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Query: UNIPROT:P10415 (
Bcl-2
)
33,771
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Recent studies have demonstrated that the expression of Fas by peripheral T cells from HIV-1+ patients is deregulated and increases the susceptibility of these cells to undergo apoptosis. Here, we show that secretion of Fas-ligand (L), the complementary agonist of Fas, is abnormally upregulated in CD4+ cells from HIV-1-infected individuals, particularly during the non-lymphopenic stages of the disease. An increase of soluble Fas-L occurred in T cell cultures from 26 patients with a number of CD4+ cells higher than 400/microliter, whereas it was almost undetectable in cultures from 21 severely lymphopenic patients (CD4+ < 200/microliter). The MTT test, cytofluorimetric analysis of cellular DNA, cytotoxicity, and proliferative assays using the Fas-transfected WC8 mouse lymphoma confirmed the cytocidal capability of T cell supernatants from non-lymphopenic patients. Double-fluorescence analysis revealed that the majority of CD4+ cells (approximately 90%) in these cultures secreted Fas-L in the presence of high intracellular gamma-
interferon
and low
Bcl-2
. In contrast, the CD8+/Fas-L+ population was comparably decreased (approximately 55%). Molecular cloning of Fas-L revealed a substantial expression of Fas-L mRNA in cells from non-lymphopenic patients compared with patients with advanced disease and healthy controls. Since CD4+ cells of Th1 phenotype are impaired during HIV-1 infection and show high cellular expression of Fas-L, it is conceivable that excess Fas-L during the early or non-lymphopenic phase of the disease increases the extent of apoptosis in these cells by the Fas/Fas-L pathway. The defective expression of the ligand in severely lymphopenic stages could be explained by exhaustion of this mechanism as the disease progresses.
...
PMID:Functional Fas-ligand expression on T cells from HIV-1-infected patients is unrelated to CD4+ lymphopenia. 987 94
It is well known that angiotensin II exerts growth promoting effects via the angiotensin II type 1 (AT1) receptor. We have cloned a second type of angiotensin II receptor (AT2 receptor) and demonstrated that this receptor acts as an antagonistic receptor against the AT1 receptor. Moreover, we have demonstrated that the AT2 receptor exerts growth inhibitory and proapoptotic effects by antagonizing the effects of the AT1 receptor and growth factors in several cell lines including vascular smooth muscle cells, cardiomyocytes, neuronal cell (PC12W) and fibroblasts (R3T3). We observed that the AT2 receptor activates tyrosine phosphatase(s) such as mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase-phosphatase-1 (MKP-1) and inactivates MAP kinase (extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK1 and ERK2)), resulting in
Bcl-2
dephosphorylation and up-regulation of Bax. This inactivation of ERK is mediated via Gi protein coupling through its unique intracellular third loop. Moreover, we have demonstrated that
interferon
regulatory factor (IRF)-1 also up-regulates the AT2 receptor in apoptotic cells, suggesting that the cytokines may play an important role in angiotensin-regulated apoptosis.
...
PMID:Molecular and cellular mechanism of angiotensin II-mediated apoptosis. 988 2
Antigen injection into animals causes antigen-specific T cells to become activated and, rapidly thereafter, die. This antigen-induced death is inhibited by inflammation. To find out how inflammation has this effect, various cytokines were tested for their ability to interfere with the rapid death of activated T cells. T cells were activated in vivo, isolated, and cultured with the test reagents. Two groups of cytokines were active, members of the interleukin 2 family and the interferons (IFNs) alpha and beta. This activity of
IFN
-alpha/beta has not been described previously. It was due to direct effects of the IFNs on the T cells and was not mediated by induction of a second cytokine such as interleukin 15. IFN-gamma did not slow the death of activated T cells, and therefore the activity of
IFN
-alpha/beta was not mediated only by activation of Stat 1, a protein that is affected by both classes of
IFN
.
IFN
-alpha/beta did not raise the levels of
Bcl-2
or Bcl-XL in T cells. Therefore, their activity was distinct from that of members of the interleukin 2 family or CD28 engagement. Since
IFN
-alpha/beta are very efficiently generated in response to viral and bacterial infections, these molecules may be among the signals that the immune system uses to prevent activated T cell death during infections.
...
PMID:Type I interferons keep activated T cells alive. 992 14
Most prostate cancers eventually develop resistance to hormonal therapy and chemotherapies. Many mechanisms for resistance to chemotherapy have been identified. Mutations or inactivation of the p53 suppressor gene and overexpression of bcl-2 are among such mechanisms. Mutations in the p53 gene can lead to resistance to certain chemotherapy agents, and such mutations are seen more often in metastatic than in primary prostate cancers. Thus, agents that are active in the setting of mutated p53 may have some advantage in prostate cancer. Overexpression of bcl-2 occurs frequently in prostate cancer and is associated with both hormonal therapy and chemotherapy resistance. In experimental systems, bcl-2 overexpression occurs after androgen deprivation and transfection of bcl-2 into sensitive cell lines makes them resistant to chemotherapy and hormonal therapies.
Bcl-2
can be inactivated by phosphorylation as occurs with taxanes. The retinoids, as a class, can inhibit the growth of resistant cell lines that overexpress bcl-2, and the combination of
interferon
(
IFN
) and cis-retinoic acid (CRA) demonstrated increased antitumor activity. In our cell line model the combination of
IFN
and CRA greatly enhanced the cytotoxicity of paclitaxel (Taxol; Bristol-Myers Squibb Company, Princeton, NJ). Based on these observations, we conducted a phase I/II trial of CRA and
IFN
-alpha in patients with biochemical recurrence of prostate cancer. Twenty-six percent achieved a decrease of prostate-specific antigen (PSA), which was correlated to elevated serum transforming growth factor-beta. We then conducted a phase I trial of 13-CRA,
IFN
-alpha, and escalating doses of paclitaxel. Eighteen patients were treated with 1 mg/kg CRA and 1x10(6) unit
IFN
on days 1 to 4 and paclitaxel at doses from 100 to 175 mg/m2. Eleven patients received the 175 mg/m2 paclitaxel dose. Two patients in the phase I study achieved partial responses (one cervix and one prostate cancer). We subsequently initiated a phase II study of 13-CRA,
IFN
-alpha, and paclitaxel in hormone refractory prostate cancer. For entry patients must show progressive disease after androgen ablation. To test the mechanism of action, we are assaying peripheral blood monocytes and, when possible, tumor tissue for bcl-2 expression. As our understanding of the mechanisms of tumor resistance to chemotherapy improves, we will be able to design better approaches in treatment targeted to overcome the mechanisms of resistance.
...
PMID:Overcoming bcl-2- and p53-mediated resistance in prostate cancer. 1019 Jul 92
Apoptosis has been identified as a mechanism of pancreatic islet beta-cell death in autoimmune diabetes. Proinflammatory cytokines are candidate mediators of beta-cell death in autoimmune diabetes, and these cytokines can induce beta-cell death by apoptosis. In the present study, we examined whether transfection of human islet beta-cells with an anti-apoptotic gene, bcl-2, can prevent cytokine-induced beta-cell destruction. Human islet beta-cells were transfected by a replication-defective herpes simplex virus (HSV) amplicon vector that expressed the bcl-2 gene (HSVbcl-2) and, as a control, the same HSV vector that expressed a beta-galactosidase reporter gene (HSVlac). Two-color immunohistochemical staining revealed that 95+/-3% of beta-cells transfected with HSVbcl-2 expressed
Bcl-2
protein compared with 14+/-3% of beta-cells transfected with HSVlac and 19+/-4% of nontransfected beta-cells. The bcl-2-transfected beta-cells were fully protected from impaired insulin secretion and destruction resulting from incubation for 5 days with the cytokine combination of interleukin (IL)-1beta, tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha, and
interferon
(
IFN
)-gamma. In addition, the bcl-2-transfected islet cells were significantly protected from cytokine-induced lipid peroxidation and DNA fragmentation. These results demonstrate that cytokine-induced beta-cell dysfunction and death involve mechanisms subject to regulation by an anti-apoptotic protein,
Bcl-2
. Therefore, bcl-2 gene therapy has the potential to protect human beta-cells in pancreatic islets, or islet grafts, from immune-mediated damage in type 1 diabetes.
...
PMID:Transfection of human pancreatic islets with an anti-apoptotic gene (bcl-2) protects beta-cells from cytokine-induced destruction. 1034 8
Type I
interferon
(
IFN
) receptor consists of two chains (Hu-IFN-alphaR1 and Hu-IFN-alphaR2), and Hu-
IFN
-alphaR2 takes a soluble (Hu-IFN-alphaR2a), short (Hu-IFN-alphaR2b), or long (Hu-IFN-alphaR2c) form. We examined the expression of type I
IFN
receptor, the growth-suppression effect of
IFN
-alpha, and their relationship in 13 liver cancer cell lines. With reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) analysis, the expressions of Hu-
IFN
-alphaR1, Hu-
IFN
-alphaR2a, and Hu-
IFN
-alphaR2c were confirmed in all cell lines, and that of Hu-
IFN
-alphaR2b in 12 cell lines. All cell lines expressed mRNAs of a transcriptional activator,
interferon
regulatory factor (IRF)-1, and its antagonistic repressor (IRF-2). Flow cytometry revealed weak expression of Hu-
IFN
-alphaR2 on the cell surface in 12 cell lines. The soluble-form protein of Hu-
IFN
-alphaR2 was detected at varying levels in culture supernatants of all cell lines with enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Cell proliferation was suppressed in proportion to the dose of human natural
IFN
-alpha at 96 hours of culture, but it was not clearly related to the expression of Hu-
IFN
-alphaR2 protein on the cell surface. Investigations on the morphology, DNA, and cell cycle presented four growth suppression patterns as a result of
IFN
-alpha: 1) induction of apoptosis and blockage of cell cycle at the S phase (9 cell lines); 2) blockage at the S phase (2 cell lines); 3) induction of apoptosis and blockage at the G2/M phase (1 cell line); and 4) blockage at the G1 phase (1 cell line). There was no evidence showing that changes in the expressions of
Bcl-2
, Bcl-xL, Bak, and Bax lead directly to IFN-alpha-mediated apoptosis. Our findings demonstrated that IFN-alpha would express growth-suppression effects at varying degrees by inducing inhibition of cell-cycle progression with or without apoptosis, regardless of the expression level of Hu-IFN-alphaR2 protein on the cell surface.
...
PMID:Interferon alfa receptor expression and growth inhibition by interferon alfa in human liver cancer cell lines. 1034 12
CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells play specific roles during an immune response. Different molecular mechanisms could regulate the proliferation, death, and effector functions of these two subsets of T cells. The p38 mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase pathway is induced by cytokines and environmental stress and has been associated with cell death and cytokine expression. Here we report that activation of the p38 MAP kinase pathway in vivo causes a selective loss of CD8(+) T cells due to the induction of apoptosis. In contrast, activation of p38 MAP kinase does not induce CD4(+) T-cell death. The apoptosis of CD8(+) T cells is associated with decreased expression of the antiapoptotic protein
Bcl-2
. Regulation of the p38 MAP kinase pathway in T cells is therefore essential for the maintenance of CD4/CD8 homeostasis in the peripheral immune system. Unlike cell death, gamma
interferon
production is regulated by the p38 MAP kinase pathway in both CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells. Thus, specific aspects of CD4(+) and CD8(+) T-cell function are differentially controlled by the p38 MAP kinase signaling pathway.
...
PMID:Activation of p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase in vivo selectively induces apoptosis of CD8(+) but not CD4(+) T cells. 1062 51
The suppressor of cytokine signalling 1 protein (SOCS-1) belongs to a novel family of cytokine inducible factors which function as inhibitors of the JAK/STAT pathway. While SOCS-1 previously has been described as a single-exon gene, here we present evidence for an additional 5' exon, separated by a 509 bp intron from exon 2. Exon 1 and part of exon 2 contain an open reading frame of 115 nt, ending one nucleotide upstream of the major reading frame. Using SOCS-1-promoter/luciferase constructs, we investigated which sequences are involved in the regulation of SOCS-1 expression. Serial promoter deletion clones indicate the localization and functionality of SP1,
interferon
-stimulated responsive elements (ISRE), and interferon-gamma-activated sites (GAS) promoter elements in the SOCS-1 5' flanking region. We present evidence that the upstream open reading frame (uORF) represses the translation of the downstream major open reading frame (mORF). Mutating the start codon of the uORF relieves this repression. Our data indicate that expression of the SOCS-1 protein is repressed on translational level by a mechanism, which bears similarities to that postulated for genes like retinoic acid receptor beta2 (RARbeta2), S-adenosylmethionine-decarboxylase (AdoMetDC),
Bcl-2
, and others.
...
PMID:Evidence for translational repression of the SOCS-1 major open reading frame by an upstream open reading frame. 1067 90
It has been reported that
interferon
(
IFN
)-gamma should inhibit in vitro mouse embryo growth by direct cell toxicity. However, the mechanism involved has not been clearly established. In the present study, this question was addressed using the embryonic stem (ES) cell model. It was found that IFN-gamma, induces a dose-dependent apoptosis in ES cells, as assessed by trypan-blue staining, by Annexin-V labeling and DNA analysis, Moreover, IFN-gamma treatment cooperates with Fas-mediated apoptosis, a phenomenon that has been recently reported. As
Bcl-2
oncoprotein functions as a death repressor molecule in an evolutionarily conserved cell death pathway, its expression was analyzed by flow cytometry. It was demonstrated that
Bcl-2
is expressed in ES cells. When compared to untreated ES cells, IFN-gamma-treated, apoptotic cells expressed a lower
Bcl-2
level and a normal level of Fas, whereas surviving cells expressed a normal level of
Bcl-2
but a lower Fas expression. Altogether, these data suggest that IFN-gamma may influence early mouse embryo development by promoting apoptosis, which may constitute a novel mechanism of IFN-gamma embryotoxicity.
...
PMID:IFN-gamma induces apoptosis in mouse embryonic stem cells, a putative mechanism of its embryotoxicity. 1091 Jan 32
Four human cell lines derived from Ewing's sarcoma, EW-7, EW-1, COH and ORS, were investigated to establish the effects of human recombinant
interferon
-alpha2a and human recombinant interferon-beta on cell proliferation and apoptosis. All four cell lines were much more sensitive to the antiproliferative effects of IFN-beta than of IFN-alpha. Analysis of the early signals triggered by IFN-alpha and IFN-beta demonstrated that the two IFNs were similarly effective in inducing tyrosine phosphorylation of the Jak-1 and Tyk-2 kinases and the transcription factors Stat-1 and Stat-2. Interestingly, an additional rapid phosphorylation of Stat-1 on serine was observed after IFN-beta treatment, with concomitant activation of p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase. In these cells, Stat-1 Ser727 phosphorylation in response to IFN-beta was found to be impaired by p38 MAPkinase inhibitor (SB203580). IFN-beta induced the formation of the Interferon Stimulated Gene Factor 3 complex more efficiently than IFN-alpha, as well as sustained induction of IRF-1, which may account for its greater induction of 2'5'oligo(A)synthetase and greater inhibition of cell proliferation. IFN-beta, but not IFN-alpha, induced apoptosis in wild-type p53 EW-7 and COH cell lines, but not in the mutated p53 EW-1 or ORS cell lines. The apoptosis induced by IFN-beta in EW-7 and COH cell lines appeared to be mediated by IRF-1 and involved the activation of caspase-7. Ectopic expression of IRF-1 induced apoptosis in all four cell lines which correlated with the activation of caspase-7 and with the downregulation of the
Bcl-2
oncoprotein, as observed for IFN-beta-induced apoptosis in parental EW-7 and COH cell lines.
...
PMID:IFN-beta induces serine phosphorylation of Stat-1 in Ewing's sarcoma cells and mediates apoptosis via induction of IRF-1 and activation of caspase-7. 1091 94
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