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Query: UNIPROT:P10415 (
Bcl-2
)
33,771
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Bcl-2
protein is one of the major apoptosis regulators. The study examines the effect of
Bcl-2
protein on the chemosensitivity of a human
hepatocellular carcinoma
cell line, QGY-7703. Western blot analysis showed that
Bcl-2
and Bax proteins were expressed in QGY-7703 cells. Characteristic features of Taxol- and doxorubicin-induced apoptosis were evidenced by the Annexin-V binding assay, TUNEL and DAPI staining. At constant Bax protein levels, stable sense and antisense gene-transfected QGY-7703 cells showed that constitutive expression of
Bcl-2
could render the cells more resistant to Taxol and doxorubicin. Contrarily, decreased
Bcl-2
levels caused the cells to be more sensitive to the drugs. As
Bcl-2
levels are directly proportional to the resistance of QGY-7703 cells to Taxol and doxorubicin, manipulation of
Bcl-2
could be performed to enhance the sensitivity of liver cancer to chemotherapeutic agents.
...
PMID:Chemosensitivity of human hepatocellular carcinoma cell line QGY-7703 is related to bcl-2 protein levels. 1056 79
p21, a potent cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor, has been known to induce cell cycle arrest in response to DNA-damaging agents. Although p21 has been reported to play an important role in the regulation of apoptosis, the postulated role for p21 in apoptosis is still controversial. Previously, we reported that p21 was induced in a p53-independent manner during ceramide-induced apoptosis in human
hepatocarcinoma
cell lines. In the present study, we investigated the precise role of p21 in ceramide-induced apoptosis in human
hepatocarcinoma
cells by using a tetracycline-inducible expression system. Overexpression of p21 by itself did not induce apoptosis in p53-deficient Hep3B cells. However, Hep3B/p21 cells were more sensitive to ceramide-induced apoptosis. In these cells, p21 overexpression did not result in G1 arrest. The expression level of Bax was increased in Hep3B/p21 cells treated with ceramide and its expression was more accelerated under the p21-overexpressed condition compared to that of the p21-repressed condition. Overexpression of Bax induced apoptosis in Hep3B cells. On the other hand, the levels of p21 and Bax protein were increased by ceramide in another
hepatocarcinoma
cell line, SK-Hep-1, while the
Bcl-2
protein level was not changed. Overexpression of
Bcl-2
not only suppressed apoptosis but also completely prevented induction of p21 and Bax caused by ceramide in SK-Hep-1 cells. Furthermore, overexpression of p21 antagonized the death-protective function of
Bcl-2
and upregulated expression of Bax protein. These results suggest that p21 promotes ceramide-induced apoptosis by enhancing the expression of Bax, thereby modulating the molecular ratio of
Bcl-2
:Bax in human
hepatocarcinoma
cells.
...
PMID:p21 promotes ceramide-induced apoptosis and antagonizes the antideath effect of Bcl-2 in human hepatocarcinoma cells. 1058 63
Immunocytochemistry has indicated that, in the liver, the bcl-2 gene is generally expressed in bile duct cells and tumors of biliary origin. Both in situ hybridization and immunocytochemistry were used to analyze the expression of bcl-2 messenger RNA (mRNA) and its protein product (
Bcl-2
) in the tissue of 50 pure primary liver tumor (PLT) specimens including 40
hepatocellular carcinoma
(
HCC
) specimens and 10 cholangiocellular carcinoma (CC) specimens. The phenotype of the tumors expressing bcl-2 was confirmed by immunocytochemical assessment of the cytokeratin (CK) profile (CK8, CK18, CK7, and CK19). Whereas positive immunoreaction with the anti-
Bcl-2
MoAb was revealed in only 8 (20%) of 40
HCC
specimens and 1 (10%) of 10 CC specimens, high contents of bcl-2 mRNA were found in 26 (65%) of 40
HCC
specimens and 9 (90%) of 10 CC specimens. Regarding the CK profile, only 25 (62%) of 40
HCC
specimens showed pure hepatocytic lineage (CKs 8-18), whereas among the remaining 15
HCC
specimens, positivity for either CK7 (12 specimens) or CK19 (5 specimens) was observed. All 10 CC specimens stained with CKs 8-18-19, and 8 of 10 stained with CK 7 as well. These results indicate that PLTs display a greater expression of bcl-2 mRNA than of the
Bcl-2
protein. Furthermore, CK profile assessment confirmed that bcl-2 expression is not confined to liver tumors of biliary origin. In the absence of a well-demonstrated post-transcriptional control of the gene, the authors propose the detection of bcl-2 mRNA by in situ hybridization as a possible alternative method for assessing the expression of bcl-2 mRNA in PLT.
...
PMID:High levels of BCL-2 messenger RNA detected by in situ hybridization in human hepatocellular and cholangiocellular carcinomas. 1061 75
Expression of the
Bcl-2
family members in a human
hepatocellular carcinoma
cell line (
HCC
-T) after sodium butyrate-treatment was investigated. Sodium butyrate, a histone deacetylase inhibitor, induced differentiation of the cell line into its normal counterpart without inducing apoptosis at the concentration of 2 mmol/l. Since sodium butyrate has effects on both differentiation and apoptosis, we investigated the expression profile of bcl-2 related genes in
HCC
-T. The expression of
Bcl-2
and Mcl-1/EAT was up-regulated 4-12 h after the treatment while Bcl-XL was up-regulated 2-3 days after the stimulation. On the other hand, the expression levels of Bax protein remained unchanged during differentiation. The
HCC
-T cells entered a cell cycle arrest at G1 and showed neither cellular fragmentation nor apoptosis during this period, which was concomitantly associated with up-regulated expression of a cell cycle regulator, p21WAF-1. These results demonstrate that induction of anti-apoptotic bcl-2 related proteins at an early stage of differentiation is important for the maintenance of
HCC
-T cell differentiation by antagonizing pro-apoptotic molecules such as Bax.
...
PMID:Bcl-2 related proteins are dramatically induced at the early stage of differentiation in human liver cancer cells by a histone deacetylase inhibitor projecting an anti-apoptotic role during this period. 1067 72
Dibutyryl cyclic AMP (DBcAMP) was previously reported to enhance the down-regulation of the retinoblastoma (RB) protein during G1 phase in proliferating primary rat hepatocytes, but to inhibit their entry into S phase and RB phosphorylation. In the present study, DBcAMP was also found to enhance the down-regulation of RB protein in the human
hepatoma
cells PLC/PRF/5 after hydroxyurea-induced synchronization at G1/S phase. One hour after synchronization, CPP32 activity was detected in the cells and was further enhanced in the presence of DBcAMP. CPP32-specific cleavage of the RB protein was also detected and enhanced by the addition of DBcAMP in a dose-dependent manner. DNA analysis by flow cytometry after serum starvation-induced synchronization at G0/G1 phase revealed that DBcAMP elicited an apoptotic peak after the S phase. Based on these findings, DBcAMP was suspected of inducing apoptosis by RB protein degradation during G1/S transition and thereby inhibit the growth of PLC/PRF/5 cells. Under serum-deficient culture conditions, addition of the CPP32 inhibitor DEVD or the ICE inhibitor YVAD enhanced cell growth but did not abolish the DBcAMP-induced growth inhibition. On the other hand, antisense oligodeoxynucleotides against
Bcl-2
mRNA showed a growth inhibitory effect on PLC/PRF/5 cells, but did not show an additive effect on the DBcAMP-induced growth inhibition. DBcAMP itself inhibited bcl-2 protein expression. DBcAMP-induced growth inhibition may be mediated by different mechanisms, including apoptosis.
...
PMID:Dibutyryl cyclic AMP-induced enhancement of RB protein degradation in human hepatoma cells. 1069 31
Epidemiology shows a clear correlation between chronic infection with the hepatitis B virus (HBV) and development of
hepatocellular carcinoma
(
HCC
). The potential role of the transactivating hepatitis B virus X protein (HBx) in transformation by HBV is controversial. Here we report that HBx suppresses transformation of primary rat embryo fibroblasts (REFs). Cooperating oncogenes like c-Ha-ras and c-myc transform REF very efficiently but cotransfection with HBx suppressed transformation of REFs down to 5%. Similarly, transfection of HBx together with the cooperating oncogenes Ha-ras and SV40 LTAg or c-Ha-ras and mutant p53 reduced the number of foci to 13%. Comparable results were obtained with HBx in the context of the whole HBV. Suppression of focus formation in REF could be partly relieved by cotransfection of apoptosis inhibitors
Bcl-2
or E1B. However, cotransfection of apoptosis inhibitors crmA and p35 did not influence the proapoptotic functions of HBx. Thus, HBx may specifically activate the
Bcl-2
sensitive pathway leading to apoptosis. Experiments with 13 HBx linker scanning mutants revealed that the domains necessary for HBx dependent transactivation overlap with the domains needed for the apoptotic/growth arrest functions of HBx.
...
PMID:Induction of apoptosis by the transactivating domains of the hepatitis B virus X gene leads to suppression of oncogenic transformation of primary rat embryo fibroblasts. 1071 5
Fas-induced apoptosis is one form of programmed cell death responsible for hepatocyte demise. However, the role of this cell surface receptor in the death of tumoral hepatic cells is still being debated. It has been shown that some
hepatoma
cell lines may escape apoptosis because of abnormal Fas localization correlated with non-functionality of the Fas protein or dysfunctionality in the Fas pathway cascade. The aim of this study was to investigate the behaviour of four
hepatoma
cell lines, HepG2, Hep3B, SKHep1 and Chang-Liver and two extrahepatic cell lines, MCF7, a mammary tumoral cell line and OVCAR-3, an ovarian tumoral cell line, when they were treated with an agonistic anti-Fas antibody alone, with interferon gamma (IFNgamma), an up-regulator of Fas protein expression, alone or with a combination of both agents. We first performed immunofluorescence and flow cytometry to confirm that Fas was present on the cell surface of each cell line in the normal state. Apoptosis was then investigated after induction with the various treatments, by DAPI staining, agarose gel DNA electrophoresis and PARP cleavage. Caspase 8 and 3 expression, as well as two anti-apoptotic proteins
Bcl-2
and HSP70, and one proapoptotic protein Bax were also investigated by immunoblot allowing identification of several apoptotic pathways based on the behaviour of the different studied proteins. HepG2 and OVCAR-3 cells were sensitive to the anti-Fas antibody alone. Hep3B was resistant to Fas-induced apoptosis but sensitive to IFNgamma-induced apoptosis. MCF7 was resistant to anti-Fas antibody and IFNgamma Chang-Liver and SKHep1 were sensitive to IFNgamma and anti-Fas antibody but at different degrees. Chang-Liver used the Fas and IFNgamma pathways, while SKHep1 involved mostly the Fas pathway. These results show that each tumor cell line is characterized by different apoptotic behaviour in relation to Fas and/or IFNgamma-induced apoptosis. In addition, despite the high level of
Bcl-2
and HSP70 proteins in the tumoral cells investigated here, they were not fully protected against apoptosis, except for MCF7. This emphasizes the necessity to analyse the different proteins responsible for apoptosis to adapt anti-tumoral therapeutics.
...
PMID:Apoptotic behaviour of hepatic and extra-hepatic tumor cell lines differs after Fas stimulation. 1072 68
Programmed cell death (apoptosis), a form of cell death, described by Kerr and Wyllie some 20 years ago, has generated considerable interest in recent years. The mechanisms by which this mode of cell death (seen both in animal and plant cells), takes place have been examined in detail. Extracellular signals and intracellular events have been elaborated. Of interest to the clinician, is the concentrated effort to study pharmacological modulation of programmed cell death. The attempt to influence the natural phenomenon of programmed cell death stems from the fact that it is reduced (like in cancer) or increased (like in neurodegenerative diseases) in several clinical situations. Thus, chemicals that can modify programmed cell death are likely to be potentially useful drugs. From foxglove, which gave digitalis to the Pacific Yew from which came taxol, plants have been a source of research material for useful drugs. Recently, a variety of plant extracts have been investigated for their ability to influence the apoptotic process. This article discusses some of the interesting data. The ability of plants to influence programmed cell death in cancerous cells in an attempt to arrest their proliferation has been the topic of much research. Various cell-lines like HL60, human
hepatocellular carcinoma
cell line (KIM-1), a cholangiocarcinoma cell-line (KMC-1), B-cell hybridomas, U937 a monocytic cell-line, HeLa cells, human lymphoid leukemia (MOLT-4B) cells and K562 cells have been studied. The agents found to induce programmed cell death (measured either morphologically or flow cytometrically) included extracts of plants like mistletoe and Semicarpus anacardium. Isolated compounds like bryonolic acid (from Trichosanthes kirilowii var. Japonica, crocin (from saffron) and allicin (from Allium sativum) have also been found to induce programmed cell death and therefore arrest proliferation. Even Chinese herbal medicine "Sho-saiko-to" induces programmed cell death in selected cancerous cell lines. Of considerable interest is the finding that Panax ginseng prevents irradiation-induced programmed cell death in hair follicles, suggesting important therapeutic implications. Nutraceuticals (dietary plants) like soya bean, garlic, ginger, green tea, etc. which have been suggested, in epidemiological studies, to reduce the incidence of cancer may do so by inducing programmed cell death. Soy bean extracts have been shown to prevent development of diseases like polycystic kidneys, while Artemisia asiatica attenuates cerulein-induced pancreatitis in rats. Interestingly enough, a number of food items as well as herbal medicines have been reported to produce toxic effects by inducing programmed cell death. For example, programmed cell death in isolated rat hepatocytes has been implicated in the hepatitis induced by a herbal medicine containing diterpinoids from germander. Other studies suggest that rapid progression of the betel- and tobacco-related oral squamous cell carcinomas may be associated with a simultaneous involvement of p53 and c-myc leading to inhibition of programmed cell death. Several mechanisms have been identified to underlie the modulation of programmed cell death by plants including endonuclease activation, induction of p53, activation of caspase 3 protease via a
Bcl-2
-insensitive pathway, potentiate free-radical formation and accumulation of sphinganine. Programmed cell death is a highly conserved mechanism of self-defense, also found to occur in plants. Hence, it is natural to assume that chemicals must exist in them to regulate programmed cell death in them. Thus, plants are likely to prove to be important sources of agents that will modulate programmed cell death.
...
PMID:Modulation of programmed cell death by medicinal plants. 1072 85
Molecular mechanisms of basal and D-amphetamine (AMPH)-induced apoptosis were studied in rat liver nodules, 12 (N12) and 30 (N30) weeks after initiation, and in
hepatocellular carcinoma
(
HCC
) induced by diethylnitrosamine in rats subjected to resistant hepatocyte model. Basal apoptosis in hematoxylin/eosin- and propidium iodide-stained sections was higher in nodules and
HCC
than in normal livers. It sharply increased in all tissues 4 hours after AMPH treatment (10 mg/kg), and declined to basal levels at 8 to 12 hours in liver and N12, but remained high up to 18 hours in N30 and
HCC
. c-myc, Tgf-alpha, p53, and Bcl-X(S) messenger RNA (mRNA) levels were higher, and
Bcl-2
mRNA was lower in N12 and/or N30 and
HCC
than in normal liver. Four hours after AMPH injection, increase in c-myc and decreases in
Bcl-2
and Bcl-X(L) mRNAs occurred in all tissues, whereas p53, Bax, and Bcl-X(S) mRNAs increased in N30 and
HCC
. These changes disappeared in liver and N12 at 18 hours, but persisted in N30 and
HCC
. c-Myc, P53,
Bcl-2
, and Bax proteins in normal liver and
HCC
+/- AMPH showed similar patterns. Tgf-beta1, Tgf-beta-RIII, CD95, and CD95L mRNA levels underwent slight or no changes in any tissue +/- AMPH. Basal Hsp27 expression was high in nodules and
HCC
, and was stimulated by AMPH in liver and N12, but not in N30 and
HCC
. These data suggest a role of dysregulation of
Bcl-2
family genes and, at least in atypical lesions, of p53 overexpression, in basal and AMPH-induced apoptosis in nodules and HCCs. Hsp27 does not appear to sufficiently protect atypical lesions against apoptosis.
...
PMID:Implication of Bcl-2 family genes in basal and D-amphetamine-induced apoptosis in preneoplastic and neoplastic rat liver lesions. 1073 53
Glucocorticoids are primarily recognized for their profound anti-inflammatory actions and their ability to induce lymphocyte apoptosis. We report here that, in contrast to their effect on cells of the immune system, glucocorticoids suppress serum deprivation induced apoptosis of rat
hepatoma
(HTC) cells. Suppression of apoptosis in these cells occurs at physiological concentrations of glucocorticoid and is abrogated by the glucocorticoid antagonist RU486. Although HTC cells also express receptors for progesterone, estrogen, and thyroid hormone, ligands for these receptors fail to rescue these cells from programmed cell death. Because the sensitivity of cells to apoptotic stimuli is often regulated by the ratio of antiapoptotic to proapoptotic
Bcl-2
family members, we analyzed the influence of glucocorticoids and induction of apoptosis by serum starvation on the expression of these proteins.
Bcl-2
, Bcl-xL, Bad, Bak, and Bax levels were not altered by either treatment. Mitochondrial function has recently been implicated as a critical early regulator of apoptosis in many cells including hepatocytes. Dexamethasone treatment blocked a decrease in this potential (delta psi(m)) during serum deprivation induced apoptosis in HTC cells, indicating an action of this hormone upstream of mitochondria. We also show that the induction of apoptosis in HTC cells is associated with a decrease in nuclear factor (NF)-kappaB. Treatment with dexamethasone effectively blocked the loss of nuclear NF-kappaB, suggesting that this hormone acts to suppress apoptosis of HTC cells via regulation of this nuclear transcription factor. This hypothesis was confirmed by transfection experiments that show that expression of a superrepressor of NF-kappaB inhibits the ability of dexamethasone to rescue HTC cells from apoptosis induced by serum deprivation.
...
PMID:Delineation of an antiapoptotic action of glucocorticoids in hepatoma cells: the role of nuclear factor-kappaB. 1080 96
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