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)

Lymphocyte activation requires signal transduction mediated by reversible phosphorylation. Changing profiles of phosphorylated intermediates relate to the progressive series of transduction pathways in cells moving from G0 to G1, and thereafter through the cell cycle. We have previously shown that transient inhibition of the serine/threonine protein phosphatases PP1 and PP2A by okadaic acid enhances early mitogenic stimulation. Thus target proteins of PP1/PP2A may be involved in regulation of early mitogenic signalling, with the phosphorylated form(s) being associated with signal enhancement. Later, pathways require dephosphorylation of these proteins, since continuous treatment with okadaic acid blocks lymphocyte progression through the cell cycle. Delayed addition of okadaic acid showed that this blockade occurs between 8 and 24 hr. Here we have furthered these observations to the level of gene induction by measuring messenger RNA (mRNA) levels for the following proteins: interleukin-2 (IL-2) and IL-2R alpha; p53, a tumour suppressor protein; the transcription factor krox-24; and two mediators of protein folding, namely cyclophilin and the heat-shock protein hsc70. An external standard was used to quantitate the mRNA levels per cell. We found that 24 hr exposure to okadaic acid has a general suppressive effect on concanavalin A (Con A)-stimulated gene induction. However, at 4 hr okadaic acid enhanced IL-2 mRNA levels induced by Con A. Moreover, in unstimulated lymphocytes, okadaic acid caused the induction of krox-24, indicating a role for PP1 and PP2A in the regulation of this gene in resting cells.
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PMID:Inhibition of the serine/threonine protein phosphatases PP1 and PP2A in lymphocytes: effect on mRNA levels for interleukin-2, IL-2R alpha, krox-24, p53, hsc70 and cyclophilin. 132 40

Exon 8 of tumour suppressor gene p53 was sequenced in domestic dogs. Ten nucleotide differences were revealed in a comparison with the feline sequence. A mutation ACT-->TCT (threonine-->serine) in codon 284 was detected in a papilloma of the oral mucosa.
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PMID:Sequence of an exon of the canine p53 gene--mutation in a papilloma. 754 37

C-CAMs are epithelial cell-adhesion molecules of the immunoglobulin supergene family with sequences highly homologous to carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA). C-CAMs and their human homologues, biliary glycoproteins, are unique among the CEA-family proteins in that they have cytoplasmic domains. Furthermore, alternative splicing generates C-CAM isoforms with different cytoplasmic domains, suggesting that the cytoplasmic domains of C-CAM may play important roles in regulating the function or functions of C-CAM. By using both sense and antisense approaches, we have shown that C-CAM1 is a tumour suppressor in prostate carcinogenesis. This observation raises the possibility that the cytoplasmic domain of C-CAM1 may be involved in signal transduction or interaction with cytoskeletal elements to elicit the tumour suppressor function. The cytoplasmic domain of C-CAM1 contains several potential phosphorylation sites, including putative consensus sequences for cyclic AMP-dependent kinase and tyrosine kinase. One of the potential tyrosine phosphorylation sites is located within the antigen-receptor homology (ARH) domain. The ARH domain of the membrane-bound IgM molecule is necessary for signal transduction in B-cells. These structural features suggest that the cytoplasmic domain of C-CAM1 may be important for signal transduction. To test this possibility, we generated several site-directed C-CAM1 mutants and tested their ability to support adhesion and their abilities to be phosphorylated in vivo. Results from these studies revealed that Tyr-488 is phosphorylated in vivo. However, replacing this tyrosine with phenylalanine did not significantly compromise its adhesion function. Similarly, Ser and Thr residues are phosphorylated in vivo, but deletion of the potential cyclic AMP-dependent kinase site did not significantly reduce the adhesion function. These results suggest that the kinase phosphorylation sites in the cytoplasmic domain of C-CAM1 are not required for the adhesion function. However, these phosphorylation sites are probably involved in the regulation of C-CAM-mediated signal transduction. Thus, there are probably distinct structural requirements for the adhesion and the signal transduction functions of C-CAM. Incidentally, a C-CAM1 deletion mutant containing a 10-amino-acid cytoplasmic domain was able to support adhesion activity. This is in contrast to our previous finding that a C-CAM isoform, C-CAM3, with a 6-amino-acid cytoplasmic domain could not support cell adhesion. This result indicates that the extra four amino acids, which are absent in C-CAM3 and contain a potential Ser/Thr phosphorylation site, are important for the adhesion function.
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PMID:Structure and function of C-CAM1: effects of the cytoplasmic domain on cell aggregation. 757 60

The p53 tumour suppressor protein is thought to play a major role in the defence of the cell against agents which damage DNA. p53 is phosphorylated at multiple sites in vivo and by several different protein kinases in vitro. In this report, we have examined the phosphorylation of murine p53 by protein kinase C (PKC). Phosphopeptide mapping, phosphoamino acid analysis and radiosequence analysis of p53 phosphorylated by PKC in vitro indicated that serine 370 and threonine 377 were the major targets for phosphorylation and suggested that serine 372 and threonines 365 and 371 were minor phosphorylation sites. Site-directed mutagenesis confirmed that residues 370-372, all of which lie within the epitope for monoclonal antibody PAb421, were phosphorylated in vitro. The p53 from 32P-labelled SV3T3 cells showed a phosphopeptide pattern which includes peptides with mobilities similar to those arising from phosphorylation of residues 370-372 by PKC in vitro. Only two of these in vivo-labelled phosphopeptides co-migrated in two dimensions with peptides labelled in vitro within the PAb421 epitope and their phosphorylation was not stimulated by the addition of the PKC activator o-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate (TPA) to the cells, even though this treatment led to a fourfold stimulation of p53 phosphorylation by MAP kinase. Moreover, when the p53 proteins containing mutations at residues 370-372 were expressed in COS cells, there was no loss of any of the in vivo phosphopeptides, indicating that phosphorylation within the PAb42I epitope was undetectable in the cell. These data suggest that p53 and PKC may not interact in vivo. The two-dimensional migration pattern of the novel group of peptides is consistent with phosphorylation of previously uncharacterised sites within the central DNA binding region of p53.
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PMID:Murine p53 is phosphorylated within the PAb421 epitope by protein kinase C in vitro, but not in vivo, even after stimulation with the phorbol ester o-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate. 870 May 48

The Smad4/DPC4 tumour suppressor is inactivated in nearly half of pancreatic carcinomas and to a lesser extent in a variety of other cancers. Smad4/DPC4, and the related tumour suppressor Smad2, belong to the SMAD family of proteins that mediate signalling by the TGF-beta/activin/BMP-2/4 cytokine superfamily from receptor Ser/Thr protein kinases at the cell surface to the nucleus. SMAD proteins, which are phosphorylated by the activated receptor, propagate the signal, in part, through homo- and hetero-oligomeric interactions. Smad4/DPC4 plays a central role as it is the shared hetero-oligomerization partner of the other SMADs. The conserved carboxy-terminal domains of SMADs are sufficient for inducing most of the ligand-specific effects, and are the primary targets of tumorigenic inactivation. We now describe the crystal structure of the C-terminal domain (CTD) of the Smad4/DPC4 tumour suppressor, determined at 2.5 A resolution. The structure reveals that the Smad4/DPC4 CTD forms a crystallographic trimer through a conserved protein-protein interface, to which the majority of the tumour-derived missense mutations map. These mutations disrupt homo-oligomerization in vitro and in vivo, indicating that the trimeric assembly of the Smad4/DPC4 CTD is critical for signalling and is disrupted by tumorigenic mutations.
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PMID:A structural basis for mutational inactivation of the tumour suppressor Smad4. 921 96

The Wilms' tumour suppressor gene (wt1) is mutated in a subset of patients with Wilms' tumour and has a critical role in urogenital development. wt1 encodes a zinc finger transcription factor which regulates expression of several genes involved in cellular proliferation and differentiation. Although a number of studies have characterized the DNA binding properties of the WT1 protein, recent evidence has suggested that WT1 may also have a role in RNA metabolism. We have used an RNA selection method to identify WT1 binding ligands from a random RNA pool. Three groups of RNA ligands specifically recognized by WT1 were identified. Mutational analysis pinpointed ribonucleotide sequences critical for binding. Analysis of truncated WT1 proteins demonstrated that three of four zinc fingers were necessary for RNA-protein interaction. The naturally occurring WT1 isoforms with insertion of lysine, threonine and serine between zinc fingers three and four were unable to bind the selected RNAs. The selected RNA ligands competed with the cognate WT1 DNA binding site for complex formation with WT1. Our findings suggest potential cellular RNA target sequences for WT1 and provide tools for studying the structural and functional properties of this tumour suppressor protein.
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PMID:Overlapping RNA and DNA binding domains of the wt1 tumor suppressor gene product. 951 53

Chromosome 9p21 is frequently deleted in malignant melanoma, and one familial malignant melanoma gene has been linked to 9p21-22. Recently, the cyclin D-dependent kinase inhibitors (CDKIs) p16INK4a and p15INK4b have been localized within chromosome 9p21, and the presence of p16INK4a point mutations has been demonstrated in familial melanoma and melanoma cell lines in vitro. To analyse the role of these CDKIs in sporadic human cutaneous non-metastatic malignant melanoma, we examined 36 primary tumour specimens representing different stages of melanoma progression and their corresponding normal skin samples for the three mechanisms of CDKI inactivation described so far. Homozygous codeletion of the p16INK4a and the p15INK4b gene was detected by Southern blot analysis in two tumour samples. By direct sequencing of polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-amplified microdissected genomic DNA; no somatic or germline p16INK4a point mutations or small deletions were detected in the remaining 34 tumour samples; one individual exhibited the previously described germline codon 148 (Ala-->Thr) polymorphism. In these tumour specimens, comparative semiquantitative reverse PCR analysis of p16INK4a transcript levels revealed no evidence for repression of p16INK4a gene transcription and thus for p16INK4a promoter inactivation by DNA methylation. These results indicate homozygous p16INK4a and p15INK4b loss to occur in a subset of cutaneous melanomas and suggest, in view of the frequent loss of heterozygosity on chromosome 9p21, the presence of another tumour suppressor gene within this chromosomal region.
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PMID:Homozygous deletion of the p16INK4a and the p15INK4b tumour suppressor genes in a subset of human sporadic cutaneous malignant melanoma. 953 18

Approximately ten percent of patients with malignant melanoma have family histories of the disease, suggesting a genetic predisposition. Germline mutations in tumour suppressor p16 gene have been implicated as disease causing mutations in some of the melanoma families. The frequency of families with p16 germline mutations among melanoma prone families varies from eight to fifty percent. The range of the variability is influenced apparently by the number of melanoma affected individuals within the family, as well as by other, yet unidentified factors. Ethnic background is known to determine both the frequency and the nature of germline alterations. Recently, specific mutations in tumour suppressor genes involved in breast cancer and in colon cancer were found at elevated frequency among Ashkenazi Jews. This report describes results of a screening for p16 germline alterations in a collection of Israeli melanoma families. We have analyzed genomic DNA from thirty one Ashkenazi and non-Ashkenazi Jewish melanoma families, as well as from thirty melanoma patients without an apparent family history of the disease. The entire coding region of the p16 gene was screened by single strand conformation polymorphism analysis and direct DNA sequencing. We have detected a number of carriers with the Ala148 Thr polymorphism at the end of the second exon and several instances of 500(G=>C) substitution at the 3' untranslated portion of the gene.
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PMID:Screening for tumour suppressor p16(CDKN2A) germline mutations in Israeli melanoma families. 980 78

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.
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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

As concerns human adult brain neoplasms, the biological behaviour of glioblastoma, a high-grade neuro-ectodermal tumour, is among the most disadvantageous. Glioblastoma may develop either as a primary tumour without clinical and histological evidence of a prior precursor lesion, or as the final stage of malignant transformation of a low-grade or anaplastic astrocytoma. There are conflicting reports in connection with the association of the p53 tumour suppressor gene mutation with the clinical and histological progression of gliomas. Previous studies likewise led to contradictory results concerning the significance of ras oncogenes in different histological malignancies, and especially in neuro-epithelial tumours. The possible roles of p53 and ras gene alterations in the development of "primary" and "transformed" glioblastomas were studied in this work. Eighteen tumours were investigated by means of immunohistochemistry and polymerase chain reaction-assisted-single strand conformation polymorphism (PCR-SSCP) sequence analysis in a search for molecular genetic differences between primary and transformed glioblastomas. An increased incidence of p53-immunopositive cells was observed in both types of glioblastomas but there was no significant difference between the transformed tumours and the primary form. All samples were screened for point mutation in codons 12 and 61 of the H-, K-, and N-ras oncogenes and exons 5-8 of the p53 gene. No aberrant band or mutation was found in the H-, K- and N-ras oncogenes. Aberrant bands were seen in only 2 (11%) of the 18 tumours in the SSCP analyses of exons 6 and 8. Sequence analysis of the 2 abnormal cases revealed G --> C transmission in the second nucleotide of codon 280 on exon 8, which resulted in a change in the encoded amino acid from arginine to threonine (case 15). A ttagtct --> ttggtct transmission on intron 5 (case 8) was also found. No genetic difference could be identified between the primary and the transformed glioblastoma forms as concerns their p53 and ras oncogenes. There are two possible explanations for these findings: (a) The p53 and ras gene mutations were not primary events in the morphological transformations. Alterations in these genes may therefore take place at an early stage in glioma progression. (b) The different genetic changes may accumulate during glioblastoma development. These specific genetic events may additionally play a role in multistep tumourigenesis.
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PMID:Sporadic p53 mutations and absence of ras mutations in glioblastomas. 1092 24


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