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Query: UNIPROT:P43146 (
tumour suppressor
)
5,935
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Granulomas occurring in sarcoidosis with lung involvement are mostly located in the paravasal interstitium, pleura, bronchial mucosa and stroma. The phases and the activity of the disease process are characterised by different patterns from multicellular epitheloidcellular granulomas to marked hyalinisations and scarifications. For the purpose of histochemical characterisation of the composition of the cells and matrix of pulmonary granulomas in open and transbronchial lung biopsies of 15 patients suffering from sarcoidosis in different clinical stages, antibodies were employed against macrophages, neutrophil elastase, collagen types I and III,
fibronectin
, laminin, PCNA and against the
tumour suppressor
gene product P53. Identification was subsequently performed either by means of indirect immunofluorescence or the PAP technique. Multicellular granulomas showed, especially centrally, a specific fluorescence for macrophages involving also giant cells, whereas antibodies against neutrophil elastase could be mainly identified peripherally. PCNA and P53 protein were identified in the cytoplasm and partly also in the nuclei of giant cells. Collagen types I and III were mainly expressed pericentrally.
Fibronectin
was found in numerous multicellular epitheloid cellular granulomas not only in the peripheral collagen network but also centripetally oriented. The scarifying granulomas showed initially increased centripetal deposition of
fibronectin
followed by an addition of collagen types I and III. Laminin was always present in very small quantities only. The results obtained demonstrate a variable expression of matrix structures in sarcoidosis, dependent on the developmental stages of pulmonary granulomas, this expression being capable of control to some extent with the proportions of epitheloid cells, lymphocytes and macrophages that are present. Tumour suppressor gene p53 positive macrophage giant cells and adhesion molecules such as
fibronectin
participate in granuloma production to a varying extent.
...
PMID:[Characterization of structural and cellular components in pulmonary sarcoidosis granuloma]. 868 5
Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) are a group of enzymes thought to be responsible for both normal connective tissue matrix remodelling and accelerated breakdown associated with tumour development. The current study aimed to investigate the immunohistochemical expression of matrix metalloproteinase 3 (MMP-3, stromelysin-1) in correlation with the expression of Basement Membrane (BM) antigen (type IV collagen, laminin),
fibronectin
, cathepsin D, p53, c-erbB-2, proliferative activity (Ki-67, PCNA), steroid receptor content as well as to the other conventional clinicopathological parameters in breast cancer. This study was performed on a series of frozen and paraffin sections from 84 breast cancer specimens by immunohistochemistry using the monoclonal antibody MMP-3 (Ab-1). Stromelysin-1 (ST1) was observed in about 10% of epithelial cells in the control groups (cases of fibrocystic and benign proliferative breast disease), while expression (> 10% of expression) was detected in 89.7% of tumours. The expression of ST1 in carcinoma cells was strongly associated with its presence in the stroma (p < 0.001). A significantly positive correlation was found between ST1 expression, and p53
tumour suppressor
gene product (p = 0.004), and a relationship with c-erbB-2 protein and progesterone receptor status was also indicated. These findings suggest that ST1 expression in breast cancer tissue is irrespective of the expression of the extracellular matrix component, the proteolytic enzyme cathepsin D and the growth fraction of the tumour, and that it could be a potential new prognostic marker in breast cancer.
...
PMID:Matrix metalloproteinase expression in human breast cancer: an immunohistochemical study including correlation with cathepsin D, type IV collagen, laminin, fibronectin, EGFR, c-erbB-2 oncoprotein, p53, steroid receptors status and proliferative indices. 967 87
Expression of full-length p16(INK4a) blocks alphavbeta3 integrin-dependent cell spreading on vitronectin but not collagen IV. Similarly, G1-associated cell cycle kinases (CDK) inhibitory (CKI) synthetic peptides derived from p16(INK4a), p18(INK4c) and p21(Cip1/Waf1), which can be delivered directly into cells from the tissue culture medium, do not affect non-alphavbeta3-dependent spreading on collagen IV, laminin and
fibronectin
at concentrations that inhibit cell cycle progression in late G1. The alphavbeta3 heterodimer remains intact after CKI peptide treatment but is immediately dissociated from the focal adhesion contacts. Treatment with phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) allows alphavbeta3 to locate to the focal adhesion contacts and the cells to spread on vitronectin in the presence of CKI peptides. The cdk6 protein is found to suppress p16(INK4a)-mediated inhibition of spreading and is also shown to localize to the ruffling edge of spreading cells, indicating a function for cdk6 in controlling matrix-dependent cell spreading. These results demonstrate a novel G1 CDK-associated integrin regulatory pathway that acts upstream of alphavbeta3-dependent activation of PKC as well as a novel function for the p16(INK4a)
tumour suppressor
protein in regulating matrix-dependent cell migration.
...
PMID:The p16(INK4a) tumour suppressor protein inhibits alphavbeta3 integrin-mediated cell spreading on vitronectin by blocking PKC-dependent localization of alphavbeta3 to focal contacts. 1020 65
von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) disease is a hereditary cancer syndrome caused by germline mutations of the VHL
tumour suppressor
gene. The VHL gene product, pVHL, forms multiprotein complexes that contain elongin B, elongin C and Cul-2, and negatively regulates hypoxia-inducible mRNAs. pVHL is suspected to play a role in ubiquitination given the similarity of elongin C and Cul-2 with Skp1 and Cdc53, respectively. pVHL can also interact with
fibronectin
and is required for the assembly of a
fibronectin
matrix. Finally, pVHL, at least indirectly, plays a role in the ability of cells to exit the cell cycle. Thus, pVHL is a
tumour suppressor
protein that regulates angiogenesis, extracellular matrix formation and the cell cycle.
...
PMID:The von Hippel-Lindau tumour suppressor protein: new perspectives. 1036 21
Current biocompatibility testing involves the demonstration of cell proliferation, which is usually interpreted as a sign of positive biocompatibility when the materials sustain cell proliferation. As the field of biomaterials research is rapidly moving toward tissue-engineered devices and hybrid organs, control of cell function has become a main topic. Cell function, which involves specific differentiation pathways, cannot be separated from cell-cycle control. The study of cell-cycle control is an important extension of routine proliferation assays and has extensive roots in developmental and tumor biology. We studied the expression of the
tumour suppressor
gene p53 and the proliferation-associated antigen Ki67 of endothelial cells in response to biomaterial contact. Cells were seeded in six- or 24-well plates, in which one or three 12-mm-diameter biomaterial disks were laid down. After 48- and 72-h incubation periods, cells were processed for flow cytometry, immunofluorescence, or Western blotting. The following materials were used: titanium, NiCr alloy, and CoCr alloy. Cells were also exposed to 24-h (ISO-norm) extracts in 25-cm(2) culture flasks (600, 000 cells) for 24 and 48 h. For extract testing, serially diluted Ni-ion suspensions were also used. Human umbilical vein endothelial cells adhered to metal surfaces and started forming a monolayer within 3 days. Ki67 expression was positive in more than 60% after 2 days and decreased markedly after 3 days of adhesion. During this time cells developed focal contacts and produced a
fibronectin
matrix. p53 expression could be demonstrated with Western blotting and flow cytometry, but not with immunofluorescence. Differences due to both culturing time and material were found in expression patterns with both methods. Inverse correlations between Ki67 and p53 expression were detected, which are probably based on culture kinetics. The results indicate that expression of p53 and also Ki67 is clearly influenced by biomaterials in direct contact testing, despite the absence of obvious morphological differences. The p53 marker can be used for defining cell function in more detail, although the correlation with specific physiological function has still to be clarified.
...
PMID:Cell-cycle control in cell-biomaterial interactions: expression of p53 and Ki67 in human umbilical vein endothelial cells in direct contact and extract testing of biomaterials. 1090 93
The von Hippel-Lindau
tumour suppressor
gene product (pVHL) associates with the elongin B and C and Cul2 proteins to form a ubiquitin-ligase complex (VCBC). To date, the only VCBC substrates identified are the hypoxia-inducible factor alpha subunits (HIF-1alpha and HIF-2alpha). However, pVHL is thought to have multiple functions and the significance of HIF-1alpha and HIF-2alpha regulation for
tumour suppressor
activity has not been defined. VHL disease is characterized by distinct clinical subtypes. Thus haemangioblastomas (HABs) and renal cell carcinoma (RCC) but not phaeochromocytoma (PHE) occur in type 1 VHL disease. Type 2 subtypes are characterized by PHE susceptibility but differ with respect to additional tumours (type 2A, PHE+HAB but not RCC; type 2B, PHE+ HAB+RCC; type 2C, PHE only). We investigated in detail the effect of 13 naturally occurring VHL mutations (11 missense), representing each phenotypic subclass, on HIF-alpha subunit regulation. Consistent effects on pVHL function were observed for all mutations within each subclass. Mutations associated with the PHE-only phenotype (type 2C) promoted HIF-alpha ubiquitylation in vitro and demonstrated wild-type binding patterns with pVHL interacting proteins, suggesting that loss of other pVHL functions are necessary for PHE susceptibility. Mutations causing HAB susceptibility (types 1, 2A and 2B) demonstrated variable effects on HIF-alpha subunit and elongin binding, but all resulted in defective HIF-alpha regulation and loss of p220 (
fibronectin
) binding. All RCC-associated mutations caused complete HIF-alpha dysregulation and loss of p220 (
fibronectin
) binding. Our findings are consistent with impaired ability to degrade HIF-alpha subunit being required for HAB development and RCC susceptibility.
...
PMID:Contrasting effects on HIF-1alpha regulation by disease-causing pVHL mutations correlate with patterns of tumourigenesis in von Hippel-Lindau disease. 1133 13
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
tumour suppressor
functions of p53 that are important for its activity depend on its role as a cell cycle arrest mediator and apoptosis inducer. Here we identify a novel function for p53 in regulating cell morphology and movement. We investigated the overall effect of p53 on morphological changes induced by RhoA, Rac1 and Cdc42 GTPases in mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs). Interestingly, p53 exerted a selective effect on Cdc42-mediated cell functions. (i) Both overexpression of wild-type p53 and activation of endogenous p53 counteracted Cdc42-induced filopodia formation. Conversely, p53-deficient MEFs exhibited constitutive membrane filopodia. Mechanistic studies indicate that p53 prevents the initiating steps of filopodia formation downstream of Cdc42. (ii) Over expression of p53 modulates cell spreading of MEFs on
fibronectin
. (iii) During cell migration, the reorientation of the Golgi apparatus in the direction of movement is abolished by wild-type p53 expression, thus preventing cell polarity. Our data demonstrate a previously uncharacterized role for p53 in regulating Cdc42-dependent cell effects that control actin cytoskeletal dynamics and cell movement. This novel function may contribute to p53 anti-tumour activity.
...
PMID:Regulation of Cdc42-mediated morphological effects: a novel function for p53. 1200 90
Previously, we identified TES as a novel candidate
tumour suppressor
gene that mapped to human chromosome 7q31.1. In this report we demonstrate that the TES protein is localised at focal adhesions, actin stress fibres and areas of cell-cell contact. TES has three C-terminal LIM domains that appear to be important for focal adhesion targeting. Additionally, the N-terminal region is important for targeting TES to actin stress fibres. Yeast two-hybrid and biochemical analyses yielded interactions with several focal adhesion and/or cytoskeletal proteins including mena, zyxin and talin. The fact that TES localises to regions of cell adhesion suggests that it functions in events related to cell motility and adhesion. In support of this, we demonstrate that fibroblasts stably overexpressing TES have an increased ability to spread on
fibronectin
.
...
PMID:TES is a novel focal adhesion protein with a role in cell spreading. 1257 Dec 87
Previously we identified TES as a candidate
tumour suppressor
gene that is located at human chromosome 7q31.1. More recently, we and others have shown TES to encode a novel LIM domain protein that localises to focal adhesions. Here, we present the cloning and functional analysis of the chicken orthologue of TES, cTES. The TES proteins are highly conserved between chicken and human, showing 89% identity at the amino acid level. We show that the cTES protein localised at focal adhesions, actin stress fibres, and sites of cell-cell contact, and GST-cTES can pull-down zyxin and actin. To investigate a functional role for cTES, we looked at the effect of its overexpression on cell spreading and cell motility. Cells overexpressing cTES showed increased cell spreading on
fibronectin
, and decreased cell motility, compared to RCAS vector transfected control cells. The data from our studies with cTES support our previous findings with human TES and further implicate TES as a member of a complex of proteins that function together to regulate cell adhesion and additionally demonstrate a role for TES in cell motility.
...
PMID:Characterisation of chicken TES and its role in cell spreading and motility. 1474 47
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