The adenovirus E1A oncogene products stimulate DNA synthesis and cell proliferation but fail to transform primary baby rat kidney (BRK) cells because of the induction of p53-mediated programmed cell death (apoptosis). Overexpression of dominant mutant p53 (to abrogate wild-type p53 function) or introduction of apoptosis inhibitors, such as adenovirus E1B 19K or Bcl-2 oncoproteins, prevents E1A-induced apoptosis and permits transformation of BRK cells. The ability of activated Harvey-ras (H-ras) to cooperate with E1A to transform BRK cells suggests that H-ras is capable of overcoming the E1A-induced, p53-dependent apoptosis. We demonstrate here that activated H-ras was capable of suppressing apoptosis induced by E1A and wild-type p53. However, unlike Bcl-2 and the E1B 19K proteins, which completely block apoptosis but not p53-dependent growth arrest, H-ras expression permitted DNA synthesis and cell proliferation in the presence of high levels of wild-type p53. The mechanism by which H-ras regulates apoptosis and cell cycle progression is thereby strikingly different from that of the E1B 19K and Bcl-2 proteins. BRK cells transformed with H-ras and the temperature sensitive murine mutant p53(val 135), which lack E1A, underwent growth arrest at the permissive temperature for wild-type p53. p53-dependent growth arrest, however, could be relieved by E1A expression. Thus, H-ras alone was insufficient and cooperation of H-ras and E1A was required to override growth suppression by p53. Our data further suggest that two complementary growth signals from E1A plus H-ras can rescue cell death and thus permit transformation.
Mol Cell Biol 1995 Aug
PMID:Activated H-ras rescues E1A-induced apoptosis and cooperates with E1A to overcome p53-dependent growth arrest. 762 44

Expression of c-myc and macromolecular synthesis have been associated with physiological cell death. We have studied their requirement for the death of factor (interleukin-3)-dependent cells (FDC-P1) bearing an inducible bcl-2 expression construct. FDC-P1 cells expressing bcl-2 turned off expression of c-myc when deprived of interleukin-3 but remained viable as long as bcl-2 was maintained. A subsequent decline in Bcl-2 allowed the cells to undergo apoptosis directly from G0, in the absence of detectable c-myc expression. Thus c-myc expression may lead to apoptosis in some cases but is not directly involved in the mechanism of physiological cell death that can be controlled by Bcl-2. The macromolecular synthesis inhibitors actinomycin D and cycloheximide triggered rapid cell death of FDC-P1 cells in the presence of interleukin-3, but the cells could be protected by Bcl-2. Thus, the cell death machinery can exist in a quiescent state and can be activated by mechanisms that do not require synthesis of RNA or protein.
Mol Cell Biol 1993 Nov
PMID:Neither macromolecular synthesis nor myc is required for cell death via the mechanism that can be controlled by Bcl-2. 769 34

The bcl-2 gene is differentially regulated during B-cell development, with low-level expression in pre-B cells and higher-level expression in mature B cells. These changes correlate with susceptibility to cell death by apoptosis and suggest that the Bcl-2 protein may play a role in the control of cell death during B-cell development. We have identified two negative regulatory regions in the human bcl-2 5' flanking and 5' untranslated regions in pre-B cells; these regions have no significant function in mature B cells. Further investigation of these regions revealed two pre-B-cell-specific enhancer elements (pi 1 sites) in the 5' negative regulatory region and one in the 3' negative regulatory region. Mutational analysis confirmed that these three sites functioned as negative regulators of the bcl-2 promoter in the pre-B-cell line Nalm-6. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays with each of the three sites demonstrated a complex of identical mobility to that formed with the immunoglobulin heavy-chain enhancer pi 1 site. UV cross-linking experiments revealed that a protein with a molecular mass of 58 kDa bound to the three bcl-2 sites and to the immunoglobulin enhancer site. This protein reacted with an antibody against Ets family proteins. Constructs with the isolated pi 1 sites linked to the simian virus 40 promoter were used in transient transfection experiments in the pre-B-cell line. The bcl-2 sites decreased expression of the simian virus 40 promoter, while the immunoglobulin enhancer site increased its expression. The pi 1 sites in the bcl-2 gene may play a role in the developmental regulation of bcl-2 expression during B-cell differentiation.
Mol Cell Biol 1995 Jul
PMID:Pi 1 binding sites are negative regulators of bcl-2 expression in pre-B cells. 779 91

In this report, we show that the overexpression of tissue transglutaminase (tTG) in the human neuroblastoma cell line SK-N-BE(2) renders these neural crest-derived cells highly susceptible to death by apoptosis. Cells transfected with a full-length tTG cDNA, under the control of a constitutive promoter, show a drastic reduction in proliferative capacity paralleled by a large increase in cell death rate. The dying tTG-transfected cells exhibit both cytoplasmic and nuclear changes characteristic of cells undergoing apoptosis. The tTG-transfected cells express high Bcl-2 protein levels as well as phenotypic neural cell adhesion molecule markers (NCAM and neurofilaments) of cells differentiating along the neuronal pathway. In keeping with these findings, transfection of neuroblastoma cells with an expression vector containing segments of the human tTG cDNA in antisense orientation resulted in a pronounced decrease of both spontaneous and retinoic acid (RA)-induced apoptosis. We also present evidence that (i) the apoptotic program of these neuroectodermal cells is strictly regulated by RA and (ii) cell death by apoptosis in the human neuroblastoma SK-N-BE(2) cells preferentially occurs in the substrate-adherent phenotype. For the first time, we report here a direct effect of tTG in the phenotypic maturation toward apoptosis. These results indicate that the tTG-dependent irreversible cross-linking of intracellular protein represents an important biochemical event in the induction of the structural changes featuring cells dying by apoptosis.
Mol Cell Biol 1994 Oct
PMID:Tissue transglutaminase and apoptosis: sense and antisense transfection studies with human neuroblastoma cells. 793 79

Etoposide (VP-16) is one of several DNA-damaging agents that induce subcellular structural changes associated with apoptosis. VP-16 exerts its DNA-damaging and cytotoxic effects subsequent to interference with DNA topoisomerase II activity. VP-16 also stimulates c-jun and c-fos mRNA expression in some cell lines, including human leukemia K562 and HL-60 cells. To compare the temporal relationship between drug-induced c-jun expression and apoptosis, we examined cell morphology, cell viability, DNA integrity, and c-jun induction during VP-16 treatment of K562 and HL-60 cells. VP-16 (10 microM)-induced internucleosomal DNA damage and nuclear fragmentation were readily apparent within 6 hr in HL-60 cells but were absent in K562 cells treated for up to 24 hr. Some internucleosomal DNA damage was observed in K562 cells but only after treatment with 100 microM VP-16 for 24 hr. In contrast, VP-16-induced DNA single-strand breaks, VP-16-induced topoisomerase II/DNA covalent complex formation, and VP-16-mediated growth inhibition were similar in K562 and HL-60 cells. Also, the time course of VP-16-induced c-jun mRNA expression was comparable for both K562 and HL-60 cell lines. Western blot analysis of whole-cell lysates showed that Bcl-2 protein levels were 13-fold greater in HL-60 cells than in K562 cells. Thus, the resistance of VP-16-treated K562 cells to apoptosis was not attributable to protection by Bcl-2. Furthermore, the relatively high levels of Bcl-2 in HL-60 cells were not sufficient to protect these cells against apoptosis. Together, our results indicate that the temporal coupling of VP-16-induced DNA damage, c-jun expression, and apoptosis is cell type specific and suggest that different signaling pathways for apoptosis are operating in these two human leukemia cell lines.
Mol Pharmacol 1994 Oct
PMID:Differential induction of etoposide-mediated apoptosis in human leukemia HL-60 and K562 cells. 796 39

Adenovirus E1A expression recruits primary rodent cells into proliferation but fails to transform them because of the induction of programmed cell death (apoptosis). The adenovirus E1B 19,000-molecular-weight protein (19K protein), the E1B 55K protein, and the human Bcl-2 protein each cause high-frequency transformation when coexpressed with E1A by inhibiting apoptosis. Thus, transformation of primary rodent cells by E1A requires deregulation of cell growth to be coupled to suppression of apoptosis. The product of the p53 tumor suppressor gene induces apoptosis in transformed cells and is required for induction of apoptosis by E1A. The ability of Bcl-2 to suppress apoptosis induced by E1A suggested that Bcl-2 may function by inhibition of p53. Rodent cells transformed with E1A plus the p53(Val-135) temperature-sensitive mutant are transformed at the restrictive temperature and undergo rapid and complete apoptosis at the permissive temperature when p53 adopts the wild-type conformation. Human Bcl-2 expression completely prevented p53-mediated apoptosis at the permissive temperature and caused cells to remain in a predominantly growth-arrested state. Growth arrest was leaky, occurred at multiple points in the cell cycle, and was reversible. Bcl-2 did not affect the ability of p53 to localize to the nucleus, nor were the levels of the p53 protein altered. Thus, Bcl-2 diverts the activity of p53 from induction of apoptosis to induction of growth arrest, and it is thereby identified as a modifier of p53 function. The ability of Bcl-2 to bypass induction of apoptosis by p53 may contribute to its oncogenic and antiapoptotic activity.
Mol Cell Biol 1994 Apr
PMID:Bcl-2 blocks p53-dependent apoptosis. 813 58

The product of the c-myc proto-oncogene is an important positive regulator of cell growth and proliferation. Recently, c-Myc has also been demonstrated to be a potent inducer of apoptosis when expressed in the absence of serum or growth factors. To further examine Myc-induced apoptosis, we coexpressed the proto-oncogene bcl2, which has been shown to block apoptosis in other systems, with c-myc in serum-deprived Rat 1a fibroblasts. Here we report that ectopic expression of bcl2 specifically blocks apoptosis induced by constitutive c-myc expression. Constitutive c-myc expression in serum-deprived Rat 1a cells caused a > 15-fold increase in the number of dead cells, accompanied by DNA fragmentation. However, coexpression of bcl2 with c-myc in these cells led to a 10-fold increase in the number of live cells and a significant decrease in DNA fragmentation. Thus, Bcl-2 effectively inhibits Myc-induced apoptosis in serum-deprived Rat 1a fibroblasts without blocking entry into the cell cycle. These results imply that apoptosis serves as a protective mechanism to prevent tumorigenicity elicited by deregulated Myc expression. This protective mechanism is abrogated, however, by Bcl-2 and therefore may explain the synergism between Myc and Bcl-2 observed in certain tumor cells.
Mol Cell Biol 1993 Apr
PMID:Myc-mediated apoptosis is blocked by ectopic expression of Bcl-2. 845 20


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