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Query: UNIPROT:P42345 (
mTOR
)
26,049
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Radiation-induced inhibition of rapamycin-sensitive pathway and its effect on the cellular response to radiation were studied in the human breast cancer cell line MCF-7. Both radiation and rapamycin shared molecular targets and induced similar physiologic responses. Each of these treatments increased immunostaining of
mammalian target of rapamycin
(
mTOR
) in the nucleus, and radiation led to decreased phosphorylation of its autophosphorylation site Ser2481. In addition to dephosphorylation of established
mTOR
downstream effectors 4E-binding protein 1 and p70 ribosomal S6 kinase, both treatments decreased the level of eukaryotic initiation factor 4G. Experiments with the potentiometric dye, JC-1, revealed an oligomycin-dependent increase in mitochondrial membrane potential following radiation or rapamycin treatment, suggesting that both lead to reversal of F0F1ATPase activity. Both radiation and rapamycin induced sequestration of cytoplasmic material in autophagic vacuoles. In both cases, appearance of autophagic vacuoles involved the participation of microtubule-associated protein 1 light chain 3 (LC3). Transient cotransfection of green fluorescent protein-LC3 with either wild-type or dominant-negative
mTOR
further showed that inactivation of
mTOR
pathway is sufficient to induce autophagy in these cells. Finally, administration of rapamycin in combination with radiation led to enhanced mitochondria hyperpolarization,
p53
phosphorylation, and increased cell death. Taken together, these experiments show that radiation-induced inhibition of rapamycin-sensitive pathway in MCF-7 cells causes changes in mitochondria metabolism, development of autophagy, and an overall decrease in cell survival.
...
PMID:Rapamycin-sensitive pathway regulates mitochondrial membrane potential, autophagy, and survival in irradiated MCF-7 cells. 1632 56
Mammalian target of rapamycin
(
mTOR
) inhibitors curtail cap-dependent translation. However, they can also induce post-translational modifications of proteins. We assessed both effects to understand the mechanism by which
mTOR
inhibitors like rapamycin sensitize multiple myeloma cells to dexamethasone-induced apoptosis. Sensitization was achieved in multiple myeloma cells irrespective of their PTEN or
p53
status, enhanced by activation of AKT, and associated with stimulation of both intrinsic and extrinsic pathways of apoptosis. The sensitizing effect was not due to post-translational modifications of the RAFTK kinase, Jun kinase, p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase, or BAD. Sensitization was also not associated with a rapamycin-mediated increase in glucocorticoid receptor reporter expression. However, when cap-dependent translation was prevented by transfection with a mutant 4E-BP1 construct, which is resistant to
mTOR
-induced phosphorylation, cells responded to dexamethasone with enhanced apoptosis, mirroring the effect of coexposure to rapamycin. Thus, sensitization is mediated by inhibition of cap-dependent translation. A high-throughput screening for translational efficiency identified several antiapoptotic proteins whose translation was inhibited by rapamycin. Immunoblot assay confirmed rapamycin-induced down-regulated expressions of XIAP, CIAP1, HSP-27, and BAG-3, which may play a role in the sensitization to apoptosis. Studies in a xenograft model showed synergistic in vivo antimyeloma effects when dexamethasone was combined with the
mTOR
inhibitor CCI-779. Synergistic effects were associated with an enhanced multiple myeloma cell apoptosis in vivo. This study supports the strategy of combining dexamethasone with
mTOR
inhibitors in multiple myeloma and identifies a mechanism by which the synergistic effect is achieved.
...
PMID:Mechanism by which mammalian target of rapamycin inhibitors sensitize multiple myeloma cells to dexamethasone-induced apoptosis. 1648 35
AMPK is a serine/threonine protein kinase, which serves as an energy sensor in all eukaryotic cell types. Published studies indicate that AMPK activation strongly suppresses cell proliferation in non-malignant cells as well as in tumour cells. These actions of AMPK appear to be mediated through multiple mechanisms including regulation of the cell cycle and inhibition of protein synthesis, de novo fatty acid synthesis, specifically the generation of mevalonate as well as other products downstream of mevalonate in the cholesterol synthesis pathway. Cell cycle regulation by AMPK is mediated by up-regulation of the
p53
-p21 axis as well as regulation of TSC2-
mTOR
(
mammalian target of rapamycin
) pathway. The AMPK signalling network contains a number of tumour suppressor genes including LKB1,
p53
, TSC1 and TSC2, and overcomes growth factor signalling from a variety of stimuli (via growth factors and by abnormal regulation of cellular proto-oncogenes including PI3K, Akt and ERK). These observations suggest that AMPK activation is a logical therapeutic target for diseases rooted in cellular proliferation, including atherosclerosis and cancer. In this review, we discuss about exciting recent advances indicating that AMPK functions as a suppressor of cell proliferation by controlling a variety of cellular events in normal cells as well as in tumour cells.
...
PMID:AMPK and cell proliferation--AMPK as a therapeutic target for atherosclerosis and cancer. 1661 76
Notch signaling is believed to promote cell survival in general. However, the mechanism is not clearly understood. Here, we show that cells expressing intracellular domain of human Notch1 (NIC-1) are chemoresistant in a wild-type
p53
-dependent manner. NIC-1 inhibited
p53
by inhibiting its activating phosphorylations at Ser(15), Ser(20), and Ser(392) as well as nuclear localization. In addition, we found that inhibition of
p53
by NIC-1 mainly occurs through
mammalian target of rapamycin
(
mTOR
) using phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)-Akt/protein kinase B (PKB) pathway as the
mTOR
inhibitor, rapamycin treatment abrogated NIC-1 inhibition of
p53
and reversed the chemoresistance. Consistent with this, rapamycin failed to reverse NIC-1-induced chemoresistance in cells expressing rapamycin-resistant
mTOR
. Further, ectopic expression of eukaryotic initiation factor 4E (eIF4E), a translational regulator that acts downstream of
mTOR
, inhibited
p53
-induced apoptosis and conferred protection against
p53
-mediated cytotoxicity to similar extent as that of NIC-1 overexpression but was not reversed by rapamycin, which indicates that eIF4E is the major target of
mTOR
in Notch1-mediated survival signaling. Finally, we show that MCF7 (breast cancer) and MOLT4 (T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia) cells having aberrant Notch1 signaling are chemoresistant, which can be reversed by both PI3K and
mTOR
inhibitors. These results establish that Notch1 signaling confers chemoresistance by inhibiting
p53
pathway through
mTOR
-dependent PI3K-Akt/PKB pathway and imply that
p53
status perhaps is an important determinant in combination therapeutic strategies, which use
mTOR
inhibitors and chemotherapy.
...
PMID:Survival signaling by Notch1: mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR)-dependent inhibition of p53. 1665 24
Aurora-A/STK15/BTAK, which encodes a centrosome-associated kinase, is amplified and overexpressed in multiple types of human tumors, including breast cancer. However, the causal relationship between overexpression of Aurora-A and tumorigenesis has not been fully established due to contradictory data obtained from different experimental systems. To investigate this, we generated a mouse strain that carries an MMTV-Aurora-A transgene. We showed that all the MMTV-Aurora-A mice displayed enhanced branch morphogenesis in the mammary gland and about 40% developed mammary tumors at 20 months of age. The tumor incidence was significantly increased in a
p53
(+/-) mutation background with about 70% MMTV-Aurora-A;
p53
(+/-) animals developed tumors at 18 months of age. Of note, overexpression of Aurora-A led to genetic instability, characterized by centrosome amplification, chromosome tetraploidization and premature sister chromatid segregation, at stages prior to tumor formation. Most notably, the severe chromosomal abnormality did not cause cell death owing to the activation of AKT pathway, including elevated levels of phosphorylated AKT and
mammalian target of rapamycin
, and nuclear accumulation of cyclin D1, which enabled continuous proliferation of the tetraploid cells. These data establish Aurora-A as an oncogene that causes malignant transformation through inducing genetic instability and activating oncogenic pathways such as AKT and its downstream signaling.
...
PMID:Overexpression of aurora kinase A in mouse mammary epithelium induces genetic instability preceding mammary tumor formation. 1671 25
Macroautophagy or autophagy is a degradative pathway terminating in the lysosomal compartment after the formation of a cytoplasmic vacuole that engulfs macromolecules and organelles. The recent discovery of the molecular controls of autophagy that are common to eukaryotic cells from yeast to human suggests that the role of autophagy in cell functioning is far beyond its nonselective degradative capacity. The downregulation of autophagy observed in cancer cells is associated with tumor progression. The regulation of autophagy by signalling pathways overlaps with the control of cell growth, proliferation, cell survival and death. Two of these pathways play an important role in control of autophagy, the class I and III PI3K pathways. Several tumor suppressor genes (PTEN, TSC1 and 2,
p53
) involved in the class I PI3K
mTOR
signalling network have been shown to stimulate autophagy. In contrast, the oncoproteins involved in this network (Ras, class I PI3K and Akt) have the opposite effect. These findings, together with the discovery that Beclin 1, which forms a complex with the class III PI3K to initiate autophagy, is a tumor suppressor gene product give credibility of the idea that autophagy is a tumor suppressor mechanism. However, cancer cells sometimes mobilize autophagic capacities in response to various stimuli, suggesting that they can also exploit autophagy for their own benefit.
...
PMID:[PI3 kinases and the control of autophagia]. 1677 20
With the rapid development of high-throughput techniques for identifying novel specific molecular targets in human cancer over the past few years, attention to targeted cancer therapy has dramatically increased. The term "targeted cancer therapy" refers to a new generation of drugs designed to interfere with a specific molecular target that is believed to play a critical role in tumor growth or progression, is not expressed significantly in normal cells, and is correlated with clinical outcome. There has been a rapid increase in the identification of targets that have potential therapeutic application. The clinical success of the small-molecule kinase inhibitor imatinib mesylate in chronic myeloid leukemia and gastrointestinal stromal tumors has accelerated the development of a new era of molecular targeted cancer therapy. The number of agents under preclinical and clinical investigation has grown accordingly. This emphasis on molecular biology and genetics has also resulted in significant changes in the treatment of gynecologic cancers. Several promising drugs targeting tyrosine kinases (EGFR and Her-2/Neu),
mTOR
, Raf kinase, proteasome, and histone deacetylases, as well as drugs affecting apoptosis and mitosis, are under development for clinical application. However, some clinical trials of
p53
gene therapies and farnesyl transferase inhibitors have had limited success. In this review, we will focus on potential novel targets in gynecologic cancer and the development of targeted therapy and its clinical applications in gynecologic cancer.
...
PMID:Targeted therapies in gynecologic cancers. 1684 24
The downregulation of macroautophagy observed in cancer cells is associated with tumor progression. The regulation of macroautophagy by signaling pathways overlaps with the control of cell growth, proliferation, cell survival and death. Several tumor suppressor genes (PTEN, TSC2 and
p53
) involved in the
mTOR
signaling network have been shown to stimulate autophagy. In contrast, the oncoproteins involved in this network have the opposite effect. These findings, together with the discovery that haploinsufficiency of the tumor suppressor beclin 1 promotes tumorigenesis in various tissues in transgenic mice, give credibility to the idea that autophagy is a tumor suppressor mechanism. The induction of macroautophagy by cancer treatments may also contribute to cell eradication. However, cancer cells sometimes mobilize autophagic capacities in response to various stimuli without a fatal outcome, suggesting that they can also exploit macroautophagy for their own benefit.
...
PMID:Autophagy signaling and the cogwheels of cancer. 1687 41
The phosphatidylinositol-3-OH kinase [PI(3)K] pathway is frequently activated in human cancers and represents a rational target for therapeutic intervention. We have previously shown that enforced expression of Akt, which is a downstream effector of PI(3)K, could promote tumorigenesis and drug resistance in the Emu-myc mouse lymphoma model, and that these tumors were particularly sensitive to inhibition of
mammalian target of rapamycin
(
mTOR
) with rapamycin when combined with conventional chemotherapy. We now show that reduced dosage of PTEN, a negative regulator of PI(3)K signaling, is sufficient to activate Akt, but has only a modest effect on lymphomagenesis in the same model. Nonetheless, loss of even one PTEN allele resulted in lymphomas that were resistant to conventional chemotherapy yet sensitive to rapamycin/chemotherapy combinations. These effects could be recapitulated by using RNA interference to suppress PTEN expression in lymphomas, which were previously established in the absence of PI(3)K lesions. Finally, the introduction of lesions that act downstream of
mTOR
(eIF4E) or disable apoptosis (Bcl-2 and loss of
p53
) into PTEN+/- lymphomas promoted resistance to rapamycin/chemotherapy combinations. Thus, whether activation of the PI(3)K pathway confers sensitivity or resistance to therapy depends on the therapy used as well as secondary genetic events. Understanding these genotype-response relationships in human tumors will be important for the effective use of rapamycin or other compounds targeting the PI(3)K pathway in the clinic.
...
PMID:Determinants of sensitivity and resistance to rapamycin-chemotherapy drug combinations in vivo. 1688 64
Cancer and vascular diseases remain the predominant causes of morbidity and mortality in industrialized countries worldwide. The course of atherosclerosis with initiation, progression, and complication parallels the three stages of carcinogenesis with induction, growth, and invasion of tissue and neoangiogenesis. Within this framework, the oncogene c-Myc and growth factors pathways are acquiring increasing importance. Insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) pathway emerges among them for its versatile pleiotropic actions. A number of genes that permit extensive communication between IGF-1-AKT,
p53
, and
mammalian target of rapamycin
(
mTOR
) pathways have been identified. In turn these pathways lead to
p53
transcriptional program, the forkhead transcriptional programs, autophagy, and translational controls, which determine cell growth or arrest, cell survival or death. The increased understanding of the extensive communication and coordination between all these pathways may enable to targeting these events and to prevent neoplastic and vascular diseases. Great effort has been focused on the development of new agents designed to target various steps of c-Myc, Ras, and IGF cascade. However, what have we recently learned about their safety and effectiveness? Here, we review the very recent advances in the identification of novel inhibitors as well as antisense oligonuleotides (ASOs) and siRNA that are proving their usefulness in ongoing clinical trials both in terms of toxicity and specificity.
...
PMID:Targeting c-Myc, Ras and IGF cascade to treat cancer and vascular disorders. 1692 Dec 63
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