Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P43146 (tumour suppressor)
5,935 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We have examined 41 cases of follicle centre cell lymphoma with fluorescent PCR of microsatellite repeats closely linked to or within six tumour suppressor gene loci (APC, DCC, P53, RB1, WT1 and NM23). These probes are highly informative with heterozygousity rates in the range of 57%-90%. In addition we have used four loci from chromosome 6 (D6S260, TNFa, D6S281 and D6S262) as control loci which are unlikely to be involved in the pathogenesis of lymphoma. Of 369 informative PCR reactions allele imbalance was identified in 38 (10%) and this was seen in 23 of the 41 cases. Looking at individual loci allele imbalance was seen in APC(1) 11%, APC(2) 12%, P53(1) 5%, P53 (2) 7%, WT1 5%, RB1 13%, DCC 18% and NM23 0%. This frequency of change was no different from that seen at the control loci D6S260 16%, TNFa 20%, D6S281 4% and D6S262 9%. In the indolent phase of germinal centre cell lymphoma there is therefore quite a high rate of allele imbalance at all loci but this is no higher in those loci linked to tumour suppressor genes.
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PMID:Allele imbalance at tumour suppressor loci during the indolent phase of follicle centre cell lymphoma. 872 37

Ovarian carcinoma is often associated with overexpression of cytokines that may exert autocrine and paracrine growth effects, as well as genetic alterations in (proto)oncogenes and tumour suppressor genes, such as p53. The p53 protein is not only involved in the regulation of cell cycle and apoptosis, it is also involved in the in vitro regulation of IL-6 gene expression. In this study, 30 tumours of patients with a primary diagnosis of human ovarian carcinoma were characterised for p53 expression with immunohistochemistry and analysed for the expression of M-CSF, IL-6, IL-1 beta, IL-11 and TNF-alpha with Northern blotting. Nuclear and cytoplasmic p53 staining was observed in 27% (8/30), cytoplasmic staining in 30% (9/30), and no p53 staining in 43% (13/30) of the tumours. In 70% (21/30) of the tumours, M-CSF mRNA was expressed, in 40% (12/30) TNF-alpha, and in 30% (9/30) IL-6. None of the tumours expressed IL-1 beta or IL-11. The expression of TNF-alpha occurred more frequently in M-CSF positive tumours compared to M-CSF negative tumours (52% (11/21) versus 11% (1/9), P < 0.05). TNF-alpha expression was also associated with better responses to chemotherapy (P < 0.02). M-CSF expression was associated with nuclear p53 staining (P < 0.05). The p53 positive tumours more frequently expressed one or more cytokines (88%) compared with p53 negative tumours (54%, P < 0.05). This study suggests that mutations in the p53 gene might be associated with cytokine overexpression, especially M-CSF.
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PMID:Expression of macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF), interleukin-6, (IL-6), interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta), interleukin-11 (IL-11) and tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) in p53-characterised human ovarian carcinomas. 947 Aug 14

The haematological diversity of myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) mandates that therapeutic strategies for this disease be guided by an understanding of the disease biology. Insights into the pathobiology of this disease have given rise to novel treatment strategies which exploit basic biological disturbances. Myelodysplastic bone marrow progenitors from patients with low leukaemia burden display an accelerated senescence phenotype which is characterised by impaired response to trophic signals and premature apoptotic death of primitive haematopoietic progenitors. Elaboration of aptogenic cytokines such as TNF-alpha and IL-1beta may reinforce this sequence by up-regulating cellular expression of fas ligand and its cognate receptor, suppressing responsiveness to growth factor stimulation, and accelerating apoptotic cell death. Inactivation of p15 or other tumour suppressor genes antedate disease progression and the emergence of blast populations with reduced capacity for fas mediated cell death. Herein we review the current understanding of the pathobiology of MDS and promising strategies for therapeutic intervention.
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PMID:Pharmacological differentiation and anti-apoptotic therapy in myelodysplastic syndromes. 1010 Dec 9

LUCA-15/RBM5 is a putative tumour suppressor. The gene encodes a number of alternative RNA splice variants with differing abilities to either enhance or suppress apoptosis, and it is likely that this ability to modulate apoptosis is central to the putative tumour suppressor activity of LUCA-15. This report demonstrates for the first time that expression from the LUCA-15 locus modulates apoptosis triggered by the death-inducing ligand TRAIL. Using Jurkat T lymphoblastic leukemia cells, LUCA-15 expression was shown to enhance not only TRAIL but TNF-alpha- and Fas-mediated apoptosis. LUCA-15, therefore, has the ability to lower the apoptotic threshold of multiple receptor-initiated death-inducing signals. Of note, sensitisation of the Jurkat cells to TRAIL was shown to depend on new protein synthesis, since no enhancement of apoptosis was observed when cells were exposed to both TRAIL and the protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide. This result suggests that LUCA-15 does not act independently to regulate apoptosis, but modulates a process that requires additional, newly synthesized protein. These results may explain the putative role of LUCA-15 as a tumour suppressor, suggesting that lack of functional LUCA-15 could provide the means by which malignant T cells escape receptor-initiated apoptotic signals.
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PMID:LUCA-15/RBM5, a putative tumour suppressor, enhances multiple receptor-initiated death signals. 1519 30

The MCF-7 human breast carcinoma cell line is widely used as a model system by breast cancer researchers and cell biologists investigating apoptosis. Since its establishment 30 years ago, from a patient with metastatic breast cancer, the original MCF-7 cell population has undergone genetic drift to such an extent that numerous genetically diverse sublines now exist. For instance, it has been reported that MCF-7 cells have lost the region 3p21.3, to which the apoptosis regulatory protein and putative tumour suppressor LUCA-15 (also called RBM5 and H37) maps; however, LUCA-15 has been cloned from MCF-7 cells, and LUCA-15 expression analyses have been conducted using MCF-7 cells. To address this discrepancy, we characterized three MCF-7 sublines by Western blot, RT-PCR and finally genomic PCR analysis, and determined that one of the three had lost the LUCA-15 gene. Interestingly, loss of LUCA-15 was positively correlated with decreased susceptibility to the death-inducing ligand TNF-alpha. Subsequent overexpression of exogenous LUCA-15 was shown to enhance TNF-alpha-mediated apoptosis, suggesting that LUCA-15 may play a role in regulating the susceptibility of breast cancer cells to drug-induced apoptosis. These results not only reinforce the necessity of MCF-7 subline characterization, but provide the first evidence of an apoptotic modulatory role for LUCA-15 in a non-T cell line.
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PMID:Genetic instability of RBM5/LUCA-15/H37 in MCF-7 breast carcinoma sublines may affect susceptibility to apoptosis. 1533 70

Recent epidemiological studies in Serbia revealed that gastric carcinoma is the third and the fifth main cause of cancer morbidity in men and women, respectively. Despite the declining incidence of gastric cancer, it remains the second most common cause of cancer-related deaths as it is worldwide. A well-defined carcinogenic inflammation-metaplasia-dysplasia-cancer sequence typically precedes the development of most gastric adenocarcinomas. Alterations such as gastric mucosal atrophy and intestinal metaplasia are merely markers of increased risk, while gastric epithelial dysplasia (GED) represent a direct precursor of cancer. DNA damage and increased mucosal proliferation secondary to H pylori infection, combined with a suitable host susceptibility phenotype (eg, genetic polymorphisms in interleukin IL-1B, IL-1RN, and tumor necrosis factor a TNF-alpha genes), are important factors in this progression pathway. However, only a small minority of patients infected with H. pylori eventually develops gastric cancer, and eradication of H pylori in these patients does not seem to eliminate the risk of cancer completely. It has been shown that atrophy may be a better indicator of risk of cancer than intestinal metaplasia, and remains to be validated in routine clinical practice according to recent proposal for new quantitative methods. It is often associated with pseudopyloric gland metaplasia in the gastric corpus mucosa, which expresses a type of trefoil peptide, the spasmolytic polypeptide (termed spasmolytic polypeptide-expressing metaplasia or SPEM) and has been shown to be linked more closely to gastric cancer than intestinal metaplasia. Better histological characterization of adenomatous (or type I), hyperplastic (foveolar or type II) and tubule-neck (mucocellular or type III) GED, two-tiered grading system (low and high grade dysplasia) as well as the introduction of Padova and Vienna international classifications of dysplasia seem to be more helpful in GED surveillance and comparative studies. A combination of histopathological features, serum markers such as pepsinogen I, and molecular tests that analyze host susceptibility polymorphisms and bacterial virulence factors, may allow development of strategies for early detection of cancer in the future. At present, pathobiology of gastric cancerogenesis is far from known, despite the progressive knowledge on predisposing environmental conditions and genetic and epigenetic abnormalities, including tumour suppressor genes, oncogenes, microsatellite instability and hypermethylation or the significance of E-cadherin mutational status association with hereditary diffuse gastric cancer syndrome. Recent evidence regarding the importance of several histopathologically derived prognostic factors, such as resection margin status and lymph node metastases and their implications have also been discussed. We aim to review these aspects, with special relevance to gastric cancer specimen reporting.
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PMID:[Pathology and pathobiology of the gastric carcinoma]. 2163 3