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)

Recent data strongly support the idea that the orchestrated interaction between cancer and other cells in the tumor microenvironment is a vital component in the neoplastic process. Thus, tumor cells take advantage of the signaling molecules of the immune system to proliferate, survive, and invade other tissues. CCL2 (Chemokine (C-C motif) ligand 2, Monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1) has been demonstrated to play a significant role in prostate cancer neoplasia and invasion, and is highly expressed in the tumor microenvironment. We recently reported that CCL2 elicits a strong survival advantage in prostate cancer PC3 cells through PI3K/Akt-dependent regulation of autophagy via the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathway and importantly, survivin upregulation is essential in this survival mechanism. Autophagy protects cells from nutrient depletion stress, but, paradoxically, excessive autophagy will result in cell death. How these life or death decisions are regulated remains unclear. Here we discuss the function of survivin in the control of autophagy and the interaction between CCL2, survivin and autophagy in the complex program of tumor progression.
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PMID:CCL2, survivin and autophagy: new links with implications in human cancer. 1875 34

The concurrent use of rituximab with cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone (R-CHOP) has established the utility of chemoimmunotherapy for the treatment of aggressive non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL). However, a substantial number of patients with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) still die from their disease, and improvements in therapy remain necessary. Numerous efforts have been made to improve prognostic tools in DLBCL, including the International Prognostic Index (IPI). Although the IPI has been validated through numerous studies over the past 25 years, currently there are no prospectively generated data that advise the clinician on how to use the IPI to treat specific patient subsets differently from one another. A variety of efforts are underway to develop new therapeutic strategies in aggressive lymphoma, including the use of dose-dense therapy (CHOP-R cycled every 14 rather than 21 days). Several novel agents are undergoing evaluation in DLBCL, as both single agents in the relapsed setting and in combination with R-CHOP. The agents have varying degrees of single-agent activity, and some of their mechanisms are incompletely understood. New agents include lenalidomide, SGN-40, bevacizumab, Syk inhibitors, enzastaurin, histone deacetylase inhibitors, bortezomib, anti-survivin agents, and mTOR inhibitors. These agents offer reason for optimism, but considerable challenges exist in demonstrating that they clearly provide added value, and in the integration, sequence, and combination of these novel drugs into the range of current treatment options available to patients with aggressive NHL.
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PMID:Targeted treatment and new agents in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma. 1876 Jul 4

The present study investigated the effect of mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) inhibition on HCC cells in vitro and in vivo, either alone or in combination with cytotoxic agents. In vitro, HCC cell lines were exposed to RAD001, an mTOR inhibitor, either alone or in combination with cisplatin. Alone, RAD001 suppressed cell proliferation in all cell lines tested, but did not induce apoptosis. RAD001 in combination with cisplatin induced a significant increase in the number of apoptotic cells, downregulated the expression of pro-survival molecules, Bcl-2, survivin and cyclinD1, and increased the cleavage of PARP, compared to RAD001 or cisplatin alone. Transfection of p53 into the Hep3B cell line increased the sensitivity of tumor cells to cisplatin. The suppression of HCC tumor growth in vivo was enhanced by RAD001 combined with cisplatin, accompanied by a significant increase in the number of apoptotic cells in tumor tissues. This study demonstrates that inhibition of mTOR suppresses tumor growth and sensitizes tumor cells to chemocytotoxic agents.
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PMID:Inhibition of mTOR enhances chemosensitivity in hepatocellular carcinoma. 1882 93

Patients with advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) have shown to benefit from tamoxifen treatment. The mechanisms of tamoxifen effects in HCC, however, are not yet clearly understood. The PI3K/Akt/mTOR signal pathway is involved in cell proliferation, tumorigenesis, and apoptosis. Over-expression of survivin has played an important role in leading to antiapoptosis. The current study investigated changes in mTOR pathway and survivin expression in hepatocarcinoma cell line HepG2 treated with tamoxifen. We detected apoptosis of hepatocarcinoma cells by flow cytometry assay. Survivin transcription level and p70S6k was demonstrated by PCR, dual-luciferase reporter assay and western blot analysis respectively. Our results are showed as follows: tamoxifen leads to apoptosis of the cells, and reduction in survivin expression, as well as a dramatic reduction in the activated form of p70S6 kinase. Twenty micromoles tamoxifen treatment significantly depresses transcription of survivin mRNA. Treating HepG2 cells with rapamycin, a specific mTOR inhibitor, significantly reduce survivin protein level but did not affect survivin transcription, which indicated that tamoxifen and rapamycin were synergistic in regards to down-regulation of survivin expression in hepatocellular carcinoma cells. Our results suggest that tamoxifen down-regulate survivin expression in HepG2 cells is mediated by transcriptional and posttranscriptional level via PI3K/Akt/mTOR pathway to induce apoptosis.
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PMID:Involvement of mTOR and survivin inhibition in tamoxifen-induced apoptosis in human hepatoblastoma cell line HepG2. 1993 98

CCL2 is a cytokine prevalent in the prostate cancer tumor microenvironment. Recently, we reported that CCL2 induces the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathway to promote prostate cancer PC3 cell survival; however, the mechanism used by CCL2 to maintain mTOR complex-1 (mTORC1) activation requires clarification. This study demonstrates that upon serum starvation, CCL2 functions as a negative regulator of AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) by decreasing phosphorylation at its major regulatory site (Thr(172)) in PC3, DU145, and C4-2B prostate cancer cells. The CCL2-mediated AMPK regulation decreased raptor phosphorylation (Ser(792)) resulting in hyperactivation of mTORC1. D942, a pharmacological activator of AMPK, stunted CCL2-induced mTORC1 activity, survivin expression, and cell survival without significantly affecting Akt activity. CCL2, however, conferred some resistance to the lethal effect of D942 compared with untreated cells. By using Akt-specific inhibitor X, it was shown that Akt inactivation did not cause an increase in AMPK phosphorylation in CCL2-stimulated cells, suggesting that CCL2-mediated negative regulation of AMPK is independent of Akt. Furthermore, bisindolylmaleimide-V, a specific inhibitor of p70(S6K), stunted survivin expression and induced cell death in CCL2-treated PC3. Altogether, these findings suggest that CCL2 hyperactivates mTORC1 through simultaneous regulation of both AMPK and Akt pathways and reveals a new network that promotes prostate cancer: CCL2-AMPK-mTORC1-survivin.
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PMID:CCL2 is a negative regulator of AMP-activated protein kinase to sustain mTOR complex-1 activation, survivin expression, and cell survival in human prostate cancer PC3 cells. 2001 39

Malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) is an aggressive, rapidly progressive malignancy without effective therapy. We evaluate sorafenib efficacy and impact on the cellular pro-survival machinery in vitro, efficacy of sorafenib as monotherapy and in combination with the naturally occurring death receptor agonist, TRAIL using human MPM cell lines, MSTO-211H, M30, REN, H28, H2052 and H2452. In vitro studies of the six MPM lines demonstrated single agent sensitivity to the multikinase inhibitor sorafenib and resistance to TRAIL. H28 and H2452 demonstrated augmented apoptosis with the addition of TRAIL to sorafenib in vitro. Treated cell lines demonstrated sorafenib-induced rapid dephosphorylation of AKT followed shortly by near complete dephosphorylation of the constitutively phosphorylated ERK1/2. Sorafenib therapy also decreased phosphorylation of B-Raf and mTOR in several cell lines. Within 3 h of sorafenib treatment, a number of known pro-survival molecules were dephosphorylated and/or downregulated in expression including MCL-1(L), c-FLIP(L), survivin and cIAP(1). These changes and eventual cell death did not elicit significant caspase-3 activation or PARP cleavage and pretreatment with the pan-caspase inhibitor, Z-VAD-FMK, did not block sorafenib efficacy but did block the effect of TRAIL monotherapy. Pre-treatment with Z-VAD-FMK did not block the synergistic effect of TRAIL and sorafenib in H28. In summary, single agent treatment with sorafenib results in widespread inhibition of the pro-survival machinery in vitro leading to cell death via a primarily caspase-independent mechanism. Combining sorafenib therapy with TRAIL, may be useful in order to provide a more efficient death signal and this synergistic effect appears to be caspase-independent. Pilot in vivo data demonstrates promising evidence of therapeutic efficacy in human tumor bearing xenograft nu/nu mice. We document single agent activity of sorafenib against MPM, unravel novel effects of sorafenib on anti-apoptotic signaling mediators, and suggest the combination of sorafenib plus TRAIL as possible therapy for clinical testing in MPM.
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PMID:Sorafenib inhibits ERK1/2 and MCL-1(L) phosphorylation levels resulting in caspase-independent cell death in malignant pleural mesothelioma. 2003 16

Medulloblastomas are the most frequent malignant brain tumors in children. Sunitinib is an oral multitargeted tyrosine kinase inhibitor used in clinical trials as an antiangiogenic agent for cancer therapy. In this report, we show that sunitinib induced apoptosis and inhibited cell proliferation of both a short-term primary culture (VC312) and an established cell line (Daoy) of human medulloblastomas. Sunitinib treatment resulted in the activation of caspase-3 and cleavage of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase and upregulation of proapoptotic genes, Bak and Bim, and inhibited the expression of survivin, an antiapoptotic protein. Sunitinib treatment also downregulated cyclin E, cyclin D2, and cyclin D3 and upregulated p21Cip1, all of which are involved in regulating cell cycle. In addition, it inhibited phosphorylation of signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3) and AKT (protein kinase B) in the tumor cells. Dephosphorylation of STAT3 (Tyr(705)) induced by sunitinib was helped by a reduction in activities of Janus-activated kinase 2 and Src. Additionally, sodium vanadate, an inhibitor of protein tyrosine phosphatases, partially blocked the inhibition of phosphorylated STAT3 by sunitinib. Loss of phosphorylated AKT after sunitinib treatment was accompanied by decreased phosphorylation of downstream proteins glycogen synthase kinase-3beta and mammalian target of rapamycin. Expression of a constitutively activated STAT3 mutant or myristoylated AKT partially blocked the effects of sunitinib in these tumor cells. Sunitinib also inhibited the migration of medulloblastoma tumor cells in vitro. These findings suggest the potential use of sunitinib for the treatment of pediatric medulloblastomas.
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PMID:Sunitinib induces apoptosis and growth arrest of medulloblastoma tumor cells by inhibiting STAT3 and AKT signaling pathways. 2005 26

Lack of apoptotic cell death has been implicated in malignant transformation and resistance to anticancer therapies. The promotion of apoptosis in cancer cells could potentially lead to the regression and improved prognosis of refractory colorectal cancer. Synthetic triterpenoids have shown strong antitumorigenic activity towards diverse cancer cell types, but have not been investigated for colorectal cancer. In the present study, we tested the apoptosis-inducing activity of oleanane triterpenoid 2-cyano-3,12-dioxooleana-1,9(11)-dien-28-oic acid (CDDO) and its C-28 methyl ester (CDDO-Me) and C-28 imidazole (CDDO-Im) derivatives in colorectal cancer cells lines. Cell growth/viability assay (MTS) demonstrated that colorectal cancer cells are highly sensitive to CDDO-Me at concentrations of 1.25 to 10 microM. The primary mode of tumor cell destruction was apoptosis as demonstrated by the cleavage of PARP-1, activation of procaspases -3, -8, and -9 and mitochondrial depolarization. Induction of apoptosis by CDDO-Me was associated with the inhibition of pro-survival Akt, NF-kappaB and mTOR signaling proteins and NF-kappaB-regulated anti-apoptotic Bcl-2, Bcl-xL, Bad and survivin. These studies provide rationale for clinical evaluation of CDDO-Me for the treatment of advanced chemotherapy refractory colorectal cancer.
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PMID:Synthetic triterpenoids inhibit growth, induce apoptosis and suppress pro-survival Akt, mTOR and NF-{kappa}B signaling proteins in colorectal cancer cells. 2039 97

Recent studies suggest that HIV-1 protease inhibitors may have anti-neoplastic effects on some malignancies. The anti-neoplastic effects of lopinavir have not been established or studied in brain tumors. Primary cultures of three fetal leptomeninges and 18 meningiomas were treated with lopinavir alone or with PDGF-BB. DNA synthesis was assessed by CyQUANT. Lopinavir effects on basal and PDGF-stimulated phosphorylation of the Akt-mTOR, MEK1/2-MAPK and STAT3 pathways, phosphorylation of Rb, Caspase 3 activation and reductions in survivin were assessed by Western blots. Lopinavir produced a significant reduction in PDGF-BB stimulation of DNA synthesis in a leptomeningeal culture (P = 0.0013) and 1 of 6 WHO grade I and 1 of 4 grade II meningiomas at 24 h and in 3 of 6 WHO grade I, 4 of 4 grade II and 1 of 1 grade III cell cultures (P = 0.0001) at 72 h. Lopinavir reduced PDGF-BB stimulation of phosphorylation/activation of MAPK in the 22 week fetal leptomeningeal cell cultures and in cells from 1 grade I meningioma at 24 h, but in none of 4 grade I and 5 grade II meningiomas at 6 h. Lopinavir had no notable effect on basal or PDGF-stimulated p-mTOR, p-MEK1/2, or p-STAT3, activation of Caspase 3 or survivin levels. Lopinavir treatment for 24 h had no effect on basal Rb phosphorylation but reduced Rb phosphorylation in all four meningioma cultures. These studies suggest that lopinavir may inhibit meningioma growth, and does so in part by cell cycle arrest. Additional evaluation of lopinavir as a potential adjunct chemotherapy is warranted.
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PMID:Lopinavir inhibits meningioma cell proliferation by Akt independent mechanism. 2059 51

The present study was undertaken to examine the effect of Fructus ligustri lucidi (FLL) extracts on glioma cell growth and to determine the underlying mechanism by which FLL extracts exert anticancer properties in human U87MG glioma cells. The FLL extracts resulted in cell death in a dose- and time-dependent manner. Western blot analysis showed that treatment with FLL extracts caused down-regulation of the phosphatidylinositol-3 kinase (PI3K)/Akt pathway. Overexpression of Akt prevented the cell death induced by the FLL extracts. The FLL extracts caused a decrease in the expression of mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) and the FLL extract-induced cell death was increased by the mTOR inhibitor rapamycin. The FLL extracts decreased the expression of survivin. Oral administration of FLL extracts in subcutaneous U87MG xenograft models reduced the glioma tumor volume. These findings indicate that the FLL extracts resulted in glioma cell death through regulation of the Akt/mTOR/survivin pathway in vitro and inhibited glioma tumor growth in vivo. These data suggest that the FLL extracts may serve as a potential therapeutic agent for malignant human gliomas.
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PMID:Fructus ligustri lucidi extracts induce human glioma cell death through regulation of Akt/mTOR pathway in vitro and reduce glioma tumor growth in U87MG xenograft mouse model. 2073 59


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