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Query: UNIPROT:P43146 (
tumour suppressor
)
5,935
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The
tumour suppressor
gene p53 is expressed in response to DNA-damage; its protein product blocks cells in the G1-phase of the cell cycle. This gives cells additional time to repair their DNA-damage. However, it may trigger apoptosis if damage is too high. Loss of p53 function appears to be an important step in carcinogenesis because 50% of human tumours have lost functional p53. In order to study the role of p53 in experimental hepatocarcinogenesis, we determined the expression of p53 in rat liver in response to various hepatocarcinogenic and hepatotoxic compounds. Administration of hepatocarcinogenic compounds increased p53 protein levels in the liver as detected by immunoprecipitation followed by SDS-PAGE and Western blotting with ECL-detection. The hepatocarcinogens included N-hydroxy-2-acetylaminofluorene, aflatoxin B1, and diethylnitrosamine. Their structural analogues N-hydroxy-4-acetylaminobiphenyl and ethyl methane-sulphonate which are not hepatocarcinogenic, did not induce p53. Also, two hepatotoxic compounds (carbon tetrachloride, D-galactosamine) did not induce p53. Other compounds that induced p53 in the rat liver were 2-aminofluorene (administered by drinking water for two weeks) and tris-(2,3-dibromopropyl)
phosphate
. Benzo[a]pyrene did not induce p53. N-Hydroxy-2-acetylaminofluorene, aflatoxin B1, and diethylnitrosamine are potent hepatic tumour promoters. At the same time, they induce p53 protein expression and inhibit proliferation of normal hepatocytes. Because this is not observed with non-hepatocarcinogenic analogues, it suggests an involvement of p53 expression in hepatic tumour promotion. A possible mechanism is discussed.
...
PMID:p53 protein expression by hepatocarcinogens in the rat liver and its potential role in mitoinhibition of normal hepatocytes as a mechanism of hepatic tumour promotion. 916 91
Histidine triad nucleotide-binding protein (HINT), a dimeric purine nucleotide-binding protein from rabbit heart, is a member of the HIT (histidine triad) superfamily which includes HINT homologues and FHIT (HIT protein encoded at the chromosome 3 fragile site) homologues. Crystal structures of HINT-nucleotide complexes demonstrate that the most conserved residues in the superfamily mediate nucleotide binding and that the HIT motif forms part of the
phosphate
binding loop. Galactose-1-phosphate uridylyltransferase, whose deficiency causes galactosemia, contains tandem HINT domains with the same fold and mode of nucleotide binding as HINT despite having no overall sequence similarity. Features of FHIT, a diadenosine polyphosphate hydrolase and candidate
tumour suppressor
, are predicted from HINT-nucleotide structures.
...
PMID:Crystal structures of HINT demonstrate that histidine triad proteins are GalT-related nucleotide-binding proteins. 916 65
Phosphoinositide 3-kinases (PI3Ks) phosphorylate inositol lipids at the 3' position of the inositol ring to generate the 3-phosphoinositides PI(3)P, PI(3,4) P2 and PI(3,4,5) P3. Recent research has shown that one way in which these lipids function in signal transduction and membrane trafficking is by interacting with 3-phosphoinositide-binding modules in a broad variety of proteins. Specifically, certain FYVE domains bind PI(3)P whereas certain pleckstrin homology domains bind PI(3,4) P2 and/or PI(3,4,5) P3. Also in 1998, PTEN - a major
tumour suppressor
in human cancer - was also shown to antagonise PI3K signalling by removing the 3-
phosphate
from 3-phosphoinositides.
...
PMID:Signalling through phosphoinositide 3-kinases: the lipids take centre stage. 1020 56
The ability to separate the isoforms of human
tumour suppressor
protein p53 expressed in insect cells using heparin-Sepharose correlates with differences in the isoelectric point of p53, demonstrating that p53 can be heterogeneously modified and providing support for the use of insect cells as a model system for identifying novel signalling pathways that target p53. One p53 isoform that was reduced in its binding to the monoclonal antibody DO-1 could be stimulated in its binding to DO-1 by prior incubation with protein phosphatases, suggesting the presence of a previously unidentified N-terminal phosphorylation site capable of masking the DO-1 epitope. A synthetic peptide from the N-terminal domain of p53 containing
phosphate
at Ser(20) inhibited DO-1 binding, thus identifying the phosphorylation site responsible for DO-1 epitope masking. Monoclonal antibodies overlapping the DO-1 epitope were developed that are specific for phospho-Thr(18) (adjacent to the DO-1 epitope) and phospho-Ser(20) (within the DO-1 epitope) to determine whether direct evidence could be obtained for novel phosphorylation sites in human p53. A monoclonal antibody highly specific for phospho-Ser(20) detected significant phosphorylation of human p53 expressed in insect cells, whereas the relative proportion of p53 modified at Thr(18) was substantially lower. The relevance of these two novel phosphorylation sites to p53 regulation in human cells was made evident by the extensive phosphorylation of human p53 at Thr(18) and Ser(20) in a panel of human breast cancers with a wild-type p53 status. Phospho-Ser(20) or phospho-Thr(18) containing p53 peptides are as effective as the phospho-Ser(15) peptide at reducing mdm2 (mouse double minute 2) protein binding, indicating that the functional effects of these phosphorylation events might be to regulate the binding of heterologous proteins to p53. These results provide evidence in vivo for two novel phosphorylation sites within p53 at Ser(20) and Thr(18) that can affect p53 protein-protein interactions and indicate that some human cancers might have amplified one or more Ser(20) and Thr(18) kinase signalling cascades to modulate p53 activity.
...
PMID:Novel phosphorylation sites of human tumour suppressor protein p53 at Ser20 and Thr18 that disrupt the binding of mdm2 (mouse double minute 2) protein are modified in human cancers. 1043 10
Phosphorylation of protein kinase C (PKC) provides an amplitude control that operates in conjunction with allosteric effectors. Under many conditions, PKC isotypes appear to be highly phosphorylated; however, the cellular inputs that maintain these phosphorylations are not characterized. In the present work, it is shown that there is a differential phosphorylation of PKCdelta in adherent versus suspension cultures of transfected HEK-293 cells. It is established that integrin activation is sufficient to trigger PKCdelta phosphorylation and that this signals through phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3-kinase) to stimulate the phosphorylation of two sites, T505 and S662. The loss of signal input to PKCdelta in suspension culture is dependent on the
tumour suppressor
gene PTEN, which encodes a bi-functional phosphotyrosine/phosphoinositide 3-
phosphate
phosphatase. In the PTEN(-/-) UM-UC-3 bladder carcinoma cell line grown in suspension, transfected PKCdelta no longer accumulates in a dephospho-form on serum removal. By contrast, in a UM-UC-3-derivative cell line stably expressing PTEN, PKCdelta does become dephosphorylated under these conditions. Employing the PTEN Gly(129)-->Glu mutant, which is selectively defective in lipid phosphatase activity, it was established that it is the lipid phosphatase activity that controls PKCdelta phosphorylation. The evidence indicates that PKCdelta phosphorylation and its latent activity are maintained in serum-deprived adherent cultures through integrin-matrix interactions. This control acts through a pathway involving a lipid product of PI3-kinase in a manner that can be suppressed by PTEN.
...
PMID:Beta1-integrin and PTEN control the phosphorylation of protein kinase C. 1108 36
Gene therapy was initially thought of as a means to correct single gene defects in hereditary disease. In the meantime, cancer has become by far the most important indication for gene therapy in clinical trials. In the foreseeable future, the best way to achieve reasonable intratumoral concentrations of a transgene with available vectors is direct intratumoral injection with or without the aid of various techniques such as endoscopy or CT-guidance. At present, viral and non-viral methods of gene transfer are used either in vivo or ex vivo/in vitro. The most important viral vectors currently in use in clinical trials comprise retroviruses, adenoviruses, adeno-associated viruses, and herpes viruses. None of the available vectors satisfies all the criteria of an ideal gene therapeutic system, and vectors with only minimal residues of their parent viruses ("gutless vectors") as well as completely "synthetic viral vectors" will gain more and more importance in the future. Non-viral gene therapy methods include liposomes, injection of vector-free DNA ("naked DNA"), protein-DNA complexes, delivery by "gene gun," calcium-
phosphate
precipitation, electroporation, and intracellular microinjection of DNA. The first clinical trial of gene therapy for cancer was performed in 1991 in patients with melanoma, and since then more than 5000 patients have been treated worldwide in more than 400 clinical protocols. With the exception of a case of fatal toxicity in a young man with hereditary liver disease treated intrahepatically with high doses of adenovirus, side effects have been rare and usually mild in all these studies and expression of the transgene could be demonstrated in patients in vivo. However, despite anecdotal reports of therapeutic responses in some patients, unequivocal proof of clinical efficacy is still lacking for most of the varied approaches to gene therapy in humans. As well as our only fragmentary understanding of the molecular pathophysiology of many diseases, the principal reason for the present lack of clinical success of gene therapy is the very low transduction and expression efficiency in vivo of available vectors. Despite the complexities of gene therapy for cancer, the numerous different approaches can be subdivided into three basic concepts: (1) strengthening of the immune response against a tumour, (2) repair of cell cycle defects caused by losses of
tumour suppressor
genes or inappropriate activation of oncogenes, and (3) suicide gene strategies. In addition, the importance of gene marker studies and gene therapeutic protection of normal tissue are briefly covered in this review.
...
PMID:Gene therapy of cancer. 1120 84
The
tumour suppressor
protein, PTEN (phosphatase and tensin homologue deleted on chromosome 10) is a member of the mixed function, serine/threonine/tyrosine phosphatase subfamily of protein phosphatases. Its physiological substrates, however, are primarily 3-phosphorylated inositol phospholipids, which are products of phosphoinositide 3-kinases. PTEN thus antagonizes PI 3-kinase-dependent signalling pathways, which explains to a large extent its
tumour suppressor
status. We have examined the kinetic behaviour, substrate specificity and regulation of PTEN both in vitro and in a variety of cellular models. Although PTEN can utilize both phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-trisphosphate [PtdIns(3,4,5)P(3)] and its water-soluble headgroup, inositol 1,3,4,5-tetrakisphosphate, as substrates, it displays classical features of interfacial catalysis, which greatly favour the lipid substrate (by as much as 1000-fold as judged by K(cat)/K(m) values). Expression of PTEN in U87 cells (which lack endogenous PTEN) and measuring the levels of all known 3-phosphorylated lipids suggests that phosphatidylinositol 3,4-bisphosphate and PtdIns(3,4,5)P(3) are both substrates, but that phosphatidylinositol 3-
phosphate
and phosphatidylinositol 3,5-bisphosphate are not. PTEN binds to several PDZ-domain-containing proteins via a consensus sequence at its extreme C-terminus. Disruption of targeting to PDZ-domain proteins selectively blocks some PTEN functions, but not others, suggesting the existence of spatially localized, functionally dedicated pools of signalling lipids. We have also shown recently that PTEN expression is controlled at the transcriptional level and is profoundly upregulated by peroxisome proliferator activated receptor gamma agonists, thereby providing possible implications for these drugs in diabetes, inflammation and cancer.
...
PMID:Antagonism of PI 3-kinase-dependent signalling pathways by the tumour suppressor protein, PTEN. 1170 86
Calponin h1 (CNh1) is an actin-binding protein that is expressed mainly in smooth muscle cells and is known to regulate smooth muscle contraction. Recently, re-expression of CNh1 in leiomyosarcoma cell lines is reported to suppress cell proliferation and tumorigenicity. However, little is known about the associated cellular structural and functional changes. Since CNh1 is also detected in normal fibroblasts, we hypothesised that CNh1 would also inhibit cell proliferation of the fibrosarcoma cells, HT1080, in which CNh1 is suppressed. An expression vector of human CNh1 complementary DNA was transfected into human HT1080 cells by a calcium-
phosphate
precipitation method. CNh1-transfected cells exhibited a flattened morphology with organised actin filaments, a significant decrease in cell motility and enhancement in adhesion to fibronectin in association with an increase in integrin alpha5beta1 expression. Anchorage-independent growth and tumorigenicity in nude mice were suppressed in the CNh1-transfected cells. Our results suggest that CNh1 may have a role as a
tumour suppressor
in human fibrosarcoma by influencing cytoskeletal activities.
...
PMID:Calponin h1 induced a flattened morphology and suppressed the growth of human fibrosarcoma HT1080 cells. 1181 11
The two mannose 6-
phosphate
(M6P) receptors were identified because of their ability to bind M6P-containing soluble acid hydrolases in the Golgi and transport them to the endosomal-lysosomal system. During the past decade, we have started to understand the structural features of these receptors that allow them to do this job, and how the receptors themselves are sorted as they pass through various membrane-bound compartments. But trafficking of acid hydrolases is only part of the story. Evidence is emerging that one of the receptors can regulate cell growth and motility, and that it functions as a
tumour suppressor
.
...
PMID:Mannose 6-phosphate receptors: new twists in the tale. 1261 39
Insulin-like growth factor 2 (IGF 2) appears to be involved in the progression of many tumours. It binds to at least two different types of receptor: IGF type 1 (IGF 1R) and mannose 6-
phosphate
/IGF type 2 (M6-P/IGF 2R). Ligand binding to IGF 1R provokes mitogenic and anti-apoptotic effects. M6-P/IGF 2R has a
tumour suppressor
function--it mediates IGF 2 degradation. Mutation of M6-P/IGF 2R causes both diminished growth suppression and augmented growth stimulation. The aim of this study was to investigate the role of IGF 2 and its receptors (IGF 1R and IGF 2R) in human gastric cancer. The expression of IGF 2 and its receptors was measured in order to analyse the possible correlation between the activity of these genes and cell proliferation in two different gastric tumour types: diffuse and intestinal. The effect of IGF 1 receptor blockage on cell proliferation and anchorage-independent cell growth was also examined. Increased expression of IGF 2 and IGF 1R genes (at the mRNA and protein level) was found in gastric cancer when compared with non-tumour tissue. Furthermore, there was a significant difference between IGF 2 expression in the more aggressive diffuse type and that in the intestinal type of gastric cancer. Moreover, the IGF 2 peptide level in the culture media obtained from the diffuse type of cancer cells was significantly higher when compared with the intestinal type. The level of IGF 2 peptide in the conditioned media strongly correlated with [3H]thymidine incorporation and cell proliferation. On the contrary, IGF 2R mRNA expression was much higher in the intestinal type of cancer than in the diffuse type. In addition, IGF 2R protein expression was substantially lower with progression of the diffuse cancer type to a higher stage. The alphaIR3 monoclonal antibody strongly inhibited [3H]thymidine incorporation and decreased the number of colonies in soft agar of cells overexpressing IGF 2. These findings suggest that members of the IGF family are involved in the pathogenesis of gastric cancer, probably by autocrine/paracrine stimulation of cell growth. Such tumours might be excellent candidates for therapeutic strategies aimed at interference with this pathway.
...
PMID:Gastric cancer: the role of insulin-like growth factor 2 (IGF 2) and its receptors (IGF 1R and M6-P/IGF 2R). 1459 55
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