Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P42345 (mTOR)
26,049 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Malignant glioma is one of the deadliest types of cancer. Understanding how the cell of origin progressively evolves toward malignancy in greater detail could provide mechanistic insights and lead to novel concepts for tumor prevention and therapy. Previously we have identified oligodendrocyte precursor cell (OPC) as the cell of origin for glioma following the concurrent deletion of p53 and NF1 using a mouse genetic mosaic system that can reveal mutant cells prior to malignancy. In the current study, we set out to deconstruct the gliomagenic process in two aspects. First, we determined how the individual loss of p53 or NF1 contributes to aberrant behaviors of OPCs. Second, we determined how signaling aberrations in OPCs progressively change from pre-malignant to transformed stages. We found that while the deletion of NF1 leads to mutant OPC expansion through increased proliferation and decreased differentiation, the deletion of p53 impairs OPC senescence. Signaling analysis showed that, while PI3K and MEK pathways go through stepwise over-activation, mTOR signaling remains at the basal level in pre-transforming mutant OPCs but is abruptly up-regulated in tumor OPCs. Finally, inhibiting mTOR via pharmacological or genetic methods, led to a significant blockade of gliomagenesis but had little impact on pre-transforming mutant OPCs, suggesting that mTOR is necessary for final transformation but not early progression. In summary, our findings show that deconstructing the tumorigenic process reveals specific aberrations caused by individual gene mutations and altered signaling events at precise timing during tumor progression, which may shed light on tumor-prevention strategies.
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PMID:p53 and NF 1 loss plays distinct but complementary roles in glioma initiation and progression. 2939 77

Malignant glioma is a severe type of brain tumor with a grim prognosis. The occurrence of resistance compromises the efficacy of chemotherapy for glioma. Long noncoding RNA growth arrest-specific 5 (GAS5) has recently become an attractive target for cancer therapy by regulating cell growth, invasion, and migration. Nevertheless, its role in glioma chemoresistance remains elusive. In the current study, the expression of GAS5 was decreased in glioma cell lines, and lower levels of GAS5 were observed in U138 and LN18 glioma cells that had low sensitivity to cisplatin. Functional assay confirmed that knockdown of GAS5 enhanced cell resistance to cisplatin in U87 cells, which had a relatively high expression of GAS5. Conversely, elevation of GAS5 increased cell sensitivity to cisplatin in U138 cells that had a relatively low expression of GAS5. Mechanistically, cisplatin exposure evoked excessive autophagy concomitant with an increase in autophagy-related LC3II expression and a decrease in autophagy substrate p62 expression, which was reversely muted after GAS5 overexpression. In addition, GAS5 restored cisplatin-inhibited mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) activation. Preconditioning with mTOR antagonist rapamycin engendered not only mTOR inhibition but also abrogated GAS5-mediated depression in cisplatin-evoked autophagy. Notably, blocking the mTOR pathway also attenuated GAS5-increased sensitivity to cisplatin in U138 cells. Cumulatively, these findings indicate that GAS5 may blunt the resistance of glioma cells to cisplatin by suppressing excessive autophagy through the activation of mTOR signaling, implying a promising therapeutic strategy against chemoresistance in glioma.
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PMID:Long noncoding RNA growth arrest-specific 5 facilitates glioma cell sensitivity to cisplatin by suppressing excessive autophagy in an mTOR-dependent manner. 3031 77