Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Query: UNIPROT:P10415 (
Bcl-2
)
33,771
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Mitochondrial glutathione (mtGSH) depletion increases sensitivity of
Bcl-2
-overexpressing B16 melanoma (B16M)-F10 cells (high metastatic potential) to tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha)-induced oxidative stress and death in vitro. In vivo, mtGSH depletion in B16M-F10 cells was achieved by feeding mice (where the B16M-F10 grew as a solid tumor in the footpad) with an L-glutamine (L-Gln)-enriched diet, which promoted in the tumor cells an increase in
glutaminase
activity, accumulation of cytosolic L-glutamate, and competitive inhibition of GSH transport into mitochondria. L-Gln-adapted B16M-F10 cells, isolated using anti-Met-72 monoclonal antibodies and flow cytometry-coupled cell sorting, were injected into the portal vein to produce hepatic metastases. In l-Gln-adapted invasive (iB16M-Gln+) cells, isolated from the liver by the same methodology and treated with TNF-alpha and an antisense
Bcl-2
oligodeoxynucleotide, viability decreased to approximately 12%. iB16M-Gln+ cell death associated with increased generation of O2*- and H2O2, opening of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore complex, and release of proapoptotic molecular signals. Activation of cell death mechanisms was prevented by GSH ester-induced mtGSH replenishment. The oxidative stress-resistant survivors showed an adaptive response that includes overexpression of manganese-containing superoxide dismutase (Mn-SOD) and catalase activities. By treating iB16M-Gln+ cells with a double anti- antisense therapy (
Bcl-2
and SOD2 antisense oligodeoxynucleotides) and TNF-alpha, metastatic cell survival decreased to approximately 1%. Chemotherapy (taxol plus daunorubicin) easily removed this minimum percentage of survivors. This contribution identifies critical molecules that can be sequentially targeted to facilitate elimination of highly resistant metastatic cells.
...
PMID:Bcl-2 and Mn-SOD antisense oligodeoxynucleotides and a glutamine-enriched diet facilitate elimination of highly resistant B16 melanoma cells by tumor necrosis factor-alpha and chemotherapy. 1626 11
Glutamine provides cancer cells with the energy required to synthesize macromolecules. Methods which block glutamine metabolism in treatment of breast cancer inhibit oncogenic transformation and tumor growth. We investigated whether inhibiting glutamine metabolism produces effects that are synergistic with those produced by drugs which damage DNA in triple-negative breast cancer cells. HCC1937 and BT-549 breast cancer cells were co-treated with either cisplatin or etoposide in combination with BPTES (a specific inhibitor of
glutaminase
1) or exposure to a glutamine-free medium, and the cell proliferation and cell apoptosis were measured by flow cytometry, immunoblotting studies, and CCK-8 assays. The results showed that both glutamine deprivation and BPTES pretreatments increased the toxic effects of cisplatin and etoposide on HCC1937 cells, as demonstrated by their reduced proliferation, increased expression of apoptosis-related proteins (cleaved-PARP, cleaved-caspase 9, and cleaved-caspase 3) and decreased
Bcl-2
/BAX ratio. However, in BT-549 cells, glutamine deprivation and BPTES treatment increased etoposide-induced apoptosis only when used with higher concentrations of etoposide, and the effect on cisplatin-induced apoptosis was minimal. These results suggest that the anti-cancer effects produced by a combined approach of inhibiting glutamine metabolism and administering common chemotherapeutic agents correlate with the tumor cell type and specific drugs being administered.
...
PMID:Glutamine deprivation plus BPTES alters etoposide- and cisplatin-induced apoptosis in triple negative breast cancer cells. 2741 28
Bcl-2
associated athanogene 3 (BAG3) is an important molecule that maintains oncogenic features of cancer cells via diverse mechanisms. One of the important functions assigned to BAG3 is implicated in selective macroautophagy/autophagy, which attracts much attention recently. However, the mechanism underlying regulation of autophagy by BAG3 has not been well defined. Here, we describe that BAG3 enhances autophagy via promotion of glutamine consumption and glutaminolysis. Glutaminolysis initiates with deamination of glutamine by
glutaminase
(
GLS
), by which yields glutamate and ammonia in mitochondria. The current study demonstrates that BAG3 stabilizes
GLS
via prohibition its interaction with SIRT5, thereby hindering its desuccinylation at Lys158 and Lys164 sites. As an underlying molecular mechanism, we demonstrate that BAG3 interacts with
GLS
and decreases SIRT5 expression. The current study also demonstrates that occupation by succinyl at Lys158 and Lys164 sites prohibits its Lys48-linked ubiquitination, thereby preventing its subsequent proteasomal degradation. Collectively, the current study demonstrates that BAG3 enhances autophagy via stabilizing
GLS
and promoting glutaminolysis. For the first time, this study reports that succinylation competes with ubiquitination to regulate proteasomal
GLS
degradation.
...
PMID:BAG3 promotes autophagy and glutaminolysis via stabilizing glutaminase. 3091 Sep 98