24 resultados para Interference Suppression


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MAX dimerization protein 1 (MAD1) is a basic-helix-loop-helix transcription factors that recruits transcription repressor such as HDAC to suppress target genes transcription. It antagonizes to MYC because the promoter binding sites for MYC are usually also serve as the binding sites for MAD1 so they compete for it. However, the mechanism of the switch between MYC and MAD1 in turning on and off of genes' transcription is obscure. In this study, we demonstrated that AKT-mediated MAD1 phosphorylation inhibits MAD1 transcription repression function. The association between MAD1 and its target genes' promoter is reduced after been phosphorylated by AKT; therefore, consequently, allows MYC to occupy the binding site and activates transcription. Mutation of such phosphorylation site abrogates the inhibition from AKT. In addition, functional assays demonstrated that AKT suppressed MAD1-mediated transcription repression of its target genes hTERT and ODC. Cell cycle and cell growth were also been released from inhibition by MAD1 in the presents of AKT. Taken together, our study suggests that MAD1 is a novel substrate of AKT and AKT-mediated MAD1 phosphorylation inhibits MAD1function; therefore, activates MAD1 target genes expression. ^ Furthermore, analysis of protein-protein interaction is indispensable for current molecular biology research, but multiplex protein dynamics in cells is too complicated to be analyzed by using existing biochemical methods. To overcome the disadvantage, we have developed a single molecule level detection system with nanofluidic chip. Single molecule was analyzed based on their fluorescent profile and their profiles were plotted into 2 dimensional time co-incident photon burst diagram (2DTP). From this 2DTP, protein complexes were characterized. These results demonstrate that the nanochannel protein detection system is a promising tool for future molecular biology. ^

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Proinflammatory cytokine TNFa plays critical roles in promoting malignant cell proliferation, angiogenesis, and tumor metastasis in many cancers. However, the mechanism of TNFa-mediated tumor development remains unclear. Here, we show that IKKa, an important downstream kinase of TNFa, interacts with and phosphorylates FOXA2 at S107/S111, thereby suppressing FOXA2 transactivation activity and leading to decreased NUMB expression, and further activates the downstream NOTCH pathway and promotes cell proliferation and tumorigenesis. Moreover, we found that levels of IKKa, pFOXA2 (S107/ 111), and activated NOTCH1 were significantly higher in hepatocellular carcinoma tumors than in normal liver tissues and that pFOXA2 (S107/111) expression was positively correlated with IKKa and activated NOTCH1 expression in tumor tissues. Therefore, dysregulation of NUMB-mediated suppression of NOTCH1 by TNFa/IKKa-associated FOXA2 inhibition likely contributes to inflammationmediated cancer pathogenesis. Here, we report a TNFa/IKKa/FOXA2/NUMB/NOTCH1 pathway that is critical for inflammation-mediated tumorigenesis and may provide a target for clinical intervention in human cancer.

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The regulation of muscle differentiation, like cell differentiation in general, is only now beginning to be understood. Here are described several key features to myogenesis: a beginning, some intermediary events, and an endpoint. Muscle differentiation proceeds spontaneously when myoblasts are cultured in serum-poor medium. Transforming growth factor type $\beta$ (TGF$\beta$), a component of fetal serum, was found to potently suppress muscle differentiation. Prolonged blockade of differentiation required replenishing TGF$\beta$. When TGF$\beta$ was removed, cells rapidly differentiated. Both TGF$\beta$ and RAS, which also blocks myogenesis, suppress the genes for a series of muscle-specific proteins. Regions that regulate transcription of one such gene, muscle creatine kinase (mck), were located by linking progressively smaller parts of the mck 5$\sp\prime$ region to the marker gene cat and testing the constructs for regulated expression of cat in myoblasts and muscle cells. The mck promoter is not muscle-specific but requires activation. Two enhancers were found: a weak, developmentally regulated enhancer within the first intron, and a strong, compact, and tightly developmentally regulated enhancer about 1.2 Kb upstream of the transcription start site. Activity of this enhancer is eliminated by activated ras. Suppression of activated N-RAS restores potency to the upstream enhancer. Further deletion shows the mck 5$\sp\prime$ enhancer to contain an enhancer core with low but significant muscle-specific activity, and at least one peripheral element that augments core activity. The core and this peripheral element were comprised almost entirely of factor-binding motifs. The peripheral element was inactive as a single copy, but was constitutively active in multiple copies. Regions flanking the peripheral element augmented its activity and conferred partial muscle-specificity. The enhancer core is also modulated by its 5$\sp\prime$ flanking region in a complex manner. Site-specific mutants covering most of the enhancer core and interesting flanking sequences have been made; all mutants tested diminish the activity of the 5$\sp\prime$ enhancer. Alteration of the site to which MyoD1 is reported to bind completely inactivates the enhancer. A theoretical analysis of cooperativity is presented, through which the binding of a constitutively expressed nuclear factor is shown to have weak positive cooperativity. In summary, TGF$\beta$, RAS, and enhancer-binding factors are found to be initial, intermediary, and final regulators, respectively, of muscle differentiation. ^

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p53 is a tumor suppressor gene that is the most frequent target inactivated in cancers. Overexpression of wild-type p53 in rat embryo fibroblasts suppresses foci formation by other cooperating oncogenes. Introduction of wild-type p53 into cells that lack p53 arrests them at the G1/S boundary and reverses the transformed phenotype of some cells. The function of p53 in normal cells is illustrated by the ability of p53 to arrest cells at G1 phase of the cell cycle upon exposure to DNA-damaging agents including UV-irradiation and biosynthesis inhibitors.^ Since the amino acid sequence of p53 suggested that it may function as a transcription factor, we used GAL4 fusion assays to test that possibility. We found that wild-type p53 could specifically activate transcription when anchored by the GAL4 DNA binding domain. Mutant p53s, which have lost the ability to suppress foci formation by other oncogenes, were not able to activate transcription in this assay. Thus, we established a direct correlation between the tumor suppression and transactivation functions of p53.^ Having learned that p53 was a transcriptional activator, we next sought targets of p53 activation. Because many transcription factors regulate their own expression, we tested whether p53 had this autoregulatory property. Transient expression of wild-type p53 in cells increased the levels of endogenous p53 mRNA. Cotransfection of p53 together with a reporter bearing the p53 promoter confirmed that wild-type p53 specifically activates its own promoter. Deletion analysis from both the 5$\sp\prime$ and 3$\sp\prime$ ends of the promoter minimized the region responsible for p53 autoregulation to 45 bp. Methylation interference identified nucleotides involved in protein-DNA interaction. Mutations within this protected site specifically eliminated the response of the promoter to p53. In addition, multiple copies of this element confer responsiveness to wild-type p53 expression. Thus, we identified a F53 responsive element within the p53 promoter.^ The presence of a consensus NF-$\kappa$B site in the p53 promoter suggested that NF-KB may regulate p53 expression. Gel-shift experiments showed that both the p50 homodimer and the p50/p65 heterodimer bind to the p53 promoter. In addition, the p65 subunit of NF-$\kappa$B activates the p53 promoter in transient transfection experiments. TNF $\alpha$, a natural NF-$\kappa$B inducer, also activates the p53 promoter. Both p65 activation and TNF $\alpha$ induction require an intact NF-$\kappa$B site in the p53 promoter. Since NF-$\kappa$B activation occurs as a response to stress and p53 arrests cells in G1/S, where DNA repair occurs, activation of p53 by NF-$\kappa$B could be a mechanism by which cells recover from stress.^ In conclusion, we provided the first data that wild-type p53 functions as a transcriptional activator, whereas mutant p53 cannot. The correlation between growth suppression and transcriptional activation by p53 implies a pathway of tumor suppression. We have analyzed upstream components of the pathway by the identification of both p53 and NF-$\kappa$B as regulators of the p53 promoter. ^

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The adenovirus type 5 E1A gene products have numerous functions in cells, which serve as useful tools in studying the mechanisms of either oncogenesis or tumor suppression. To understand the mechanisms of E1A-mediated tumor suppression, we introduced an Ad5 E1A gene into murine melanoma cells, and characterized E1A-mediated biological functions both in vitro and in vivo. The results of the study indicated that: (i) Ad5 E1A mediated tumor suppression in rodent tumor cells; (ii) E1A-mediated tumor suppression is associated with E1A-mediated apoptosis in vivo.^ To determine which functional region(s) of E1A is(are) required for E1A-mediated apoptosis and whether E1A-mediated apoptosis is required for E1A-mediated tumor suppression, we established stable transfectants of E1A mutants, which have deletion mutation at either the N-terminal (p300-binding) or the CR2 (pRb-binding) domain or both, and then characterized biological functions both in vitro and in vivo. The results of the study indicate that the CR2 domain of E1A is required for E1A-mediated apoptosis, while the N-terminal domain of E1A is dispensable. Interestingly, either of the two domains is able to mediate tumor suppression, since mutant E1A with a single deletion at either domain still suppressed tumor growth. Importantly, deletion mutations at both the N-terminal and the CR2 domains of E1A abrogated E1A-mediated tumor suppression, suggesting both regions are required for E1A-mediated tumor suppression. The results demonstrate that E1A-mediated apoptosis is not the only mechanism for E1A-mediated tumor suppression. Thus, the N-terminal and CR2 domains of E1A mediated two independent mechanisms of tumor suppression.^ To understand the mechanism of E1A-mediated apoptosis, we examined the temporal relationship of molecular events during the apoptotic cascades after UV radiation and serum depletion in both the E1A-expressing cells and parental cells. Kinetic analysis of JNK activity indicates that the JNK pathway is greatly increased in response to UV light in E1A transfectants, suggesting that extracellular stress stimuli have been converted into intracellular stress signals with greater magnitude in E1A transfectants than those in parental cells. Thus, E1A-mediated sensitization precedes these events. As ceramide has been proposed as second messenger and upstream activator of JNK pathway for stress-induced apoptosis, we also examined the roles of ceramide in apoptosis and the relationship with JNK pathway. The results indicate that E1A transfectants do not have increased sensitivity to ceramide. Therefore, E1A-mediated sensitization to UV radiation cannot be attributed to an increased sensitivity to ceramide. Furthermore, UV-induced JNK activation correlates with UV-induced apoptosis, while lethal dose of ceramide does not activate JNK. Thus, activation of JNK pathway is independent of the ceramide pathway. In addition, E1A transfectants also have increased activation of NF-kB in response to UV. These results suggest that E1A-mediated sensitization is an early event which associates with conversion of extracellular stress stimuli into amplified intracellular signals. The mechanism of E1A-mediated sensitization and its relationship with other pathways are discussed. ^

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The p53 gene is known to be one of the most commonly mutated genes in human cancers. Many squamous cell carcinomas of the head and neck (SCCHNs) have been shown to contain nonfunctional p53 as well. The use of p53-mediated gene therapy to treat such cancers has become an intensive area of research. Although there have been varied treatment responses to p53 gene therapy, the role that endogenous p53 status plays in this response has not been thoroughly examined. Because of this, the hypothesis of this study examined the role that the endogenous p53 status of cells plays in their response to p53 gene therapy. To test this, an adenoviral vector containing p53 (p53FAd) was administered to three squamous cell carcinoma lines with varied endogenous p53. The SCC9 cell line demonstrates no p53 protein expression, the SCC4 cell line displays overexpression of a mutant p53 protein, and the 1986LN cell line displays low to no expression of wild-type p53 protein as a consequence of human papillomavirus infection. After treatment with p53FAd, the cells were examined for evidence of exogenous p53 expression, growth suppression, alterations in cellular proteins, G1 growth arrest, apoptosis, and differentiation state. Each cell line exhibited exogenous p53 protein. Growth suppression was seen most prominently in the SCC9 cells, to some extent in the 1986LN cells, and little was seen with the SCC4 cells. WAF1/p21 protein was induced in all three cell lines, while PCNA, bcl-2, and bax expression was not significantly affected in any of the lines. Apoptosis developed first in SCC9 cells, next in 1986LN cells, with little seen in the SCC4 cells. The SCC9 line was the only line to show significant GI growth arrest. No significant differences were observed in the overall expression of differentiation markers, aside from increased keratin 13 mRNA levels in all three lines indicating a possible tendency toward differentiation. This study indicates that the endogenous p53 status of squamous cell carcinomas appears to play a critical role in determining the response to p53 adenoviral gene therapy. ^

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Cutaneous exposure to ultraviolet-B radiation (UVR) results in the suppression of cell-mediated immune responses such as contact hypersensitivity (CHS) and delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH). This modulation of immune responses is mediated by local or systemic mechanisms, both of which are associated with the generation of antigen-specific suppressor T lymphocytes (Ts). UV-induced Ts have been shown to be CD3+CD4+CD8 − T cells that control multiple immunological pathways. However, the precise mechanisms involved in the generation and function of these immunoregulatory cells remain unclear. We investigated the cellular basis for the generation of UV-induced Ts lymphocytes in both local and systemic models of immune suppression, and further examined the pleiotrophic function of these immunoregulatory cells. ^ We used Thy1.1 and Thy1.2 congenic mice in a draining lymph node (DLN) cell transfer model to analyze the role played by epidermal Langerhans cells in the generation of Ts cells. We demonstrate that T cells tightly adhered to antigen-presenting cells (APC) from UV-irradiated skin are the direct progenitors of UV-induced Ts lymphocytes. Our studies also reveal that UV-induced DNA-damage in the form of cyclobutyl pyrimidine dimers (CPD) in the epidermal APC is crucial for the altered maturation of these adherent T cells into Ts. ^ We used TCR transgenic mice in an adoptive transfer model and physically tracked the antigen-specific clones during immune responses in unirradiated versus UV-irradiated mice. We demonstrate that UV-induced Ts and effector TDTH cells share the same epitope specificity, indicating that both cell populations arise from the same clonal progenitors. UVR also causes profound changes in the localization and proliferation of antigen-specific T cells during an immune response. Antigen-specific T cells are not detectable in the DLNs of UV-irradiated mice after 3 days post-immunization, but are found in abundance in the spleen. In contrast, these clones continue to be found in the DLNs and spleens of normal animals several days post-immunization. Our studies also reveal that a Th2 cytokine environment is essential for the generation of Ts in UV-irradiated mice. ^ The third part of our study examined the pleiotrophic nature of UV-induced Ts. We used a model for the induction of both cellular and humoral responses to human gamma-globulin (HGG) to demonstrate that UV-induced Ts lymphocytes can suppress DTH as well as antibody responses. (Abstract shortened by UMI.) ^

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The adenovirus type 5 E1A (abbreviated E1A) has previously been known as an immortalization oncogene because E1A is required for transforming oncogenes, such as ras and E1B, to transform cells in primary cultures. However, E1A has also been shown to downregulate the overexpression of the Her-2/neu oncogene, resulting in suppression of transformation and tumorigenesis induced by that oncogene. In addition, E1A is able to promote apoptosis induced by anticancer drugs, irradiation, and serum deprivation. Many tyrosine kinases, such as the EGF receptor, Her-2/Neu, Src, and Axl are known to play a role in oncogenic signals in transformed cells. To study the mechanism underlying the E1A-mediated tumor-suppressing function, we exploited a modified tyrosine kinase profile assay (Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci, 93, 5958–5962, 1996) to identify potential tyrosine kinases regulated by E1A. RT-PCR products were synthesized with two degenerate primers derived from the conserved motifs of various tyrosine kinases. A tyrosine kinase downregulated by E1A was identified as Axl by analyzing the Alu I-digested RT-PCR products. We isolated the DNA fragment of interest, and found that E1A negatively regulated the expression of the transforming receptor tyrosine kinase Axl at the transcriptional level. To study whether downregulation of the Axl receptor is involved in E1A-mediated growth suppression, we transfected axl cDNA into E1A-expressing cells (ip1-E1A) to establish cells that overexpressed Axl (ip1-E1A-Axl). The Axl ligand Gas6 triggered a greater mitogenic effect in these ip1-E1A-Axl cells than in the control cells ip1-E1A and protected the Axl-expressing cells from serum deprivation-induced apoptosis. Further study showed that Akt is required for Axl-Gas6 signaling to prevent ip1-E1A-Axl cells from serum deprivation-induced apoptosis. These results indicate that downregulation of the Axl receptor by E1A is involved in E1A-mediated growth suppression and E1A-induced apoptosis, and thereby contributes to E1A's anti-tumor activities. ^

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Skin cancer is the most prevalent form of neoplasia, with over one million newcases diagnosed this year. UV radiation is a ubiquitous environmental agent that induces skin cancer. In addition to its carcinogenic effect, UV radiation also suppresses cell-mediated immune responses. This immune suppression is not only observed at the site of irradiation, but UV radiation also induces systemic immune suppression. Since UV radiation has a limited ability to penetrate the skin, the question of the mechanism of this systemic immune suppression arises. A number of studies have suggested that UV radiation induce systemic effects through the production of immunoregulatory cytokines, such as IL-4 and IL-10. These cytokines affect the immune response by altering systemic antigen presentation, specifically by suppressing the activation of Th1 cells while allowing the activation of Th2 cells. Because IL-12 is an important regulator of Th1 cell activation, we tested the hypothesis that administration of IL-12 could overcome UV-induced immune suppression. ^ The studies presented here are divided into dime specific aims. In the first specific aim, the ability of IL-12 to overcome UV-induced immune suppression was examined. IL-12 could overcome UV-induced immune suppression as well as prevent the generation of and neutralize the activity of preformed suppressor cells induced by UV radiation. In the second specific aim, the mechanism by which IL-12 overcomes UV-induced immune suppression was examined. IL-12 overcame UV-induced immune suppression by blocking the production of immunoregulatory cytokines such as IL-4, IL-10 and TNF-α. In the third specific aim, the effect of UV radiation on antigen presentation was investigated. UV radiation was found to decrease the production of biologically active IL-12. In addition, UV also increased the production of IL-12p40 homodimer, an antagonist of IL-12p70 heterodimer. This result suggests that IL-12 may have a dual role in the immune suppression induced by, UV radiation. On one hand the biologically active IL-12p70 heterodimer blocks UV-induced immune suppression. In contrast, IL-12p40 homodimer may mediate the suppressive effect of UV radiation. This paradox indicates that IL-12 may have a greater regulatory role in the immune response than was previously suspected. ^