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)

The last decade has seen major advances in the acquisition of knowledge concerning both the cellular and molecular genetics of multiple myeloma. Although discrete and specific changes associated with the plasma cell disorders have yet to be identified, a pattern is emerging that one can associate with the plasma cell disorders. This pattern includes the frequent involvement of chromosomes 1 and 14, and in particular presence of the 14q+ abnormality. But in addition there are typically many other numeric and/or structural changes that can, in fact, involve almost any chromosome, but particularly chromosomes 3, 5, 6, and 7, as well as 11, 14, 17, and 18. The presence of one or more unidentified marker chromosomes is also a typical feature. The ongoing challenges include identification of a crucial initial genetic change (if such exists) as well as the factors contributing to the ongoing karyotypic evaluation that results in complex karyotypes in patients with advanced disease. There is no doubt that the complex karyotypic picture contributes to the major heterogeneity of plasma cells that occurs in malignant plasma cell disorders. Karyotypic complexity underlies heterogeneity in cell morphology, surface antigen expression, response to cytokines, and a variety of other functional characteristics. The aberrant expression of antigens normally found on other hematopoietic progenitors has led to speculation about the true nature of the stem cell in myeloma. The overriding challenge, however, is to fully understand the plasma cell disorders at the molecular level. Although changes have already been noted in the functions of C-myc, the ras family of oncogenes, Bcl-2 expression, and several so called anti-oncogenes such as p53, it is likely that we have only begun to scratch the surface in the area of molecular changes. The potential for involvement at multiple molecular sites and the possibility of complex interactions between gene segments is truly overwhelming. However, it is hoped that at the molecular level a pattern will ultimately emerge. It is most interesting, as previously discussed, that there is an interplay among C-myc, N-ras, Bcl-2, and the Epstein-Barr virus in the predilection for a plasma cell phenotype. Undoubtedly there is much more to learn, and it is truly exciting to finally have some tools and probes at hand to more effectively study the genome in multiple myeloma and related disorders.
...
PMID:Cellular and molecular genetic features of myeloma and related disorders. 158 85

Programmed cell death (PCD) has been observed in a wide variety of cell types in response to physiologic signals or types of stress. How these stimuli trigger PCD, and whether there is a common PCD signal transduction pathway, is not clear. As more genes are described that may participate in or regulate PCD, an assay system in which gene products can easily be introduced and/or modulated would be of great value. To avoid the generation and screening of multiple individual stable cell transfectants, a simple transient transfection death assay has been developed. 2B4.11, a murine T cell hybridoma, was transfected by electroporation with a constitutively active beta-galactosidase reporter gene and the cells were incubated in culture medium or with a PCD-inducing stimulus. The amount of beta-galactosidase activity remaining in the intact cells at the end of the culture period represented only viable transfected cells. Bcl-2 was chosen to examine whether this system would be useful to study the effect of transiently transfected genes since it blocks PCD in a number of experimental systems. Consistent with data obtained using stable transfectants, transient expression of Bcl-2 in 2B4.11 completely protected cells from glucocorticoid- and cytotoxic agent-induced PCD. This protection from death was confirmed at the individual cell level by the transient co-expression of a class I Ld surface antigen and flow cytometric analysis. Some of the advantages of the transient transfection death assay described here are; (1) the simple and sensitive beta-galactosidase assay, (2) the rapidity of the assay, (3) the ability to perform conventional viability assays to monitor treatment-induced cytotoxicity, (4) multiple gene products can be tested alone, and in combination, (5) antisense or dominant negative approaches can be used, and (6) the adaptability of this assay system to other cell types, transfection techniques, or reporter and expression vectors. The transient transfection death assay should make it easier to identify and order important steps in the PCD signal transduction pathways.
...
PMID:A simple assay for examining the effect of transiently expressed genes on programmed cell death. 789 44

CD95 (Fas/APO-1) is a cell surface receptor able to trigger apoptosis in a variety of cell types. The expression and function of the CD95 antigen on leukemic blasts from 42 patients with B lineage and 53 patients with T lineage acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) were investigated using immunofluorescence staining and apoptosis assays. The CD95 surface antigen was expressed in most ALL cases, with the T lineage ALL usually showing a higher intensity of surface CD95 expression as compared with the B lineage ALL cells (relative fluorescence intensity, RFI: 4.8 +/- 0.47 vs 2.2 +/- 0.23, respectively, P < 0.01). Functional studies disclosed that upon oligomerization by anti-CD95 monoclonal antibodies the CD95 protein was either not able to initiate apoptosis of leukemic cells (75% of cases) or induced low rates of apoptosis (20% of cases). Only in 5% of cases did the apoptosis rate exceed the 20% level of the CD95-specific apoptosis. Most of the CD95-sensitive cases were found among T lineage ALLs (38% of T lineage vs 10% of B lineage ALLs). Overall, the extent of CD95-induced apoptosis did not correlate with the expression level of CD95. Similarly, no significant correlation between expression level and functionality of CD95 in human leukemia cell lines of B and T cell origin could be observed. Bcl-2 protein has been associated with prolonged cell survival and has been shown to block partially CD95-mediated apoptosis, but for ALL cells no correlation between bcl-2 expression and spontaneous or CD95-mediated apoptosis could be found. The results obtained in this study indicate that, despite constitutive expression of CD95, the ALL cells are mainly resistant to CD95-triggering. More detailed investigations of the molecular mechanisms involved in the intracellular apoptotic signal transduction, such as interactions of the bcl-2 and the other members of the bcl-2 family, and functionality of the interleukin-1beta converting enzyme (ICE) like-proteases, may give new insights into key events responsible for the resistance or sensitivity to the induction of apoptosis in acute leukemia.
...
PMID:Differential CD95 expression and function in T and B lineage acute lymphoblastic leukemia cells. 926 77

Group I Burkitt lymphoma (BL) cell lines (L3055, Elijah, Louckes, BL2, and BL29) retaining the original biopsy phenotype were found to undergo prolonged phenotypic, functional, and molecular change on short-term exposure to soluble recombinant CD40L trimer. Sensitivity to, extent of, and duration of change appeared to reflect passage number in that the earliest passaged lines, L3055 and BL29, were generally the most susceptible. Culture of group I BL lines with CD40L resulted in significant growth arrest (without apoptosis) that, for L3055 cells, was sustained for 7 to 9 days after 72 hours of exposure. This was accompanied by the formation of large homotypic aggregates together with gross changes in individual cell morphology and a concomitant upregulation of CD54 (ICAM-1). Three of the five group I BL lines exhibited rapid downregulation of the hallmark CD77 surface antigen, which, for L3055 cells, was maintained for at least 12 days after 72 hours of incubation with CD40L. With the exception of BL2, all group I BL lines were induced to express CD40 homodimers on CD40-stimulation, whereas only monomers were detected in unstimulated cells. Experiments using CD40-transfected Rat-1 fibroblasts showed that the ability to signal for dimer formation required Thr234 of CD40. For L3055 and BL29 cells, an initial 72 hours of exposure to CD40L resulted in the maintenance of homodimers for up to 14 and 10 days, respectively. There was a close correlation between the induction and duration of CD40 homodimers and the appearance of Bcl-2. For L3055 cells, which are sensitive to apoptosis-induction on BCR-engagement, exposure to CD40L for 72 hours was found to provide considerable protection from anti-IgM, which was still significant to 20 days. The implications of such sustained effects on relatively short-term exposure of tumor B cells to CD40L are discussed.
...
PMID:Prolonged phenotypic, functional, and molecular change in group I Burkitt lymphoma cells on short-term exposure to CD40 ligand. 976 68

Hexamethylen-bisacetamide (HMBA) represents the prototype of a group of hybrid polar compounds, which induce differentiation in a variety of transformed cells including human embryonal carcinoma cells. Therefore, HMBA has been used in the differentiation therapy of cancer for patients with both hematological and solid malignancies. Upon HMBA treatment, the embryonal carcinoma cell line NTERA-2 clone D1 (NT2/D1) accumulates in G1 and undergoes terminal differentiation. Here we demonstrate that growth arrest and differentiation of NT2/D1 cells induced by HMBA involve increased expression of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p27, enhanced association of p27 with cyclin E/CDK2 complexes and suppression of kinase activity associated to cyclin E/CDK2 (but not to cyclin D3/CDK4). When HMBA differentiation was induced in the presence of p27 antisense oligonucleotides, NT2/D1 cells failed to arrest growth properly and, in parallel with the reduction of the anti-apoptotic Bcl-2 gene expression, cells underwent massive programmed cell death. Conversely, constitutive expression of p27 into NT2/D1 cells induced a marked reduction in the growth potential of these cells and partially reproduced HMBA-induced modification of surface antigen expression (down-regulation of SSEA-3 expression and up-regulation of VINIS-53 expression). Expression of p21 induced growth arrest but not differentiation. Likewise, inhibition of CDK2 by transfection of a dominant negative CDK2 in NT2/D1 cells or treatment with the kinase inhibitor olomucine induced growth arrest but not differentiation. Therefore, we propose that p27 represents a crucial molecule in HMBA signaling that cannot be replaced by p21. Furthermore, the results obtained with CDK2 inhibitors demonstrate that the block of CDK2 activity is sufficient for growth arrest but not for cell differentiation and suggest that, at least in these cells, growth arrest and differentiation are regulated by two overlapping but different pathways.
...
PMID:Key role of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p27kip1 for embryonal carcinoma cell survival and differentiation. 1059 22

Sodium butyrate (NaBu) can enhance the expression of genes from some of the mammalian promoters including cytomegalovirus (CMV) and simian virus 40 (SV40), but it can also inhibit cell growth and induce cellular apoptosis. Thus, the beneficial effect of using a higher concentration of NaBu on a foreign protein expression is compromised by its cytotoxic effect on cell growth. To overcome this cytotoxic effect of NaBu, a survival protein, human Bcl-2, was overexpressed in recombinant Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells (SH2-0.32), producing a humanized antibody directed against the S surface antigen of hepatitis B virus. When batch cultures of both control cells transfected with bcl-2-deficient plasmid (SH2-0.32-Deltabcl-2) and cells transfected with bcl-2 expression plasmid (14C6-bcl-2) were performed in the absence of NaBu, both cells showed similar profiles of cell viability and antibody production. Compared with the SH2-0.32-Deltabcl-2 culture, under the condition of NaBu addition at the exponential growth phase, overexpression of the bcl-2 gene considerably suppressed the NaBu-induced apoptosis of 14C6-bcl-2 by inhibiting caspase 3 activity and extending culture longevity by >2 days. As a result, the final antibody concentration of 14C6-bcl-2 culture was twofold higher than that of SH2-0.32-Deltabcl-2 culture in the presence of NaBu and threefold higher than that of SH2-0.32-Deltabcl-2 and 14C6-bcl-2 cultures in the absence of NaBu.
...
PMID:Overexpression of bcl-2 inhibits sodium butyrate-induced apoptosis in Chinese hamster ovary cells resulting in enhanced humanized antibody production. 1129 Oct 28

Twenty specimens of bone-implant interface membrane from THR/TKR were used for in situ localization of apoptotic changes. A panel of antibodies was used to label leukocyte antigens (CD68 and CD3) cytokines (IL-1alpha and IL-1beta) and apoptosis inhibiting and promoting proteins (bcl-2 and bax) by means of immunohistochemical techniques. A DNA fragment test on the tissue sections was also carried out to confirm actual cell death using the enzyme terminal deoxy nucleotidyl transferase (TdT) to incorporate biotinylated nucleotide with the 3'-OH DNA ends. Leukocyte antigen staining showed that there were large numbers of CD68 positive macrophages as well as multinucleate giant cells (MNGC) but that CD3 positive lymphocytes were also present in the interface membrane. The leukocyte surface antigen staining pattern corresponded to previous findings [1]. Immunostaining with bcl-2 and bax antibodies revealed that both of these proteins were expressed in the cytoplasm of the cells in the interface membrane but they showed different cellular patterns. Bcl-2 was localized in a small number of lymphocyte-like cells while bax was expressed by large numbers of cells, mainly macrophages. The number of cells which expressed bcl-2 was significantly lower than that of bax (P<0.01). DNA fragment localization occurred mostly in a layer of cells (1- 3 cells deep) next to the implant surface. Again the level of DNA fragment-containing cells was significantly lower than that of bax positive cells (P<0.01). The results, for the first time, indicate that there is an apoptotic activity occurring in cells in the interface membrane, but not all the cells which express apoptosis-promoting protein (i.e. bax) will enter into the phase of cell death.
...
PMID:In situ localization of apoptotic changes in the interface membrane of aseptically loosened orthopaedic implants. 1534 69

We have shown previously that prostatic stem/progenitor cells can be purified from isolated prostate ducts, based on their high expression of the Sca-1 surface antigen. We now report that high levels of aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) activity are present in a subset of prostate epithelial cells that coexpress a number of antigens found on stem/progenitor cells of other origins (CD9, Bcl-2, CD200, CD24, prominin, Oct 3/4, ABCG2, and nestin). Almost all of these cells expressing high levels of ALDH activity also express Sca-1 and a third of them express high levels of this antigen. The cells with high levels of ALDH activity have greater in vitro proliferative potential than cells with low ALDH activity. Importantly, in an in vivo prostate reconstitution assay, the cells expressing high levels of ALDH activity were much more effective in generating prostatic tissue than a population of cells with low enzymatic activity. Thus, a high level of ALDH activity can be considered a functional marker of prostate stem/progenitor cells and allows for simple, efficient isolation of cells with primitive features. The elucidation of the role of ALDH in prostate stem/progenitor cells may lead to the development of rational therapies for treating prostate cancer and benign prostatic hyperplasia.
...
PMID:High aldehyde dehydrogenase activity: a novel functional marker of murine prostate stem/progenitor cells. 1954 9

The objective of this study was to generate a liver targeting fusion interferon, galactosyl-human serum albumin-interferon alpha2b (G-HSA-IFN) and to evaluate its bioactivity in vitro on HepG2.2.15 cells which express hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) and hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg). The cell proliferation was determined by Sulpho Rhodamine B (SRB) staining method and flow cytometry (FCM) assay. Hochest33342 and Propidium Iodide (PI) double staining and Western blot analysis of Bcl-2/Bax were also performed to evaluate cell lethality and apoptosis. The concentrations of HBsAg and HBeAg secreted in culture supernatant were detected using Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay (ELISA). The results demonstrated that G-HSA-IFN could inhibit the proliferation of HepG2.2.15 cells and the cell cycle was arrested at G0/G1 phase. Western blotting results showed that the expression of Bcl-2 was inhibited in a dose-dependent manner while the expression of Bax was enhanced. The expression of HBsAg was inhibited by G-HSA-IFN in a dose-dependent manner, while no significant inhibiting effect on the expression of HBeAg was observed. Conclusively, G-HSA-IFN could not only significantly inhibit the HBsAg expression and the proliferation of HepG2.2.15 cells, but also induce the apoptosis of the target cells, rendering it a promising drug candidate for hepatitis B.
...
PMID:Generation of a liver targeting fusion interferon and its bioactivity analysis in vitro. 2202 57

Lipid rafts are subdomains of the cell membrane with distinct protein composition and high concentrations of cholesterol and glycosphingolipids. Raft proteins are thought to mediate diverse cellular processes including signal transduction. However, its cellular mechanisms remain unclear. Caveolin-1 (cav-1, marker protein of caveolae) has been thought as a switchboard between extracellular matrix (ECM) stimuli and intracellular signals. Flotillin-2/reggie-1(Flot-2) is another ubiquitously expressed raft protein which defines non-caveolar raft microdomains (planar raft). Its cellular function is largely uncharacterized. Our novel studies demonstrated that Flot-2, in conjunction with cav-1, played important functions on controlling cell death via regulating Fas pathways. Using Beas2B epithelial cells, we found that in contrast to cav-1, Flot-2 conferred cytoprotection via preventing Fas mediated death-inducing signaling complex (DISC) formation, subsequently suppressed caspase-8 mediated extrinsic apoptosis. Moreover, Flot-2 reduced the mitochondria mediated intrinsic apoptosis by regulating the Bcl-2 family and suppressing cytochrome C release from mitochondria to cytosol. Flot-2 further modulated the common apoptosis pathway and inhibited caspase-3 activation via up-regulating the members in the inhibitor of apoptosis (IAP) family. Last, Flot-2 interacted with cav-1 and limited its expression. Taken together, we found that Flot-2 protected cells from Fas induced apoptosis and counterbalanced the pro-apoptotic effects of cav-1. Thus, Flot-2 played crucial functions in cellular homeostasis and cell survival, suggesting a differential role of individual raft proteins.
...
PMID:Flotillin-2 modulates fas signaling mediated apoptosis after hyperoxia in lung epithelial cells. 2420 53


1 2 Next >>