Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:P43146 (
tumour suppressor
)
5,935
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The p63 gene encodes at least six different proteins with homology to the
tumour suppressor
protein p53 and the related p53 family member p73. So far, there have been limited data concerning the expression patterns of individual p63 proteins, due to a lack of reagents that distinguish between the different isoforms. Three antibodies have been produced specifically directed against the two N-terminal isoforms (TAp63 and DeltaNp63) and the C-terminal region of the p63alpha proteins. TAp63 proteins are located suprabasally in stratified epithelia compared with the N-terminal truncated forms, which are more abundantly expressed in the basal cell layer, indicating a switch in expression of p63 isoforms during normal cellular differentiation. Analysis of squamous cell carcinomas shows DeltaNp63alpha to be the most widely expressed isoform, compatible with a role for this protein in promoting neoplastic cell growth in these tissues. DeltaNp63 protein expression is also restricted to basal cells in breast and prostate, whilst TAp63 isoforms are more widely expressed in these tissues as well as in tumours at these sites. TAp63, but not DeltaNp63 or p63alpha, is detected in normal colon and in colon carcinoma. TAp63 proteins are also expressed in the nuclei of a sub-population of
lymphoid
cells and in most malignant lymphomas, whereas DeltaNp63 proteins are not expressed. Taken together, a hitherto unrecognized regulation of p63 isoform expression in vivo has been uncovered, with different p63 proteins expressed during differentiation and in different cell types. The data indicate roles for specific p63 isoforms not only in maintaining epithelial stem cell populations, but also in cellular differentiation and neoplasia.
...
PMID:Differential expression of p63 isoforms in normal tissues and neoplastic cells. 1243 10
Natural killer (NK)/T-cell lymphoma is a special subtype of rare malignant lymphoma that is more prevalent in Asia than in America and Europe. This newly characterized haemato-
lymphoid
malignancy is highly aggressive and frequently present in nasal and upper aerodigestive sites. Several studies have reported the commonly deleted region of chromosome 6q21-25 in this particular type of lymphoma. To refine the smallest region of overlapping (SRO) deletion for localization of potential
tumour suppressor
(TS) genes, we performed loss of heterozygosity (LOH) and homozygosity mapping of deletion (HOMOD) analyses on 37 nasal and nasal-type NK/T-cell lymphoma patients using a panel of 25 microsatellite markers, covering the 6q21-q25 region. In all patients studied, LOH was detected in eight (89%) paired-sample patients, while hemizygous deletion was detected in three (11%) single-sample patients. Combination of the LOH and HOMOD results defined a distinct 3 Mb SRO on chromosome 6q25. Quantitative multiplex polymerase chain reaction analysis of 10 sequence-tagged sites further refined the putative TS-gene-containing region to a 2.6 Mb interval between TIAM2 and SNX9. Eighteen known genes/Unigene clusters and 25 hypothetical genes are located within this 2.6 Mb region, but none are previously identified TS genes. These results provide a framework for future positional cloning of novel TS gene(s) at 6q25.2-q25.3.
...
PMID:A 2.6 Mb interval on chromosome 6q25.2-q25.3 is commonly deleted in human nasal natural killer/T-cell lymphoma. 1289 14
The APC
tumour suppressor
gene is mutated in most colon cancers. A major role of APC is the downregulation of the beta-catenin/T-cell factor (Tcf)/
lymphoid
enhancer factor (LEF) signalling pathway; however, there are also suggestions that it plays a role in the organization of the cytoskeleton, and in cell adhesion and migration. For the first time, we have achieved stable expression of wild-type APC in SW480 colon cancer cells, which normally express a truncated form of APC. The ectopically expressed APC is functional, and results in the translocation of beta-catenin from the nucleus and cytoplasm to the cell periphery, and reduces beta-catenin/Tcf/LEF transcriptional signalling. E-cadherin is also translocated to the cell membrane, where it forms functional adherens junctions. Total cellular levels of E-cadherin are increased in the SW480APC cells and the altered charge distribution in the presence of full-length APC suggests that APC is involved in post-translational regulation of E-cadherin localization. Changes in the location of adherens junction proteins are associated with tighter cell-cell adhesion in SW480APC cells, with consequent changes in cell morphology, the actin cytoskeleton and cell migration in a wound assay. SW480APC cells have a reduced proliferation rate, a reduced ability to form colonies in soft agar and do not grow tumours in a xenograft mouse tumour model. By regulating the intracellular transport of junctional proteins, we propose that APC plays a role in cell adhesion in addition to its known role in beta-catenin transcriptional signalling.
...
PMID:Restoration of full-length adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) protein in a colon cancer cell line enhances cell adhesion. 1467 5
RUNX transcription factors are important in development and in numerous types of human cancer. They act as either transcriptional activators or repressors and can be proto-oncogenes or tumour suppressors. Understanding their regulation and interaction may explain how RUNX factors contribute to such different and often opposing biological processes. We show that RUNX3 regulates RUNX1 expression, contributing to the mutually exclusive expression of RUNX3 and RUNX1 in human B
lymphoid
cell lines. RUNX3 repressed the RUNX1 P1 promoter by binding specifically to conserved RUNX sites near the transcription start of the promoter. siRNA inhibition of RUNX3 in lymphoblastoid cells resulted in increased RUNX1 expression, indicating that continuous expression of physiological levels of RUNX3 is required to maintain repression. Furthermore, expression of RUNX3 was required for efficient proliferation of B cells immortalized by Epstein-Barr virus. Cross-regulation between different RUNX family members is therefore a means of controlling RUNX protein expression and must now be considered in the interpretation of pathological changes due to loss of RUNX3
tumour suppressor
function or following gene duplication or translocation events.
...
PMID:Transcriptional cross-regulation of RUNX1 by RUNX3 in human B cells. 1568 19
Acute induction of oncogenic Ras provokes cellular senescence involving the retinoblastoma (Rb) pathway, but the tumour suppressive potential of senescence in vivo remains elusive. Recently, Rb-mediated silencing of growth-promoting genes by heterochromatin formation associated with methylation of histone H3 lysine 9 (H3K9me) was identified as a critical feature of cellular senescence, which may depend on the histone methyltransferase Suv39h1. Here we show that Emicro-N-Ras transgenic mice harbouring targeted heterozygous lesions at the Suv39h1, or the p53 locus for comparison, succumb to invasive T-cell lymphomas that lack expression of Suv39h1 or p53, respectively. By contrast, most N-Ras-transgenic wild-type ('control') animals develop a non-
lymphoid
neoplasia significantly later. Proliferation of primary lymphocytes is directly stalled by a Suv39h1-dependent, H3K9me-related senescent growth arrest in response to oncogenic Ras, thereby cancelling lymphomagenesis at an initial step. Suv39h1-deficient lymphoma cells grow rapidly but, unlike p53-deficient cells, remain highly susceptible to adriamycin-induced apoptosis. In contrast, only control, but not Suv39h1-deficient or p53-deficient, lymphomas senesce after drug therapy when apoptosis is blocked. These results identify H3K9me-mediated senescence as a novel Suv39h1-dependent
tumour suppressor
mechanism whose inactivation permits the formation of aggressive but apoptosis-competent lymphomas in response to oncogenic Ras.
...
PMID:Oncogene-induced senescence as an initial barrier in lymphoma development. 1607 29
Predisposition to lymphomagenesis is a well-known phenomenon of ataxia-telangiectasia, a recessive disorder caused by germline inactivation of ATM. ATM encodes a protein implicated in the repair of radiation induced double-strand breaks. Biallelic ATM inactivation was described also in sporadic
lymphoid
malignancies, supporting a role of ATM as a
tumour suppressor
gene. It is, however, still unclear whether ATM heterozygotes are at higher risk of tumours. We describe an ATM heterozygous patient, who developed a mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) after occupational exposure to ionising radiation and somatic mutation of the second ATM allele supporting the contention that heterozygous germline ATM alterations in combination with irradiation exposure predisposes to sporadic MCL.
...
PMID:Development of a mantle cell lymphoma in an ATM heterozygous woman after occupational exposure to ionising radiation and somatic mutation of the second allele. 1638 60
Multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN) are major predisposition syndromes to endocrine tumours and are characterised by an autosomal dominant disorder and full penetrance. MEN-1 is a major form of hyperparathyroidism associated with a high prevalence of endocrine tumours of the pancreas, pituitary gland, adrenal cortex and the
lymphoid
and bronchial endocrine tissues. MEN-2 is the familial syndrome of medullary thyroid carcinoma, associated with pheochromocytoma and hyperparathyroidism. Apart from the clinical expression of their allelic variants, both syndromes are different in their physiopathogenesis, in that MEN-2 is related to the constitutional activation of the proto-oncogene RET that encodes a putative tyrosine kinase receptor, while MEN-1 is a
tumour suppressor
gene model, related to mutations in the menin adapter-protein of multiple intracellular functions. The study of other rarer forms of predisposition to endocrine tumours, and especially to hyperparathyroidism, has uncovered new genes such as HRPT2, which show that multiple physiological routes, including the close regulation of transcription and genetic stability, may lead to the same clinical outcome. These hereditary models of endocrine cancer contribute as much to further physiopathogenic knowledge as to the therapeutic recommendations for managing these syndromes.
...
PMID:[Pathogenic patterns of genetic predisposition to endocrine tumors]. 1737 13
The past decade has seen an explosion of interest in the epigenetics of cancer, with an increasing understanding that this form of genomic modification plays a critical role in pathogenesis. The malignant phenotype results from a step-wise increase of both genetic abnormalities and epigenetic modifications, leading to dysregulation of critical genes controlling cell growth, differentiation and apoptosis. The methylation of CpG islands within gene promoters is a major epigenetic transcriptional control mechanism that is frequently dysregulated in human cancer. This phenomenon (methylation of CpG islands) plays a critical role in the transcriptional silencing of
tumour suppressor
genes in cancer and has prompted the development and testing of several demethylating agents aimed at reversing this process. Clinical trials using epigenetically targeted therapies have yielded particularly promising results in the myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), in which
tumour suppressor
gene silencing by promoter methylation is a frequent event. Several genes and gene pathways disrupted by aberrant CpG island methylation have now been identified in haematological malignancies, the most frequently studied being the cell cycle inhibitors p16 (now termed CDKN2A; mostly methylated in
lymphoid
malignancy) and p15 (now termed CDKN2B; commonly methylated in
lymphoid
and myeloid malignancies). This review will discuss the role that aberrant gene silencing by promoter hypermethylation plays in the molecular pathogenesis of haematological malignancies and assess the clinical potential of demethylating agents for the management of patients.
...
PMID:Gene silencing by DNA methylation in haematological malignancies. 1748 80
MicroRNAs are a recently discovered class of small ( approximately 22nt) endogenously expressed translational-repressor RNAs that play key roles in many cellular pathways and whose aberrant expression appears to be a common feature of malignancy. MicroRNAs are expressed in specific haematological cell types and play important regulatory roles in early haematopoietic differentiation, erythropoiesis, granulocytosis, megakaryocytosis and
lymphoid
development. Additionally, there is an emerging body of research to suggest that microRNAs play an important role in the pathology of haematological malignancies. MicroRNAs have been found to act as both
tumour suppressor
molecules [e.g. MIRN15A (miR-15a), MIRN16-1 (miR-16-1)] in leukaemias and have oncogenic properties [e.g. MIRN155 (miR-155) and MIRN17-92 (miR-17-miR-92) cluster] in lymphomas. This review discusses the rapidly accumulating research that points to the major role microRNAs play in both haematopoiesis and haematological malignancy.
...
PMID:MicroRNAs and haematology: small molecules, big function. 1753 73
Wnt5a is a member of the Wnt family of proteins that signals through the non-canonical Wnt/Ca(2+) pathway to suppress cyclin D1 expression and negatively regulate B cell proliferation suggesting that it acts as an
tumour suppressor
for
lymphoid
leukemogenesis. Although canonical Wnt pathway is a 'hot spot' for methylation in acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL), the role of Wnt5a abnormalities has never been evaluated in this clinical setting. The methylation status of the WNT5A promoter was analysed by methylation-specific PCR (MSP) and sequencing in six ALL-derived cell lines (TOM-1, NALM-20, MY, LOUCY, JURKAT and TANOUE) and in 307 ALL patients. WNT5A and CYCLIN D1 expressions were assessed by quantitative RT-PCR. We observed WNT5A hypermethylation in all cell lines and in cells from 43% (132/307) of ALL patients. WNT5A methylation was associated with decreased WNT5A mRNA expression (P<0.001) and this expression was restored after exposure to the demethylating agent 5-Aza-2'-deoxycytidine. Moreover, WNT5A hypermethylation correlated with upregulation of CYCLIN D1 expression (P=0.002). Disease-free survival (DFS) and overall survival (OS) at 13 and 14 years, respectively, were 59% and 53% for unmethylated patients and 28% and 31% for hypermethylated patients (P=0.0003 and P=0.003). Multivariate analysis demonstrated that WNT5A methylation was an independent prognostic factor predicting DFS (P=0.003) and OS (P=0.04). We have demonstrated that WNT5A, a putative
tumour suppressor
gene in ALL, is silenced by methylation in this disease and that this epigenetic event is associated with upregulation of CYCLIN D1 expression and confers poor prognosis in this group of patients.
...
PMID:WNT5A, a putative tumour suppressor of lymphoid malignancies, is inactivated by aberrant methylation in acute lymphoblastic leukaemia. 1803 22
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
Next >>