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Query: UNIPROT:P10415 (
Bcl-2
)
33,771
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Inhibitors of transcription and translation can protect cells from physiological cell deaths induced by a variety of stimuli. These observations have been taken to suggest that de novo macromolecular synthesis may be an essential component of the cell death process. Paradoxically, the same inhibitors, at higher concentrations, themselves trigger the death of cells. Previously, we have mapped a conserved and ordered sequence of events that exerts physiological cell death. Diverse signals converge to activate this lethal pathway, composed of a proteolytic cascade of caspases and subsequent
cyclin
-dependent kinases. Here we report that inhibitors of nuclear gene expression, when they block cell death, act upstream of this lethal process to prevent its activation. In contrast, when cell death is triggered by high doses of the inhibitors, these same essential molecules are activated, despite the essentially complete blockade of macromolecular synthesis. This inhibitor-induced death response is associated with the release of cytochrome c from mitochondria and the activation of apical caspase 9 and is blocked by overexpression of
Bcl-2
. These data demonstrate that all essential molecules that exert lethality already are resident within cells and are activated posttranslationally upon stimulation. De novo macromolecular synthesis pertains idiosyncratically only to upstream, modulatory elements of particular death responses.
...
PMID:The effector phase of physiological cell death relies exclusively on the posttranslational activation of resident components. 1206 14
The role of
Bcl-2
in photodynamic therapy (PDT) is controversial, and some photosensitizers have been shown to induce
Bcl-2
degradation with loss of its protective function. Hypericin is a naturally occurring photosensitizer with promising properties for the PDT of cancer. Here we show that, in HeLa cells, photoactivated hypericin does not cause
Bcl-2
degradation but induces
Bcl-2
phosphorylation in a dose- and time-dependent manner.
Bcl-2
phosphorylation is induced by sublethal PDT doses; increasing the photodynamic stress promptly leads to apoptosis, during which
Bcl-2
is neither phosphorylated nor degraded.
Bcl-2
phosphorylation involves mitochondrial
Bcl-2
and correlates with the kinetics of a G(2)/M cell cycle arrest, preceding apoptosis. The co-localization of hypericin with alpha-tubulin and the aberrant mitotic spindles observed following sublethal PDT doses suggest that photodamage to the microtubule network provokes the G(2)/M phase arrest. PDT-induced
Bcl-2
phosphorylation is not altered by either the overexpression or inhibition of p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (p38 MAPK) and c-Jun NH(2)-terminal protein kinase 1 (JNK1) nor by inhibiting the extracellular signal-regulated kinases (ERKs) or protein kinase C. By contrast,
Bcl-2
phosphorylation is selectively suppressed by the
cyclin
-dependent protein kinase (CDK)-inhibitor roscovitine, completely blocked by the protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide and enhanced by the overexpression of CDK1, suggesting a role for this pathway. However, in an in vitro kinase assay, active CDK1/cyclin B1 complex failed to phosphorylate immunoprecipitated
Bcl-2
, suggesting that this protein kinase may not directly modify
Bcl-2
. Mutation of serine-70 to alanine in
Bcl-2
abolishes PDT-induced phosphorylation and restores the caspase-3 activation to the same levels of the vector-transfected cells, indicating that
Bcl-2
phosphorylation may be a signal to delay apoptosis in G(2)/M phase-arrested cells.
...
PMID:Phosphorylation of Bcl-2 in G2/M phase-arrested cells following photodynamic therapy with hypericin involves a CDK1-mediated signal and delays the onset of apoptosis. 1210 Nov 83
Flavopiridol is a synthetic flavone that inhibits tumor growth by suppressing
cyclin
-dependent kinases (CDKs). We have investigated effects of flavopiridol in oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC). Flavopiridol was found to inhibit the growth of OSCC cells in a time- and dose-dependent manner. Induction of apoptosis was observed in all cells showing accumulated cells with sub-G(1) DNA contents, DNA fragmentations, and PARP cleavages. While
Bcl-2
and Bax expression did not change, Bcl-x(L) was down regulated and Bcl-xs was up-regulated after being exposed to flavopiridol. Flavopiridol treatments also resulted in remarkable reductions of cyclin A,
cyclin
B, and cyclin D1 expressions. We also found that expression levels of CDK activation kinase and CDC25C were reduced, and p34 inactive form CDK2 were up-regulated. Our data indicate that flavopiridol has growth inhibition activities against OSCC. Flavopiridol not only inhibits CDKs directly, but it also inhibits the CDKs activation pathway and activates the Bcl-x apoptotic pathway.
...
PMID:Flavopiridol, a cyclin dependent kinase (CDK) inhibitor, induces apoptosis by regulating Bcl-x in oral cancer cells. 1245 21
The call for the discovery of less toxic, more selective, and more effective agents to treat cancer has become more urgent. Inhibition of angiogenesis continues to be one of the main streams in the current cancer drug discovery activity. Insights into tumor angiogenesis biology have led to the identification of a number of molecules, which are important for the progression of these processes. Of particular interest is a group of growth factors including fibroblast growth factor, platelet-derived growth factor, and vascular endothelial growth factor. These growth factors and their corresponding receptor tyrosine kinases have become important targets for inhibition of the proliferation of endothelial cells, the main component of blood vessels. The validated targets for inhibition of angiogenesis also include a family of matrix metalloproteinases and cell adhesion molecules. In the closely related area, protein kinases have emerged as one of the most important targets for drug discovery. Besides growth factor receptor tyrosine kinases, numerous other protein kinases implicated in malignancies have been identified including non-receptor kinases such as Bcl-Abl and Src kinases. In addition, the cell cycle regulators (
cyclin
-dependent kinases, p21 gene) and apoptosis modulators (
Bcl-2
oncoprotein, p53 tumor suppressor gene, survivin protein, etc) have also attracted renewed interest as potential targets for anticancer drug discovery. Other molecular targets include protein farnesyltransferase (FTase), histone deacetylase (HDAC), and telomerase, which have essential roles in cellular signal transduction pathways (FTase, HDAC) and cell life-span (telomerase). This review presents a comprehensive summary and discussion on the most important targets currently attracting a great deal of interest in contemporary anticancer drug design and discovery. Recent advances complementing these targets are also highlighted.
...
PMID:Current targets for anticancer drug discovery. 1255 68
Early detection of lung cancer requires none or few invasive techniques. Distal lung cancer (40% of the cases in most European countries) can be sensitively detected by spiral computed tomography. Theoretically, in 60% of cases, the proximal lesions (main to segmental bronchi, accessible by bronchoscopy) should be able to be detected by sputum cytology. Unfortunately, this very specific technique has a low sensitivity and is time consuming. Fluorescent bronchoscopy increases the detection rate of early or micro-invasive lesions and may be proposed in highly selected populations, but not as a screening test. Biomarkers in blood and sputum have not yet been clinically validated. However, the amount of data generated from studies first on resected tumours, then on early bronchial lesions and more recently on blood and sputum offer a wide field for investigation. Lung carcinogenesis is a multistep process characterised by the accumulation of successive molecular genetic and epigenetic abnormalities, resulting in selection of clonal cells with uncontrolled growth capacities throughout the whole respiratory tract (field cancerisation). Molecular lesions far precede morphological transformation of preneoplastic bronchial lesions (dysplasia) or alveolar lesions (atypical alveolar hyperplasia). Genetic and epigenetic abnormalities in the genes involved in cell cycle, senescence, apoptosis, repair, differentiation and cell migration control may be detected on bronchial biopsies, on respiratory cells from the sputum and even in the circulating deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA). The key genes involved include those in the P53-retinoblastoma (Rb) pathways. The balance between
cyclin
-dependent kinases and their inhibitors regulates the level of Rb phosphorylation and its function at G1-S transition; P53 plays at least two functions (cell cycle and apoptosis control). The balance of bax-
bcl2
is important in the control of apoptosis as well as loss of fragile histidine triad expression. O(6)-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase seems to be important in DNA repair control, the RARbeta receptor in differentiation, and cadherin H and E and different metalloproteases genes in cell migration. The demonstration of hyperexpression or silencing of these genes needs different validated techniques: immunohistochemistry on biopsies or cytological preparations, molecular biology techniques for mutations, loss of heterozygosity and aberrant methylation abnormalities. Automation and miniaturisation of these techniques will allow early detection and may be widely applied once clinically validated.
...
PMID:Early detection of lung cancer: role of biomarkers. 1257
As telomeres play a role in protecting DNA, there is the possibility that telomerase activity is involved with cellular response to DNA-damaging agents. This study was designed to investigate the association between telomerase and the doxorubicin altered cell cycle in drug resistant gastric carcinoma cell lines. Three doxorubicin resistant gastric carcinoma cell lines and their parent cell lines (SNU-1, SNU-16 and SNU-620) were incubated with doxorubicin at the final concentration induced resistance and ten times final concentration for 24 h. Telomerase activity and hTERT mRNA expression were lowered by doxorubicin treatment in parent cell lines, but in drug resistant cell lines, telomerase activity and hTERT mRNA expression were not repressed by doxorubicin treatment.
Bcl-2
protein expression, which is known to regulate telomerase activity, did not change in doxorubicin resistant cell lines but decreased in parent cell lines by doxorubicin treatment. Cell cycle analysis revealed that the parent cell lines had an increased fraction of cells in G2/M phase after doxorubicin treatment and doxorubicin resistant cell lines had maintained fractions in G0/G1 phase. Doxorubicin treatment did not alter
cyclin
B or cdc2 protein level, which is known as the essential component of G2/M transition. G2/M arrest in the parent cell lines was associated with an increase in inhibitory phosphorylation of Tyr15 on cdc2. In summary, the parent cell lines showed G2/M arrest and a reduction of telomerase activity after doxorubicin treatment. In contrast, reduced telomerase activity,
Bcl-2
expression and G2/M arrest after doxorubicin treatment did not appear in resistant cell lines. Therefore, relative resistance to doxorubicin may be related to high levels of bcl-2 or intact cell cycle and consequently high telomerase activity.
...
PMID:Telomerase activity, expression of Bcl-2 and cell cycle regulation in doxorubicin resistant gastric carcinoma cell lines. 1257 37
The signal transducer and activator of transcription molecules (Stats) play key roles in cytokine-induced signal transduction. Recently, it was proposed that constitutively activated Stat 3 (Stat 3 phosphorylated) contributes to the pathogenesis of multiple myeloma (MM) by preventing apoptosis and inducing proliferation. The study aim was to investigate Stat 3 activation in a series of multiple myeloma (MM) cases and its effect on downstream targets such as the anti-apoptotic proteins Bcl-xL, Mcl-1, and
Bcl-2
, and the cell-cycle protein cyclin D1. Forty-eight cases of MM were analyzed. Immunohistochemistry was performed on paraffin sections using antibodies against cyclin D1,
Bcl-2
, Bcl-xL, Mcl-1, p21, Stat 3, and Stat 3 phosphorylated (P). Their specificity was corroborated by Western blot analysis using eight human MM cell lines as control. The proliferation rate was assessed with the antibody MiB1. In addition, the mRNA levels of cyclin D1 and Stat 3 were determined by quantitative real-time reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction of paraffin-embedded microdissected tissue. Three different groups determined by the expression of Stat 3P and cyclin D1 (protein and mRNA) were identified: group 1, Stat 3-activated (23 cases, 48%). All cases revealed nuclear expression of Stat 3P. No elevation of Stat 3 mRNA was identified in any of the cases. Three cases in this group showed intermediate to low cyclin D1 protein and mRNA expression. Group 2 included 15 (31%) cases with cyclin D1 staining and lack of Stat 3P. All cases showed intermediate to high levels of cyclin D1 mRNA expression. Group 3 included 10 (21%) cases with no expression of either cyclin D1 or Stat 3P. High levels of anti-apoptotic proteins Bcl-xL and Mcl-1 were identified in 89% and 100% of all cases, respectively. In contrast to Bcl-xL and Mcl-1, the expression of
Bcl-2
showed an inverse correlation with proliferation rate (P: 0.0003). No significant differences were found between the three groups in terms of proliferation rate or expression of anti-apoptotic proteins. However,
cyclin
D1+ cases were always well differentiated and were more likely to show a lymphoplasmocytoid differentiation (chi-square = 9.55). Overall, constitutive activation of Stat 3 was found in almost half (48%) of the investigated MM cases. However, this does not seem to have a major impact on the expression of anti-apoptotic proteins and proliferation. We showed that cyclin D1 overexpression and Stat 3 activation are, mutually exclusive events in MM (P = 0.0066). The universal expression of Mcl-1, independent of activated Stat 3, suggests that its expression is constitutive and that it might play an important role in the pathogenesis of MM.
...
PMID:Analysis of signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (Stat 3) pathway in multiple myeloma: Stat 3 activation and cyclin D1 dysregulation are mutually exclusive events. 1270 28
The antiproliferative effect of human bcl-2 gene transferred to E1A + c-Ha-ras-transformed rat embryo fibroblasts, which are characterized by the absence of cell cycle checkpoints after damage and by a high proapoptotic sensitivity was studied. Ionizing irradiation, adriamycin treatment, and serum starvation were shown to induce G1/S arrest in E1A + c-Ha-ras-transformants.
Bcl-2
antiproliferative effect in E1A + c-Ha-ras-transformants was not associated with alterations in Cdk2, cyclin E and A contents. G1/S arrest following irradiation or serum starvation was accompanied by a decrease in kinase activity associated with cyclin E-cdk2, whereas G1/S arrest in tetraploid subpopulation after adriamycin treatment did not correlate with a decrease in cyclin E-associated kinase activity. Cyclin A-associated kinase activity did not decrease after any used treatment. Transfection of bcl-2 in E1A + c-Ha-ras-transformants resulted in elevated expression of
cyclin
-cdk complexes inhibitor p21/Waf-1, but not p27/Kip. Damaging agents caused p21/Waf-1 and p27/Kip accumulation, but bcl-2 overexpression did not restore functions of these inhibitors, since p21/Waf-1 and p27/Kip were unable to suppress
cyclin
-cdk complexes activity after damage. These results suggest that bcl-2 transfection in E1A + c-Ha-ras-transformants is likely to result in irradiation- or serum starvation-induced G1/S arrest accomplished by a selective decrease in cyclin E-associated kinase activity. Adriamycin-induced G1/S arrest seems to be realized via
cyclin
-cdk complexes activity-independent way involving antiproliferative targets downstream of cyclin E-cdk2 and cyclin A-cdk2 complexes.
...
PMID:[Changes in the activity of cyclin-kinase complexes governing cell transition from G1 phase to DNA replication phase in E1A + c-Ha-ras transformants transfected with the bcl-2 gene]. 1272 79
Docetaxel (Taxotere) is a member of the taxane class of anticancer agents to reach clinical use. This semisynthetic analog of paclitaxel (Taxol) is one of the newer potent anti-neoplastic agents now undergoing extensive laboratory and clinical investigations. Several studies indicate that antimicrotubule agents are potent promoters of apoptosis in cancer cells. Cytotoxic mechanisms of antimitotic taxoids are not yet fully understood, but it has been demonstrated that docetaxel increases tubulin polymerisation, promotes microtubule assembly and also inhibits tubulin depolymerisation. Disruption of microtubules results also in the induction of tumor suppressor gene p53 and inhibitor of
cyclin
-dependent kinases and activation/inactivation of several protein kinases. As a consequence cells are arrested in the G2-M phase of the cell cycle, after which they may either undergo cell death by apoptosis or necrosis or overcome the G2-M stop and continue in the division cycle (often toward a post-mitotic cell death) depending on the tumor cell type. Nevertheless, how docetaxel induces apoptotic cell death or caspases activation is not yet defined. One may assume that taxanes are able to induce the phosphorylation of Bcl-X(L)/
Bcl-2
members and thus inactivate their anti-apoptotic capacities. The down-regulation of
Bcl-2
and/or the upregulation of p53 and p21/WAF-1 are certainly one of the important modes of apoptosis induction by taxanes. The aim of this framework is to summarize the effects of microtubuline targeting agents on apoptotic signal transduction and new molecular pathways. Finally, we will also discuss the potential therapeutic interest in the association of docetaxel and ionizing radiation.
...
PMID:Signal transduction pathways of taxanes-induced apoptosis. 1276 74
Cyclin E, the regulatory component of the cyclin E/cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) complex, is required for proliferation and overexpression of this
cyclin
is associated with many types of human tumors. To elucidate the mechanism by which cyclin E overexpression promotes tumorigenesis, cyclin E was overexpressed in two breast cancer lines: MCF7 and T47D. Cells overexpressing cyclin E display a marked decrease in the expression of
Bcl-2
, an antiapoptotic protein, and increased levels of the proapoptotic proteins Bad and Bax. The levels of Bcl-X(L) and Mcl-1 remain unchanged. Since the homeostasis of pro- and antiapoptotic proteins was altered, we asked if cyclin E overexpression modifies responses to cytokines. MCF7 cyclin E overexpressing cells have an enhanced sensitivity to Fas, TRAIL, and TNF-alpha-induced apoptosis. T47D cells overexpressing cyclin E have a significant increase in TNF-alpha and TRAIL-induced apoptosis. In conclusion, our results provide a link between expression of cyclin E, deregulation of
Bcl-2
, and an altered response to cytokine-mediated apoptosis.
...
PMID:Cyclin E overexpression enhances cytokine-mediated apoptosis in MCF7 breast cancer cells. 1284 48
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