Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:P10415 (
Bcl-2
)
33,771
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The hallmark of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) is the chimeric tyrosine kinase oncogene bcr-abl. Since expression of bcr-abl mRNA frequently increases with disease progression and a duplication of the Philadelphia chromosome (harbouring the bcr-abl hybrid locus) represents the most frequent karyotypic abnormality in acute phase CML, we hypothesized that the level of BCR-
ABL
protein may affect the disease phenotype. Therefore, the biological effects of high and low levels of BCR-
ABL
expression were compared in growth factor-dependent and -independent myeloid and lymphoid cell lines. Our results demonstrated that low levels of BCR -
ABL
were sufficient to render these cell lines growth factor independent and tumorigenic, but higher levels were mandatory for additional protection against apoptotic stimuli. The provision of growth factor or an activated ras oncogene did not afford the same degree of protection as high levels of BCR-
ABL
and there were qualitative differences between the survival signals mediated by BCR-
ABL
and
Bcl-2
. These results have enabled us to establish a dose-dependent hierarchy of BCR-
ABL
induced biological effects, thus distinguishing the activation of pathways mediating protection from cytokine withdrawal from those protecting against other apoptotic stimuli.
...
PMID:BCR-ABL activates pathways mediating cytokine independence and protection against apoptosis in murine hematopoietic cells in a dose-dependent manner. 946 59
Several lines of evidence have demonstrated that IFNs could be relevant in the treatment of certain neoplastic diseases such as carcinomas. In particular, IFN-alpha, in addition to the anti-proliferative and cytostatic effects, was demonstrated to be capable of inducing cell death by apoptosis both in vivo and in vitro. Numerous protocols have also been proposed which consider the association of IFN-alpha with other drugs. Among these are retinoids, a class of compounds capable of inducing inhibition of cell growth and differentiation. We address the question here by analyzing the role of cell adhesion in susceptibility to IFN-alpha, RA and their combination of a human cell line derived from a squamous carcinoma of the cervix, the
Bcl-2
-negative SiHa cell line. In this context, cytoskeleton components and several surface molecules playing a role in cell substrate and cell-to-cell relationships have been evaluated. We found that RA treatment is capable of improving stress fiber formation, decreasing cell detachment and increasing cell-adhesion capability. However, no variations in the ability to adhere to specific extracellular-matrix molecules were found in RA-treated cells. No quantitative changes were detected in integrins involved as receptors for extracellular matrix molecules (VLAI-VLA5) or in other cell-adhesion-associated molecules (e.g., CD44). By contrast, 2 important molecules involved in cell-adhesion processes appeared to be up-regulated by RA exposure:
focal adhesion kinase
and E-cadherin, involved in adhesion plaque formation and cell-to-cell contacts, respectively. Keeping in mind the importance of adhesion properties in the cell-growth pathway, our findings could be of interest in the study of carcinoma-cell proliferation and metastatic potential.
...
PMID:Antiproliferative activity of interferon alpha and retinoic acid in SiHa carcinoma cells: the role of cell adhesion. 959 Jan 30
The phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)-signaling pathway has emerged as an important component of cytokine-mediated survival of hemopoietic cells. Recently, the protein kinase
PKB
/akt (referred to here as
PKB
) has been identified as a downstream target of PI3K necessary for survival.
PKB
has also been implicated in the phosphorylation of Bad, potentially linking the survival effects of cytokines with the
Bcl-2
family. We have shown that granulocyte/macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) maintains survival in the absence of PI3K activity, and we now show that when
PKB
activation is also completely blocked, GM-CSF is still able to stimulate phosphorylation of Bad. Interleukin 3 (IL-3), on the other hand, requires PI3K for survival, and blocking PI3K partially inhibited Bad phosphorylation. IL-4, unique among the cytokines in that it lacks the ability to activate the p21ras-mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascade, was found to activate
PKB
and promote cell survival, but it did not stimulate Bad phosphorylation. Finally, although our data suggest that the MAPK pathway is not required for inhibition of apoptosis, we provide evidence that phosphorylation of Bad may be occurring via a MAPK/ERK kinase (MEK)-dependent pathway. Together, these results demonstrate that although PI3K may contribute to phosphorylation of Bad in some instances, there is at least one other PI3K-independent pathway involved, possibly via activation of MEK. Our data also suggest that although phosphorylation of Bad may be one means by which cytokines can inhibit apoptosis, it may be neither sufficient nor necessary for the survival effect.
...
PMID:Dissociation of cytokine-induced phosphorylation of Bad and activation of PKB/akt: involvement of MEK upstream of Bad phosphorylation. 963 68
Integrin-basement membrane interactions provide essential signals that promote survival and growth of epithelial cells, whereas loss of such adhesions triggers programmed cell death. We found that HSC-3 human squamous carcinoma cells survived and grew readily as monolayers, but when they were suspended as single cells, they ceased proliferating and entered into the apoptotic death pathway, characterized by DNA fragmentation. In contrast, if the suspended carcinoma cells were permitted to form E-cadherin-mediated multicellular aggregates, they not only survived but proliferated. However, aggregated normal keratinocytes were unable to survive in suspension culture and rapidly became apoptotic. Anchorage independence and resistance to apoptosis of HSC-3 cell aggregates required high levels of extracellular Ca2+ and was inhibited with function-perturbing anti-E-cadherin antibody. Resistance to suspension-induced apoptosis in cell aggregates paralleled the up-regulation of
Bcl-2
but occurred in the absence of
focal adhesion kinase
activation. Analysis of suspension-induced death in a set of cloned squamous epithelial cell lines with different levels of E-cadherin expression revealed that receptor-positive cell clones evaded apoptosis and proliferated in three-dimensional aggregate culture, whereas cadherin-negative clones failed to survive. Collectively, these observations indicate that cadherin-mediated intercellular adhesions generate a compensatory mechanism that promotes anchorage-independent growth and suppresses apoptosis.
...
PMID:E-cadherin regulates anchorage-independent growth and survival in oral squamous cell carcinoma cells. 964 58
Cell adhesion to the extracellular matrix (ECM) has been implicated in apoptosis in anchorage-dependent cell types. We recently found that a peptide derived from fibronectin (termed III14-2) inhibits the integrin-mediated cell adhesion to ECM. Using this antiadhesive peptide and a variety of ECM proteins, we show here a critical role of the integrin-ECM protein interaction in apoptotic regulation of human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC). HUVEC in suspension underwent apoptosis under the serum-free conditions, as judged by nuclear and DNA fragmentations. This apoptosis was suppressed to varying degrees when alpha 5 beta 1, alpha v beta 3, and alpha 2 beta 1 integrins were occupied with either soluble or immobilized ECM proteins such as fibronectin, vitronectin, and type I collagen, respectively. Peptide III14-2, which had no effect by itself on the HUVEC apoptosis, disrupted the ligation of alpha 5 beta 1 and alpha v beta 3 but no alpha 2 beta 1 and ultimately led the cells to apoptosis, indicating that this antiadhesive peptide indirectly induces apoptosis by blocking cell survival signal delivered from alpha 5 beta 1 and alpha v beta 3 integrins. Genistein, a protein tyrosine kinase inhibitor, slightly reduced the rescuing effect of fibronectin, whereas sodium orthovanadate and bombesin, which increase in the level of protein tyrosine phosphorylation, made HUVEC less susceptible to apoptosis and blocked the effect of peptide III14-2. HUVEC adhesion to fibronectin substrate raised the tyrosine phosphorylation level of
focal adhesion kinase
and the expression of cytoprotective
Bcl-2
protein, both of which were reversed by the antiadhesive effect of peptide III14-2. Thus, the opposing effects of ECM proteins, including fibronectin and vitronectin, and peptide III14-2 on HUVEC apoptosis appear to be due to the opposing effects of these factors on the signaling pathway which includes tyrosine phosphorylation of
FAK
and
Bcl-2
expression.
...
PMID:Modulation of apoptotic cell death by extracellular matrix proteins and a fibronectin-derived antiadhesive peptide. 966 6
Tumor formation is caused by an imbalance between cell replication and apoptosis, which is a physiological form of cell death. For instance, UV damage can result in tumor formation due to mutations of the tumor-suppressor gene p53, a major apoptosis-inducing protein. Over-expression of the proto-oncogene
Bcl-2
, due to chromosomal translocation, can also inhibit apoptosis resulting in, e.g., lymphomas and leukemias. Anti-tumor therapies are often based on induction of apoptosis mediated via p53 and/or inhibited by
Bcl-2
, which explains the frequently poor results of anti-tumor treatment. The avian-virus-derived protein 'Apoptin', induces apoptosis in a p53-independent way, is stimulated by
Bcl-2
and is insensitive to BCR-
ABL
, another inhibitor of chemotherapeutic agents. Apoptin induces apoptosis in human transformed/tumorigenic cells but not in normal diploid cells. Co-synthesis of SV40 large T antigen and Apoptin results in induction of apoptosis, illustrating that the establishment of a stable transformed state is not required. UV-irradiation causes an aberrant SOS-response in primary diploid cells from cancer-prone individuals and renders such cells susceptible to Apoptin-induced apoptosis. All these features make Apoptin a potential candidate as a therapeutic and diagnostic tool in cancer treatment.
...
PMID:Apoptin specifically causes apoptosis in tumor cells and after UV-treatment in untransformed cells from cancer-prone individuals: a review. 968 3
The mechanism by which early lymphoid cells are selectively transformed by v-Abl is currently unknown. Previous studies have shown constitutive activation of IL-4 and IL-7 signaling pathways, as measured by activation of Janus protein kinase (JAK)1,
JAK3
, STAT5, and STAT6, in pre-B cells transformed by v-Abl. To determine whether activation of these cytokine signaling pathways by v-Abl is important in the cellular events induced by the Abelson murine leukemia virus, the effects of IL-4 and IL-7 on pre-B cells transformed with a temperature-sensitive v-Abl mutant were examined. Whereas IL-4 had little or no effect, IL-7 delayed both the apoptosis and cell cycle arrest that occur upon v-Abl kinase inactivation. IL-7 also delayed the decreases in the levels of c-Myc,
Bcl-2
, and Bcl-xL that occur upon loss of v-Abl kinase activity. IL-7 did not maintain v-Abl-mediated differentiation arrest of the pre-B cells, as activation of NF-kappaB and RAG gene transcription was unaffected by IL-7. These results identify a potential role for IL-7 signaling pathways in transformation by v-Abl while demonstrating that a combination of IL-4 and IL-7 signaling cannot substitute for an active v-Abl kinase in transformed pre-B cells.
...
PMID:IL-7 reconstitutes multiple aspects of v-Abl-mediated signaling. 979 89
Prior investigations document that proliferative signaling cascades, under some circumstances, initiate apoptosis, although mechanisms that dictate the final outcome are largely unknown. In COS-7 cells, ceramide signals Raf-1 activation through Ras (Zhang, Y., Yao, B., Delikat, S., Bayoumy, S., Lin, X. H., Basu, S., McGinley, M., Chan-Hui, P. Y., Lichenstein, H., and Kolesnick, R. (1997) Cell 89, 63-72), but not apoptosis. However, expression of small amounts of the pro-apoptotic
Bcl-2
family member, BAD, conferred ceramide-induced apoptosis onto COS-7 cells. Ceramide signaled apoptosis in BAD-expressing cells by a pathway involving sequentially kinase suppressor of Ras (KSR)/ceramide-activated protein kinase, Ras, c-Raf-1, and MEK1. Downstream, this pathway linked to BAD dephosphorylation at serine 136 by prolonged inactivation of Akt/
PKB
. Further, mutation of BAD at serine 136 abrogated ceramide signaling of apoptosis. The present study indicates that when ceramide signals through the Ras/Raf cascade, the availability of a single target, BAD, may dictate an apoptotic outcome.
...
PMID:BAD enables ceramide to signal apoptosis via Ras and Raf-1. 980 8
The protection against apoptosis provided by growth factors in several cell lines is due to stimulation of the phosphatidylinositol-3-OH kinase (PI(3)K) pathway, which results in activation of protein kinase B (
PKB
; also known as c-Akt and Rac) and phosphorylation and sequestration to protein 14-3-3 of the proapoptotic
Bcl-2
-family member BAD. A modest increase in intracellular Ca2+ concentration also promotes survival of some cultured neurons through a pathway that requires calmodulin but is independent of PI(3)K and the MAP kinases. Here we report that Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase kinase (CaM-KK) activates
PKB
directly, resulting in phosphorylation of BAD on serine residue 136 and the interaction of BAD with protein 14-3-3. Serum withdrawal induced a three- to fourfold increase in cell death of NG108 neuroblastoma cells, and this apoptosis was largely blocked by increasing the intracellular Ca2+ concentration with NMDA (N-methyl-D-aspartate) or KCl or by transfection with constitutively active CaM-KK. The effect of NMDA on cell survival was blocked by transfection with dominant-negative forms of CaM-KK or
PKB
. These results identify a Ca2+-triggered signalling cascade in which CaM-KK activates
PKB
, which in turn phosphorylates BAD and protects cells from apoptosis.
...
PMID:Calcium promotes cell survival through CaM-K kinase activation of the protein-kinase-B pathway. 985 94
Erythropoietin (EPO) and its cell surface receptor (EPOR) play a central role in proliferation, differentiation, and survival of erythroid progenitors. Signals induced by EPO have been studied extensively by using erythroid as well as nonerythroid cell lines, and various controversial results have been reported as to the role of signaling molecules in erythroid differentiation. Here we describe a novel approach to analyze the EPO signaling by using primary mouse fetal liver hematopoietic cells to avoid possible artifacts due to established cell lines. Our strategy is based on high-titer retrovirus vectors with a bicistronic expression system consisting of an internal ribosome entry site (IRES) and green fluorescent protein (GFP). By placing the cDNA for a signaling molecule in front of IRES-GFP, virus-infected cells can be viably sorted by fluorescence-activated cell sorter, and the effect of expression of the signaling molecule can be assessed. By using this system, expression of cell-survival genes such as
Bcl-2
and Bcl-XL was found to enhance erythroid colony formation from colony-forming unit-erythroid (CFU-E) in response to EPO. However, their expression was not sufficient for erythroid colony formation from CFU-E alone, indicating that EPO induces signals for erythroid differentiation. To examine the role of EPOR tyrosine residues in erythroid differentiation, we introduced a chimeric EGFR-EPOR receptor, which has the extracellular domain of the EGF receptor and the intracellular domain of the EPOR, as well as a mutant EGFR-EPOR in which all the cytoplasmic tyrosine residues are replaced with phenylalanine, and found that tyrosine residues of EPOR are essential for erythroid colony formation from CFU-E. We further analyzed the function of the downstream signaling molecules by expressing modified signaling molecules and found that both
JAK2
/STAT5 and Ras, two major signaling pathways activated by EPOR, are involved in full erythroid differentiation.
...
PMID:Role of cytokine signaling molecules in erythroid differentiation of mouse fetal liver hematopoietic cells: functional analysis of signaling molecules by retrovirus-mediated expression. 1002 85
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>