2 resultados para p38b isoform
em CORA - Cork Open Research Archive - University College Cork - Ireland
Resumo:
Oesophageal cancer is an aggressive tumour which responds poorly to both chemotherapy and radiation therapy and has a poor prognosis. Thus, a greater understanding of the biology of oesophageal cancer is needed in order to identify novel therapeutic targets. Among these targets p38 MAPK isoforms are becoming increasingly important for a variety of cellular functions. The physiological functions of p38α and -β are now well documented in contrast to -γ and -δ which are comparatively under-studied and ill-defined. A major obstacle to deciphering the role(s) of the latter two p38 isoforms is the lack of specific chemical activators and inhibitors. In this study, we analysed p38 MAPK isoform expression in oesophageal cancer cell lines as well as human normal and tumour tissue. We observed specifically differential p38δ expression. The role(s) of p38δ and active (phosphorylated) p38δ (p-p38δ) in oesophageal squamous cell carcinoma (OESCC) was delineated using wild-type p38δ as well as active p-p38δ, generated by fusing p38δ to its upstream activator MKK6b(E) via a decapeptide (Gly-Glu)5 linker. OESCC cell lines which are p38δ-negative (KE-3 and -8) grew more quickly than cell lines (KE-6 and -10) which express endogenous p38δ. Re-introduction of p38δ resulted in a time-dependent decrease in OESCC cell proliferation which was exacerbated with p-p38δ. In addition, we observed that p38δ and p-p38δ negatively regulated OESCC cell migration in vitro. Finally both p38δ and p-p38δ altered OESCC anchorage-independent growth. Our results suggest that p38δ and p-p38δ have a role in the suppression of OESCC. Our research may provide a new potential target for the treatment of oesophageal cancer.
Resumo:
TRIB2 is a member of the mammalian Tribbles family of serine/threonine pseudokinases (TRIB1-3). Here, we studied murine haematopoiesis after Trib2 ablation under steady state and proliferative stress conditions, including genotoxic and oncogenic stress. At the steady state, we found that TRIB2 loss did not adversely affect peripheral blood cell counts and populations. No detectable significant differences were found in the populations of haematopoietic stem and progenitor cells. However, Trib2-/- mice had significantly higher thymic cellularity due to the increased proliferation of Trib2-/- developing thymocytes which give rise to increased number of mature thymic subsets. During stressed haematopoiesis, Trib2-/- developing thymocytes demonstrate hypersensitivity to 5-fluorouracil-induced cell death. Nevertheless, Trib2-/- mice exhibit accelerated thymopoietic recovery post 5-fluorouracil treatment due to increased cell division kinetics of developing thymocytes. In an experimental murine T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (T-ALL) model, Trib2-/- mice had reduced latency in vivo which associated with aggressive T-ALL phenotypes and impaired activation of mitogen-activated protein kinase. Gene set enrichment analysis showed that TRIB2 expression is elevated in immature subtype of human T-ALL enriched with mitogen-activated protein kinase signalling. However, TRIB2 expression is suppressed in mature subtype of human T-ALL. Thus, TRIB2 emerges as a novel regulator of thymocyte cellular proliferation, important for the thymopoietic response to genotoxic and oncogenic stress, and possessing tumour suppressor function. In Drosophila, Tribbles promotes degradation of String which is an orthologue of mammalian CDC25 phosphatases in order to arrest cell cycle during embryonic development. Here, we showed that the role of Tribbles-induced degradation of String is evolutionarily conserved in TRIB2. We found that TRIB2 interacts with CDC25B/C but not CDC25A isoform. Overexpression of TRIB2 promotes polyubiquitination and degradation of CDC25C. Hence, future works are warranted to examine TRIB2-CDC25C interaction in the context of developing thymocytes and in T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukaemia, the malignant counterpart.