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)

Ca2+ release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) by the IP3 receptors (IP3Rs) crucially regulates diverse cell signalling processes from reproduction to apoptosis. Release from the IP3R may be modulated by endogenous proteins associated with the receptor, such as the 12 kDa FK506-binding protein (FKBP12), either directly or indirectly by inhibition of the phosphatase calcineurin. Here, we report that, in addition to calcineurin, FKPBs modulate release through the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR), a kinase that potentiates Ca2+ release from the IP3R in smooth muscle. The presence of FKBP12 was confirmed in colonic myocytes and co-immunoprecipitated with the IP3R. In aortic smooth muscle, however, although present, FKBP12 did not co-immunoprecipitate with IP3R. In voltage-clamped single colonic myocytes rapamycin, which together with FKBP12 inhibits mTOR (but not calcineurin), decreased the rise in cytosolic Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]c) evoked by IP3R activation (by photolysis of caged IP3), without decreasing the SR luminal Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]l) as did the mTOR inhibitors RAD001 and LY294002. However, FK506, which with FKBP12 inhibits calcineurin (but not mTOR), potentiated the IP3-evoked [Ca2+]c increase. This potentiation was due to the inhibition of calcineurin; it was mimicked by the phosphatase inhibitors cypermethrin and okadaic acid. The latter two inhibitors also prevented the FK506-evoked increase as did a calcineurin inhibitory peptide (CiP). In aortic smooth muscle, where FKBP12 was not associated with IP3R, the IP3-mediated Ca2+ release was unaffected by FK506 or rapamycin. Together, these results suggest that FKBP12 has little direct effect on IP3-mediated Ca2+ release, even though it is associated with IP3R in colonic myocytes. However, FKBP12 might indirectly modulate Ca2+ release through two effector proteins: (1) mTOR, which potentiates and (2) calcineurin, which inhibits Ca2+ release from IP3R in smooth muscle.
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PMID:In smooth muscle, FK506-binding protein modulates IP3 receptor-evoked Ca2+ release by mTOR and calcineurin. 1627 92

Sirolimus is one of the intensively investigated drugs with pluripotent activities. It binds to its intracellular receptor FKBP12 (FK506-binding protein 12), a member of the family of FK506-binding proteins, and inhibits the activity of mTOR, a serine/threonine kinase involved in numerous cell processes linked to cell growth control. The drug is currently registered for the prophylaxis of organ rejection and for use in coronary stents. However, unique characteristics of sirolimus make it a good candidate for anti-cancer therapy. Indeed, phase II and III clinical studies in humans with several types of neoplasms are already under way. The review describes molecular activity of sirolimus and its analogs, characteristic for specific applications, in view of very recent advances involving tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC)-mediated signaling pathways. Current studies with sirolimus performed in tuberous sclerosis animal models are presented. Possible application of sirolimus for treating tuberous sclerosis, disease caused by mutations of TSC proteins, is discussed.
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PMID:Molecular activity of sirolimus and its possible application in tuberous sclerosis treatment. 1632 2

A stable supramolecular cluster in T cells at the contact site of APCs, the immunological synapse (IS), is essential for full T cell activation. Failure of IS maturation, as determined by defective relocalization of the TCR/CD3 complex at the T cell/APC contact site, is linked with T cell hyporesponsiveness. The effects of clinically used immunosuppressants on these critical events, however, are undefined. Here, we show that treatment of T cells with cyclosporin A, FK506, and dexamethasone, which are known to inhibit calcineurin and NF-kappaB, respectively, but not rapamycin, the inhibitor of mammalian target of rapamycin, selectively prevented TCR/CD3 relocalization into the IS, while relocalization of adhesion and cytoskeletal proteins as well as T cell/APC conjugate formation remained unaltered. The involvement of calcineurin and NF-kappaB in IS maturation was confirmed by using specific inhibitors of these molecules (FR901725, gossypol, SN50). FK778, as an inhibitor of DNA replication and also TCR/CD3-activated tyrosine kinases, globally abrogated cytoskeletal, adhesion, and signaling molecule relocalization, thereby preventing formation of an IS at an earlier, immature stage along with impaired, antigen-specific T cell/APC conjugate formation. Collectively, blocking IS formation at distinct stages may mediate effects on T cell activation of currently used immunosuppressants, apart from their capacity to block gene transcription, cytokine signaling, and DNA replication. Furthermore, these data imply novel functions of calcineurin and NF-kappaB for successful IS maturation.
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PMID:Impairment of T cell interactions with antigen-presenting cells by immunosuppressive drugs reveals involvement of calcineurin and NF-kappaB in immunological synapse formation. 1703 82

Mullerian Inhibiting Substance (MIS), a biological modifier that causes regression of Mullerian ducts in male embryos, is effective as a single agent in vitro and in vivo against human and mouse ovarian cancer cell lines expressing MIS type II receptor; however, little is known about how recombinant human MIS (rhMIS), now being scaled for preclinical trials, could be used in combination with cytotoxic or targeted chemotherapeutic agents. Mouse serous and endometrioid ovarian carcinoma cell lines were tested in vitro against rhMIS alone and with doxorubicin, paclitaxel, or cisplatin as agents in clinical use. Because MIS releases FK506 binding protein (FKBP12), which activates the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) downstream of Akt, rhMIS and rapamycin combinations were tested. MIS increases p16 protein levels, and 5'-Aza-2'-deoxycytidine (AzadC) induces p16 mRNA; therefore, they were used in combination in vitro and in vivo with a human ovarian cancer cell line. A paclitaxel-resistant human ovarian cancer cell line and its parental line both respond to rhMIS in vitro. Additivity, synergy, or competition was observed with MIS and rapamycin, AzadC, doxorubicin, cisplatin, and paclitaxel, suggesting that MIS in combination with selective targeted therapies might achieve greater activity against ovarian cancer than the use of each individual agent alone. These assays and statistical analyses could be useful in selecting rhMIS and chemotherapeutic agent combinations that enhance clinical efficacy and reduce toxicity.
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PMID:Mullerian Inhibiting Substance enhances subclinical doses of chemotherapeutic agents to inhibit human and mouse ovarian cancer. 1708 39

Increased organ ischemia time leads to delayed graft function (DGF), increased acute rejection (AR), enhanced chronic allograft nephropathy (CAN), and reduced long-term allograft survival. The mechanisms by which IRI predisposes to AR and CAN are unknown. We hypothesized that gene expression profiling of ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI)-affected kidney would identify how IRI predisposes to AR and CAN. Furthermore, we examined how current immunosuppressive drug molecular targets are altered by IRI. C57BL/6J mice were exposed to 30 (n = 3) or 60 (n = 3) minutes of bilateral kidney ischemia or sham surgery (n = 5). At 36 hour kidney tissue was collected and analyzed using Affymetrix 430MOEA (22626 genes) array and GC-RMA-SAM pipeline. Genes with the false discovery rate (q < 1%) and +/-50% fold change (FC) were considered affected by IRI. Genes coding for histocompatibility and antigen-presenting factors, calcineurin, and mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathway-associated proteins were selected using Gene Ontology (GO) analysis. GO analysis identified 10 and 17 alloimmunity-related genes affected by IRI induced by 30 and 60 minutes of ischemia, respectively, including Traf6 (FC = 2.99) and H2-D1 (FC = 2.58). We also detected significant IRI genomic responses in calcineurin and mTOR pathways represented by Fkbp5 (FC = 4.18) and Fkbp1a (FC = 2.0), and Eif4ebp1 (FC = 16.8) and Akt1 (FC = 3.64), respectively. These data demonstrated that IRI up-regulates expression of several alloimmunity-associated genes, which can in turn enhance alloimune responses. Our discovery of IRI-induced up-regulation of genes associated with calcineurin and mTOR pathways are consistent with clinical observations that FK506 and Rapamycin can alter the course of DGF. Further validation and dissection of these pathways can lead to novel approaches by which improved management of early "nonimmune" transplant events can decrease susceptibility to more classic "immune" changes and CAN.
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PMID:Genomic profiling of kidney ischemia-reperfusion reveals expression of specific alloimmunity-associated genes: Linking "immune" and "nonimmune" injury events. 1717 65

Rapamycin is an immunosuppressive drug that binds simultaneously to the 12-kDa FK506- and rapamycin-binding protein (FKBP12, or FKBP) and the FKBP-rapamycin binding (FRB) domain of the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) kinase. The resulting ternary complex has been used to conditionally perturb protein function, and one such method involves perturbation of a protein of interest through its mislocalization. We synthesized two rapamycin derivatives that possess large substituents at the C-16 position within the FRB-binding interface, and these derivatives were screened against a library of FRB mutants using a three-hybrid assay in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Several FRB mutants responded to one of the rapamycin derivatives, and twenty of these mutants were further characterized in mammalian cells. The mutants most responsive to the ligand were fused to yellow fluorescent protein, and fluorescence levels in the presence and absence of the ligand were measured to determine stability of the fusion proteins. Wild-type and mutant FRB domains were expressed at low levels in the absence of the rapamycin derivative, and expression levels rose up to 10-fold upon treatment with ligand. The synthetic rapamycin derivatives were further analyzed using quantitative mass spectrometry, and one of the compounds was found to contain contaminating rapamycin. Furthermore, uncontaminated analogs retained the ability to inhibit mTOR, although with diminished potency relative to rapamycin. The ligand-dependent stability displayed by wild-type FRB and FRB mutants as well as the inhibitory potential and purity of the rapamycin derivatives should be considered as potentially confounding experimental variables when using these systems.
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PMID:The rapamycin-binding domain of the protein kinase mammalian target of rapamycin is a destabilizing domain. 1735 Sep 53

In smooth muscle, the ryanodine receptor (RyR) mediates Ca(2+) release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca(2+) store. Release may be regulated by the RyR accessory FK506-binding protein (FKBP12) either directly, as a result of FKBP12 binding to RyR, or indirectly via modulation of the activity of the phosphatase calcineurin or kinase mTOR. Here we report that RyR-mediated Ca(2+) release is modulated by FKBP12 in colonic but not aortic myocytes. Neither calcineurin nor mTOR are required for FKBP12 modulation of Ca(2+) release in colonic myocytes to occur. In colonic myocytes, co-immunoprecipitation techniques established that FKBP12 and calcineurin each associated with the RyR2 receptor isoform (the main isoform in this tissue). Single colonic myocytes were voltage clamped in the whole cell configuration and cytoplasmic Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](c)) increases evoked by the RyR activator caffeine. Under these conditions FK506, which displaces FKBP12 (to inhibit calcineurin) and rapamycin, which displaces FKBP12 (to inhibit mTOR), each increased the [Ca(2+)](c) rise evoked by caffeine. Notwithstanding, neither mTOR nor calcineurin are required to potentiate caffeine-evoked Ca(2+) increases evoked by each drug. Thus, the mTOR and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase inhibitor, LY294002, which directly inhibits mTOR without removing FKBP12 from RyR, did not alter caffeine-evoked [Ca(2+)](c) transients. Nor did inhibition of calcineurin by cypermethrin, okadaic acid or calcineurin inhibitory peptide block the FK506-induced increase in RyR-mediated Ca(2+) release. In aorta, although RyR3 (the main isoform), FKBP12 and calcineurin were each present, RyR-mediated Ca(2+) release was unaffected by either FK506, rapamycin or the calcineurin inhibitors cypermethrin and okadaic acid in single voltage clamped aortic myocytes. Presumably failure of FKBP12 to associate with RyR3 resulted in the immunosuppressant drugs (FK506 and rapamycin) being unable to alter the activity of RyR. The effects of these drugs are therefore, apparently dependent on an association of FKBP12 with RyR. Together, removal of FKBP12 from RyR augmented Ca(2+) release via the channel in colonic myocytes. Neither calcineurin nor mTOR are required for the FK506- or rapamycin-induced potentiation of RyR Ca(2+) release to occur. The results indicate that FKBP12 directly inhibits RyR channel activity in colonic myocytes but not in aorta.
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PMID:FK506-binding protein (FKBP12) regulates ryanodine receptor-evoked Ca2+ release in colonic but not aortic smooth muscle. 1795 Aug 43

The mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) is a serine/threonine kinase involved in nutrient sensing and cell growth and is a validated target for oncology and immunosuppression. Two modes of direct small-molecule inhibition of mTOR activity are known: targeting of the kinase active site and a unique mode in which the small molecule rapamycin, in complex with FKBP12 (the 12-kDa FK506 binding protein), binds to the FRB (FKBP12/rapamycin binding) domain of mTOR and inhibits kinase activity through a poorly defined mechanism. To facilitate the study of these processes, the authors have expressed and purified a truncated version of mTOR that contains the FRB and kinase domains and have developed homogeneous fluorescence-based assays to study mTOR activity. They demonstrate the utility of these assays in studies of active site-directed and FRB domain-directed mTOR inhibition. The results suggest that these assays can replace traditional radiometric or Western blot-based assays.
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PMID:Pharmacological characterization of purified recombinant mTOR FRB-kinase domain using fluorescence-based assays. 1835 35

Ca(2+)-release-activated Ca(2+) (CRAC) channels generate sustained Ca(2+) signals that are essential for a range of cell functions, including antigen-stimulated T lymphocyte activation and proliferation. Recent studies have revealed that the depletion of Ca(2+) from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) triggers the oligomerization of stromal interaction molecule 1 (STIM1), the ER Ca(2+) sensor, and its redistribution to ER-plasma membrane (ER-PM) junctions where the CRAC channel subunit ORAI1 accumulates in the plasma membrane and CRAC channels open. However, how the loss of ER Ca(2+) sets into motion these coordinated molecular rearrangements remains unclear. Here we define the relationships among [Ca(2+)](ER), STIM1 redistribution and CRAC channel activation and identify STIM1 oligomerization as the critical [Ca(2+)](ER)-dependent event that drives store-operated Ca(2+) entry. In human Jurkat leukaemic T cells expressing an ER-targeted Ca(2+) indicator, CRAC channel activation and STIM1 redistribution follow the same function of [Ca(2+)](ER), reaching half-maximum at approximately 200 microM with a Hill coefficient of approximately 4. Because STIM1 binds only a single Ca(2+) ion, the high apparent cooperativity suggests that STIM1 must first oligomerize to enable its accumulation at ER-PM junctions. To assess directly the causal role of STIM1 oligomerization in store-operated Ca(2+) entry, we replaced the luminal Ca(2+)-sensing domain of STIM1 with the 12-kDa FK506- and rapamycin-binding protein (FKBP12, also known as FKBP1A) or the FKBP-rapamycin binding (FRB) domain of the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR, also known as FRAP1). A rapamycin analogue oligomerizes the fusion proteins and causes them to accumulate at ER-PM junctions and activate CRAC channels without depleting Ca(2+) from the ER. Thus, STIM1 oligomerization is the critical transduction event through which Ca(2+) store depletion controls store-operated Ca(2+) entry, acting as a switch that triggers the self-organization and activation of STIM1-ORAI1 clusters at ER-PM junctions.
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PMID:Oligomerization of STIM1 couples ER calcium depletion to CRAC channel activation. 1859 93

Interleukin-18 (IL-18), a product of dendritic cells (DC), is a pro-inflammatory cytokine involved in the pathogenesis of allograft rejection, vascular disease, arthritis and diabetes. Rapamycin (Rapa) is an immunosuppressant that inhibits T cell mTOR kinase activation. In contrast, Sanglifehrin A (SFA), is a cyclophilin-binding immunosuppressant that does not act on calcineurin phosphatases but appears to inhibit IL-2-dependent T cell proliferation. Rapa and SFA exert some immunosuppressive effects on DC by inhibiting IL-12 production, although their effects on DC have not been investigated as comprehensively as those on T cells. We aimed to determine the impact of these drugs on DC IL-18 synthesis in vivo and in vitro. We found in vivo that LPS-stimulated OX62(+) DC produced significantly more IL-18 mRNA, compared to OX62(+) DC depleted splenocytes (p<0.01) and non-LPS-stimulated OX62(+) DC (p<0.01). OX62(+)CD4(+) and OX62(+)CD4(-) cells produced similar amounts of IL-18 mRNA. Rapa and SFA, but not CsA, significantly inhibited IL-18 production from OX62(+) DC in vitro, in a dose-dependent manner (p<0.05). In vivo IL-18 production was also inhibited by Rapa and SFA in splenic OX62(+) DC (p<0.01). Finally, inhibition of IL-18 production by Rapa and SFA was independent of the FK506 or cyclophilin pathways, respectively. In conclusion, Rapa and SFA, but not CsA, block IL-18 production and this novel Rapa blockade effect on IL-18 may contribute to the ability of Rapa to inhibit chronic allograft nephropathy and restenosis.
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PMID:Dentritic cell derived IL-18 production is inhibited by rapamycin and sanglifehrin A, but not cyclosporine A. 1866 82


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