Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P10415 (Bcl-2)
33,771 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The impact of the immunomodulatory photosensitizer benzoporphyrin derivative monoacid ring A (BPD-MA, verteporfin) and visible light on the survival and surface receptor pattern of resting and activated murine T cells was evaluated. T cells treated for 48 h with immobilized anti-CD3 monoclonal antibody upregulated expression of the interleukin-2 receptor alpha-chain (CD25), transferrin receptor (CD71), the apoptosis-regulating Fas receptor (CD95), contained a greater level of the anti-apoptotic protein Bcl-2 and accumulated significantly more BPD-MA than their unactivated counterparts. Activated T cells displayed a modestly greater susceptibility to the photodynamic induction of DNA fragmentation than resting T cells. Resting T cells treated with sub-lethal levels of BPD-MA and light did not exhibit changes in surface levels of CD3, CD4, CD8, CD28, CD45 or T cell receptor (TCR) beta-chain structures. However, levels of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I antigens were decreased while the density of Thy-1.2 (CD90) increased on these cells. Photodynamically treated T cells failed to express optimal CD25 levels when exposed to the mitogenic anti-CD3 antibody. Activated T cells treated with sub-lethal levels of BPD-MA and light exhibited lower CD25 levels, a temporary block in cell cycle transition, but unaltered expression of MHC Class I, CD3, CD4, CD8, CD45, CD54, CD71, CD122 (IL-2R beta-chain) or TCR beta-chain antigens 24 h afterward. Resting and activated T lymphocytes differ in susceptibility to PDT-mediated apoptosis but both types are sensitive to anti-proliferative effects the treatment exerts at sub-lethal photosensitizer levels. The marked sensitivity of activated T cells to photodynamic inactivation likely contributes to the immunomodulatory action of BPD-MA.
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PMID:Consequences of the photodynamic treatment of resting and activated peripheral T lymphocytes. 995 Feb 67

Treatment with the photosensitizer benzoporphyrin derivative monoacid ring A (BPD-MA, verteporfin) followed by irradiation with visible light induces apoptosis in human acute myelogenous leukaemia HL-60 cells. Photoactivation of BPD-MA induces procaspase 3 (CPP32/Yama/apopain) and procaspase 6 (Mch2) cleavage into their proteolytically active subunits in these cells. The Bcl-2 proto-oncogene product has been shown to protect cells from a number of proapoptotic stimuli. In the present study, the influence of Bcl-2 overexpression on cellular resistance to photoactivation of BPD-MA was studied. Overexpression of Bcl-2 in HL-60 cells prevented apoptosis-related events including caspase 3 and 6 activation, poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase cleavage and the formation of hypodiploid DNA produced by BPD-MA (0-200 ng ml(-1)) and light. However, Bcl-2 overexpression was less effective at preventing cell death that occurred after photoactivation at high levels (50-100 ng ml(-1)) compared with lower doses (10-25 ng ml(-1)) of BPD-MA. These results indicate that caspase 3 and 6 activation and their regulation by Bcl-2 may play important roles in photodynamic therapy (PDT)-induced cell killing.
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PMID:Bcl-2 overexpression blocks caspase activation and downstream apoptotic events instigated by photodynamic therapy. 1040 99