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)

With the growing understanding of cytostatic drug-induced programmed cell death new drug-resistance mechanisms based on the altered ability of cells to die by apoptosis have been defined. At first, the sensitive and P-glycoprotein (P-gp)-related resistant cell lines were tested to induce apoptosis by a non-P-gp transported drug, such as cytosine arabinoside (ara-C). It was demonstrated that ara-C induces apoptosis in sensitive as well as in P-gp-related resistant cell lines, as expected. Furthermore, the role of bcl-2 and bcl-xL apoptosis inhibitors as well as bax expression (apoptosis inducer) in human sensitive leukemic cell lines (CCRF-CEM and HL-60) as compared to their resistant variants such as CCRF-CEM/ACT400, CCRF-CEM/VCR1000, HL-60/IDA40, HL-60/DNR250 was evaluated. In addition to the P-gp-related resistance, a possible multidrug resistance-associated protein (MRP) and the lung resistance protein (LRP)-related resistance were assessed by flow cytometry using the monoclonal antibodies 4E3.16, MRPr1 and LRP56. Furthermore, the function of P-gp was determined with the rhodamine-123 (R-123) accumulation test. Bcl-2 and bax were analyzed by both flow cytometry and ECL Western blot, bcl-xL by ECL-Western blot alone. Comparison of the two sensitive cell lines demonstrated different bcl-2, bax and bcl-xL patterns. The common characteristic was the increased expression of one of the apoptosis inhibitor proteins, such as bcl-2 or bcl-xL. The sensitive CCRF-CEM showed a high bax level, where a decrease of about 75% in resistant variants was measured. Compared to their sensitive counterpart HL-60, a low bax expression was analyzed, which increased in the resistant variant. The common characteristic of all resistant cell lines was the decreased expression of bax compared to bcl-2 or bcl-xL. In the P-gp-related resistant HL-60/DNR250 only an increase in bcl-xL was seen, whereas in the LRP-expressing as well as P-gp and MRP negative resistant HL-60/IDA40 both apoptotic inhibitor proteins bcl-2 and bcL-xL showed maximum increase, compared to the other resistant cell lines. The P-gp-related resistant cell lines CCRF-CEM/ACT400 and CCRF-CEM/VCR1000 also showed an increased expression of both bcl-2 and bcl-xL. Summarizing these results, it was shown that the examined sensitive human leukemic cell lines and their resistant variants demonstrated a different pattern of markers for preventing and promoting apoptosis. An association between P-gp and possible LRP-expressing leukemic cells as well as apoptosis-preventing markers (bcl-2, bcl-xL) seems to exist. The clinical relevance of the coexpression of various resistance mechanisms remains to be confirmed in large leukemia patient groups.
Leukemia 1999 Nov
PMID:Bcl-2, bax and bcl-xL expression in human sensitive and resistant leukemia cell lines. 1055 64

Glucocorticoids and fludarabine are able to induce typical features of apoptosis in CLL lymphocytes. Cysteinyl aspartate specific proteases (caspases) play a key biochemical role in the apoptotic pathway. Caspase activation following cytotoxic stimuli leads to highly specific proteolytic cleavage of functionally important cellular enzymes. One of them is poly ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP). To some extent caspase activation seems to be under the control of the Bcl-2 family of interacting proteins. We determined the role of Bcl-2-family proteins Bcl-2 (anti-apoptotic) and Bax (pro-apoptotic), activation of caspase-3 (CPP32/Yama) and activation of PARP in CLL apoptosis. All 21 analyzed CLL samples expressed Bcl-2 and Bax. Four of 13 (31%) samples with a low Bcl-2/Bax ratio exhibited in vitro prednisolone resistance, whereas eight of nine (88%) samples with a high Bcl-2/Bax ratio were in vitro resistant (</=0.025). There was no significant correlation between clinical pre-treatment status and Bcl-2/Bax ratio. Caspase-3/CPP32 activity increase was registered after dexamethasone as well as after fludarabine treatment in CLL lymphocytes in vitro. Caspase inhibitor Z-VAD.fmk was only able to partially block dexamethasone-induced and spontaneous apoptosis but not fludarabine-induced apoptosis in CLL lymphocytes. PARP activity decreased after dexamethasone and fludarabine treatment. PARP inhibitor 3-aminobenzamide (3-AB) was able to partially inhibit dexamethasone-induced apoptosis but not fludarabine-induced and spontaneous apoptosis.
Leukemia 1999 Nov
PMID:Drug-induced apoptosis in chronic lymphocytic leukemia. 1055 65

The expression of Bcl-2 family members was examined in normal and leukemic hematopoietic cells. Immature hematopoietic progenitor cells (CD34+/33-/13-) did not express Bcl-2 but Bcl-XL, the majority of CD34 cells expressed Bcl-2, Bcl-XL and BAD, and normal promyelocytes (CD34-/33+) lacked expression of both Bcl-2 and Bcl-XL, while leukemic CD34+progenitors and promyelocytes expressed these anti-apoptotic proteins. In AML, Bcl-2 expression was higher on CD34+ than on all AML cells, however, expression of Bcl-2 or Bcl-XL did not predict achievement of complete remission. Surprisingly, low Bcl-2 content was associated with poor survival in a group of patients with poor prognosis cytogenetics. The anti-apoptotic BAD protein was found to be expressed in AML, but was phosphorylated in 41/42 samples. Phosphorylation was found at both sites, Ser 112 and Ser 136. During induction chemotherapy, Bcl-2 levels of CD34 cells increased significantly. In the context of evidence for small numbers of leukemic CD34+ cells expressing very high levels of Bcl-2 prior to therapy, this finding is interpreted as a survival advantage of Bcl-2 overexpressing progenitors and rapid elimination of cells with low Bcl-2. Bcl-2 and Bcl-XL were both expressed in minimal residual disease cells. Downregulation of Bcl-2 mRNA and protein was observed by ATRA and the combination of Ara-C, followed by ATRA, resulted in markedly increased cytotoxicity in HL-60 cells, as compared to Ara-C alone or ATRA followed by Ara-C. Implications of these findings for the development of new therapeutic strategies for AML are discussed.
Leukemia 1999 Nov
PMID:Expression of Bcl-2-related genes in normal and AML progenitors: changes induced by chemotherapy and retinoic acid. 1055 66

Resistance to chemotherapy-induced apoptosis and a multidrug-resistance (MDR) phenotype, mainly mediated by P-glycoprotein (P-gp), contribute to chemotherapy failure in hematologic malignancies. To study apoptosis-regulating factors in acute myeloid leukemia (AML), we investigated cell samples of adults with de novo AML by flow cytometry for constitutive expression levels of the apoptosis-related molecules CD95 (n = 135), Bcl-2 (n = 131), and Bax (n = 66), as well as spontaneous apoptosis in vitro (n = 104) and susceptibility to anti-CD95-induced apoptosis (CD95 sensitivity) (n = 93). We correlated these findings with P-gp function as detected by the rhodamine123-efflux test (n = 121), immunophenotype, FAB morphology, cytogenetics, and clinical data of the examined patients. Immature FAB M0/1 AML cells expressed significantly more Bcl-2 (P < 0.0002) and less CD95 (P < 0.0003) compared with AML cells of the more mature FAB M2-5 subtypes. No maturation-dependent difference in Bax expression was observed. FAB M2-5 AML cells were more susceptible to anti-CD95-induced apoptosis (P < 0.008) and showed a lower P-gp function (P < 0.002) than FAB M0/1 AML cells. Leukemic cells of AML patients who achieved a complete remission (CR) after induction chemotherapy expressed less Bcl-2 than non-responder (NR) (69 CR, 23 NR; P = 0.05). CR was associated with a higher extent of spontaneous apoptosis in vitro (58 CR, 17 NR; P=0.05) and a tendency towards a higher CD95 expression (73 CR, 23 NR; P = 0.08) compared to NR. CR also correlated with a low P-gp function (70 CR, 21 NR; P = 0.008) and a tendency towards CD34 negativity (73 CR, 23 NR; P = 0.08). No correlation between Bax expression and response to induction chemotherapy (49 CR, 12 NR) was observed. In stepwise logistic regression analyses, P-gp function and the extent of spontaneous apoptosis in vitro as well as CD95 sensitivity but not Bcl-2, CD95, Bax, and CD34 expression levels emerged as significant markers for response to induction chemotherapy. We conclude that the constitutive expression of CD95 and Bcl-2, as well as CD95 sensitivity and P-gp function but not constitutive Bax expression depend on the maturation stage of leukemic cells in adult de novo AML. P-gp function, the extent of spontaneous apoptosis in vitro and CD95 sensitivity are more predictive for response to induction chemotherapy in adult de novoAML than the constitutive expression levels of the apoptosis-related molecules CD95, Bcl-2 and Bax.
Leukemia 1999 Dec
PMID:Clinical significance of CD95, Bcl-2 and Bax expression and CD95 function in adult de novo acute myeloid leukemia in context of P-glycoprotein function, maturation stage, and cytogenetics. 1060 14

Drug resistance is a well recognized problem in cancer therapy. Despite the current dogma that drug resistance is always an obstacle for treatment, here I show that it provides opportunities for selective protection of non-resistant cells with killing of drug-resistant cancer cells. According to the proposed 'two-drug' strategy, the first drug should be ineffective against a target drug-resistant cell (ie the drug is a substrate of MRP or Pgp pumps). In addition, it must be cytostatic but not cytotoxic. The second drug, which is applied in sequence, must be a cycle-dependent apoptotic drug to which the target cell is not cross-resistant. Thus, low doses of adriamycin, etoposide and actinomycin D, used as the first drugs, were cytostatic to parental HL60 cells. Therefore, these drugs precluded Bcl-2/Raf-1 phosphorylation, PARP cleavage and cell death which are otherwise induced by paclitaxel, a mitosis-selective apoptotic drug for HL60 cells. In contrast, HL60/ADR cells which express MRP, a transporter which pumps out the first drugs from a cell, were insensitive to the first drugs and therefore readily underwent apoptosis following the second drug. This strategy also allowed a selective killing of HL60/TX cells which express MDR-1, with the only difference being that the second drug, paclitaxel, was substituted for epothilones, non-Pgp substrates. Lack of protection by the first drug, a Pgp substrate, resulted in HL60/TX killing by the second drug, whereas parental HL-60 cells were fully protected. Therefore, drug resistant cells can be selectively killed by a combination of drugs not killing sensitive cells. Lack of toxicity against normal cells will be clinically translated in reduction of adverse side-effects of chemotherapy against drug-resistant malignancies.
Leukemia 1999 Dec
PMID:Drug-resistance enables selective killing of resistant leukemia cells: exploiting of drug resistance instead of reversal. 1060 25

Over the past decade, the involvement of tyrosine kinases in signal transduction pathways evoked by cytokines has been intensively investigated. Only relatively recently have the roles of serine/threonine kinases in cytokine-induced signal transduction and anti-apoptotic pathways been examined. Cytokine receptors without intrinsic kinase activity such as interleukin-3 (IL-3), granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) and the interferons were thought to transmit their regulatory signals primarily by the receptor-associated Jak family of tyrosine kinases. This family of tyrosine kinases activates STAT transcription factors, which subsequently transduced their signals into the nucleus to modulate gene expression. Cytokine receptors with intrinsic tyrosine kinase activity such as c-Kit were initially thought to transduce their signals independently of serine/threonine kinase cascades. Recently, both of these types of receptor signaling pathways have been shown to interact with serine/threonine kinase pathways as maximal activation of these tyrosine kinase regulated cascades involve serine/threonine phosphorylation modulated by, for example MAP kinases. A common intermediate pathway initiating from cytokine receptors is the Ras/Raf/MEK/ERK (MAPK) cascade, which can result in the phosphorylation and activation of additional downstream kinases and transcription factors such as p90Rsk, CREB, Elk and Egr-1. Serine/threonine phosphorylation is also involved in the regulation of the apoptosis-controlling Bcl-2 protein, as certain phosphorylation events induced by cytokines such as IL-3 are anti-apoptotic, whereas other phosphorylation events triggered by chemotherapeutic drugs such as Paclitaxel are associated with cell death. Serine/threonine phosphorylation is implicated in the etiology of certain human cancers as constitutive serine phosphorylation of STATs 1 and 3 is observed in chronic lymphocytic leukemia and can be inhibited by the chemotherapeutic drug fludarabine. Serine/threonine phosphorylation also plays a role in the etiology of immunodeficiencies. Activated STAT5 proteins are detected in reduced levels in lymphocytes recovered from HIV-infected individuals and immunocompromised mice. Serine/threonine phosphorylation may be an important target of certain chemotherapeutic drugs which recognize the activated proteins. This meeting report and mini-review will discuss the interactions of serine/threonine kinases with signal transduction and apoptotic molecules and how some of these pathways can be controlled by chemotherapeutic drugs. Leukemia (2000) 14, 9-21.
Leukemia 2000 Jan
PMID:Serine/threonine phosphorylation in cytokine signal transduction. 1063 71

B cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B-CLL) cannot be cured with conventional chemotherapy. This clinical enigma appears to be at least partially due to the fact that B-CLL cells are resistant to programmed cell death (apoptosis) and that they are arrested in G0/G1 phase of the cell cycle. The reasons for the dysregulation of these two key cellular events in B-CLL are unclear. The present study aimed at determining correlations between the expression levels of proteins regulating apoptosis, cell cycle and DNA repair in B-CLL cells and normal B cells. In addition, the differential sensitivity of B-CLL cells to drug-induced apoptosis was quantified. We show that in B-CLL cells levels of the death-suppressor Bcl-2 correlated positively with those of the pro-apoptotic protein Bax and of the cyclin-dependent kinase (cdk) inhibitor p27Kip1. In B-CLL cells levels of the anti-apoptotic Bcl-xL showed a positive correlation with levels of the 80 kDa regulatory component (Ku80) of the DNA-dependent protein kinase that is involved in DNA double-stranded break repair. These correlations were not detected in normal B cells. The sensitivity of leukemic cells to FLUD but not to ADM, CPM or to DEX was reduced in pre-treated patients. These data support the hypothesis that in B-CLL cells death-modulators and molecules modulating cell cycle and DNA repair are regulated in a coordinated manner. Leukemia (2000) 14, 40-46.
Leukemia 2000 Jan
PMID:Chemosensitivity of B cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia and correlated expression of proteins regulating apoptosis, cell cycle and DNA repair. 1063 75

Drug resistance remains a serious limiting factor in the treatment of acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) either at initial presentation or following primary or subsequent relapses. Using specific kinase inhibitors, this study has investigated the contribution of the Ras/PI3-kinase regulated survival pathways to drug resistance and suppression of apoptosis in a cell line derived from AML (HL60). Inhibition of the Raf/MAP-kinase (ERK) pathway with a specific MAP-kinase inhibitor, apigenin did not sensitise HL60 cells to drug-induced apoptosis, indicating a lack of involvement in chemoresistance. In contrast, the PI3-kinase inhibitors, LY294002 and wortmannin, did induce a significant increase in apoptosis in combination with cytotoxic drugs. The contribution of downstream mediators of PI3-kinase, p70S6-kinase and PKB/Akt were then investigated. While inhibition of p70S6-kinase with rapamycin did not increase drug-induced apoptosis, PI3-kinase inhibition resulted in notable dephosphorylation of PKB, suggesting that the PI3-kinase/PKB survival pathway may play a major role in chemoresistance in AML. This pathway has been reported to mediate heterodimer interactions with the proapoptotic regulator, Bad. In contrast to previous studies, we found no evidence of Bad binding to anti-apoptotic Bcl-2, Bcl-XL or McI-1, or of alterations in Bax heterodimers. This suggests that alternative targets of PI3-kinase/PKB, distinct from the Bcl-2 family may be responsible for contributing to survival factor-mediated drug resistance in AML.
Leukemia 2000 Apr
PMID:Sensitisation of HL60 human leukaemic cells to cytotoxic drug-induced apoptosis by inhibition of PI3-kinase survival signals. 1076 45

CD95 (Fas/APO-1) is a member of the TNFR superfamily that induces apoptosis following cross-linking with its cognate ligand, CD95L (FasL/APO-1L) or agonist antibody. The human myeloma cell line, RPMI 8226, has limited sensitivity to CD95-mediated apoptosis, with a maximum of 65% of the population responding. To determine the source of the limited sensitivity to CD95-mediated apoptosis, we isolated multiple clones from the RPMI-8226 cell line by limiting dilution. Analysis of these clones demonstrated that sensitivity to CD95-mediated cell death directly correlated with CD95 expression. Clones with high levels of CD95 expression had greater than 90% cell death, whereas cells with low levels of expression had less than 10% cell death. In contrast, no correlative differences were identified for other members of the DISC complex, or for members of the anti-apoptotic Bcl-2 family. We further examined the sensitivity of the 8226 clones to various cytotoxic agents. Although modest clonal variability was demonstrated in response to the chemotherapeutic drugs, doxorubicin, etoposide (VP-16), and vincristine, there was no correlation between CD95 function and sensitivity to chemotherapeutic drugs. These results indicate that in this cell line, receptor expression is rate limiting in CD95-mediated apoptosis, whereas CD95 expression was not a determinant in drug-induced programmed cell death.
Leukemia 2000 May
PMID:Clonal variability in CD95 expression is the major determinant in Fas-medicated, but not chemotherapy-medicated apoptosis in the RPMI 8226 multiple myeloma cell line. 1080 14

Follicular lymphomas (FL) are closely associated with a t(14;18)(q32;q21) translocation, leading to a bcl2 protein over-production. This translocation probably constitutes a very early step in the development of the disease. Besides the cytogenetic assay, t(14;18) detection can be achieved using either Southern blot or polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Since 1990, several publications have reported discrepancies between the results of cytogenetic and molecular analysis of t(14;18). Using methods able to explore long DNA fragments, several authors reported breakpoints located outside the usual breakpoint regions. However, these techniques cannot be easily used in routine. The aim of this study was to develop a simple PCR assay to amplify rearrangements usually not detected in FL. We selected a group of 83 patients with a t(14;18) on cytogenetic analysis: using usual probes and primers, 54/83 (65.1%) showed a MBR rearrangement, 7/83 (8.4%) were mcr positive and 22/83 (26.5%) remained negative. Among these 22 rearrangements, nine could be detected using this new PCR assay. Four breakpoints were located in a 20 bp area suggesting a recurrent breakpoint cluster close to an Alu repetitive sequence. Finally, remaining negative cases (13/83, 15.6%) suggest that other breakpoints are located between the MBR and mcr regions.
Leukemia 2000 Sep
PMID:Characterisation of BCL2-JH rearrangements in follicular lymphoma: PCR detection of 3' BCL2 breakpoints and evidence of a new cluster. 1099 1


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