946 resultados para tumor suppressor gene
Resumo:
The group C adenovirus E4orf6 protein has previously been shown to bind to the p53 cellular tumor suppressor protein and block its ability to activate transcription. Here we show that the E4orf6 protein blocks the induction of p53-mediated apoptosis when AT6 cells, which harbor a temperature-sensitive p53, are shifted to the permissive temperature. The E4orf6 protein does not, however, prevent the induction of apoptosis in p53-deficient H1299 cells by treatment with tumor necrosis factor alpha and cycloheximide. The E4orf6 protein also cooperates with the adenovirus E1A protein to transform primary baby rat kidney cells, and it cooperates with the adenovirus E1A plus E1B 19-kDa and E1B 55-kDa proteins to increase the number of baby rat kidney cell transformants and enhance the rate at which they arise. The level of p53 is substantially reduced in transformed cells expressing the E4orf6 protein in comparison to adenovirus transformants lacking it. The E4orf6 gene also accelerates tumor formation when transformed baby rat kidney cells are injected subcutaneously into the nude mouse, and it converts human 293 cells from nontumorigenic to tumorigenic in nude mice. In addition to the well-studied E1A and E1B oncogenes, group C adenoviruses harbor a third oncogene, E4orf6, which functions in some respects similarly to the E1B oncogene.
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The early growth response 1 (EGR-1) gene product is a transcription factor with role in differentiation and growth. We have previously shown that expression of exogenous EGR-1 in various human tumor cells unexpectedly and markedly reduces growth and tumorigenicity and, conversely, that suppression of endogenous Egr-1 expression by antisense RNA eliminates protein expression, enhances growth, and promotes phenotypic transformation. However, the mechanism of these effects remained unknown. The promoter of human transforming growth factor beta 1 (TGF-beta 1) contains two GC-rich EGR-1 binding sites. We show that expression of EGR-1 in human HT-1080 fibrosarcoma cells uses increased secretion of biologically active TGF-beta 1 in direct proportion (rPearson = 0.96) to the amount of EGR-1 expressed and addition of recombinant human TGF-beta 1 is strongly growth-suppressive for these cells. Addition of monoclonal anti-TGF-beta 1 antibodies to EGR-1-expressing HT-1080 cells completely reverses the growth inhibitory effects of EGR-1. Reporter constructs bearing the EGR-1 binding segment of the TGF-beta 1 promoter was activated 4- to 6-fold relative to a control reporter in either HT-1080 cells that stably expressed or parental cells cotransfected with an EGR-1 expression vector. Expression of delta EGR-1, a mutant that cannot interact with the corepressors, nerve growth factor-activated factor binding proteins NAB1 and NAB2, due to deletion of the repressor domain, exhibited enhanced transactivation of 2- to 3.5-fold over that of wild-type EGR-1 showing that the reporter construct reflected the appropriate in vivo regulatory context. The EGR-1-stimulated transactivation was inhibited by expression of the Wilms tumor suppressor, a known specific DNA-binding competitor. These results indicate that EGR-1 suppresses growth of human HT-1080 fibrosarcoma cells by induction of TGF-beta 1.
Resumo:
Proteases are known to play important roles in cell growth control, although the underlying mechanisms are still poorly understood. Here we show that the protease inhibitor N-acetyl-L-leucinyl-L-leucinyl-L-norleucinal induced cell cycle arrest in platelet-derived growth factor-stimulated human fibroblasts at the G1/S boundary of the cell cycle by inhibiting the proteasome. Inhibition of the proteasome resulted in accumulation of the tumor suppressor p53, which was followed by an increase in the amount of the cyclin-dependent kinase-inhibitor p21. As a consequence, both phosphorylation and activity of the cyclin-dependent kinase 2/cyclin E complex were inhibited. We further observed that the retinoblastoma gene product, pRb, remained in the hypophosphorylated state, thus preventing cells from progression into the S-phase. These studies strongly support the hypothesis that the proteasome is a key regulator in the G1-phase of cell cycle progression.
Resumo:
p53 is a multifunctional tumor suppressor protein involved in the negative control of cell growth. Mutations in p53 cause alterations in cellular phenotype, including immortalization, neoplastic transformation, and resistance to DNA-damaging drugs. To help dissect distinct functions of p53, a set of genetic suppressor elements (GSEs) capable of inducing different p53-related phenotypes in rodent embryo fibroblasts was isolated from a retroviral library of random rat p53 cDNA fragments. All the GSEs were 100-300 nucleotides long and were in the sense orientation. They fell into four classes, corresponding to the transactivator (class I), DNA-binding (class II), and C-terminal (class III) domains of the protein and the 3'-untranslated region of the mRNA (class IV). GSEs in all four classes promoted immortalization of primary cells, but only members of classes I and III cooperated with activated ras to transform cells, and only members of class III conferred resistance to etoposide and strongly inhibited transcriptional transactivation by p53. These observations suggest that processes related to control of senescence, response to DNA damage, and transformation involve different functions of the p53 protein and furthermore indicate a regulatory role for the 3'-untranslated region of p53 mRNA.
Resumo:
To investigate the role of nucleotide excision repair (NER) in the cellular processing of carcinogenic DNA photoproducts induced by defined, environmentally relevant portions of the solar wavelength spectrum, we have determined the mutagenic specificity of simulated sunlight (310-1100 nm), UVA (350-400 nm), and UVB (290-320 nm), as well as of the "nonsolar" model mutagen 254-nm UVC, at the adenine phosphoribosyltransferase (aprt) locus in NER-deficient (ERCC1) Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells. The frequency distributions of mutational classes induced by UVB and by simulated sunlight in repair-deficient CHO cells were virtually identical, each showing a marked increase in tandem CC-->TT transitions relative to NER-proficient cells. A striking increase in CC-->TT events was also previously documented for mutated p53 tumor-suppressor genes from nonmelanoma tumors of NER-deficient, skin cancer-prone xeroderma pigmentosum patients, compared to normal individuals. The data therefore indicate that the aprt gene in NER-deficient cultured rodent cells irradiated with artificial solar light generates the same distinctive "fingerprint" for sunlight mutagenesis as the p53 locus in NER-deficient humans exposed to natural sunlight in vivo. Moreover, in strong contrast to the situation for repair-component CHO cells, where a significant role for UVA was previously noted, the mutagenic specificity of simulated sunlight in NER-deficient CHO cells and of natural sunlight in humans afflicted with xeroderma pigmentosum can be entirely accounted for by the UVB portion of the solar wavelength spectrum.
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A major barrier to the design of immunotherapeutics and vaccines for cancer is the idiosyncratic nature of many tumor antigens and the possibility that T cells may be tolerant of broadly distributed antigens. We have devised an experimental strategy that exploits species differences in protein sequences to circumvent tolerance of high-affinity T cells. HLA transgenic mice were used to obtain cytotoxic T lymphocytes specific for peptides from the human p53 tumor-suppressor molecule presented in association with HLA-A2.1. Although such p53-specific cytotoxic T cells did not recognize nontransformed human cells, they were able to lyse a wide variety of human tumor cells lines, thus confirming the existence of broadly distributed determinants that may serve as targets for immunotherapy.
Resumo:
Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome (BWS) involves fetal overgrowth and predisposition to a wide variety of embryonal tumors of childhood. We have previously found that BWS is genetically linked to 11p15 and that this same band shows loss of heterozygosity in the types of tumors to which children with BWS are susceptible. However, 11p15 contains > 20 megabases, and therefore, the BWS and tumor suppressor genes could be distinct. To determine the precise physical relationship between these loci, we isolated yeast artificial chromosomes, and cosmid libraries from them, within the region of loss of heterozygosity in embryonal tumors. Five germ-line balanced chromosomal rearrangement breakpoint sites from BWS patients, as well as a balanced chromosomal translocation breakpoint from a rhabdoid tumor, were isolated within a 295- to 320-kb cluster defined by a complete cosmid contig crossing these breakpoints. This breakpoint cluster terminated approximately 100 kb centromeric to the imprinted gene IGF2 and 100 kb telomeric to p57KIP2, an inhibitor of cyclin-dependent kinases, and was located within subchromosomal transferable fragments that suppressed the growth of embryonal tumor cells in genetic complementation experiments. We have identified 11 transcribed sequences in this BWS/tumor suppressor coincident region, one of which corresponded to p57KIP2. However, three additional BWS breakpoints were > 4 megabases centromeric to the other five breakpoints and were excluded from the tumor suppressor region defined by subchromosomal transferable fragments. Thus, multiple genetic loci define BWS and tumor suppression on 11p15.
Resumo:
The signaling mechanisms responsible for the induced expression of interferon (IFN) genes by viral infection or double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) are not well understood. Here we investigate the role of the interferon-induced dsRNA-dependent protein kinase PKR in the regulation of IFN induction. Biological activities attributed to PKR include regulating protein synthesis, mediating IFN actions, and functioning as a possible tumor suppressor. Since binding of dsRNA is required for its activation, PKR has been considered as a candidate signal transducer for regulating IFN expression. To examine this role of PKR, loss-of-function phenotypes in stable transformants of promonocytic U-937 cells were achieved by two different strategies, overexpression of an antisense PKR transcript or a dominant negative PKR mutant gene. Both types of PKR-deficient cells were more permissive for viral replication than the control U-937 cells. As the result of PKR loss, they also showed impaired induction of IFN-alpha and IFN-beta genes in response to several inducers--specifically, encephalomyocarditis virus, lipopolysaccharide, and phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate. Interestingly, while IFN-alpha induction by dsRNA was impaired in PKR-deficient cells, IFN-beta induction remained intact. Loss of PKR function also resulted in decreased antiviral activity as elicited by IFN-alpha and, to a greater extent, by IFN-gamma. These results implicate PKR in the regulation of several antiviral activities.
Resumo:
The p53 tumor-suppressor protein binds DNA and activates the expression of a 21-kDa protein that inhibits both the activity of cyclin-dependent kinases and the function of proliferating cell nuclear antigen. Since p21 expression has been reported to increase 10- to 20-fold as human diploid fibroblasts lose the ability to replicate, we examined the expression and activity of p53 during replicative aging. Similar levels of total p53 mRNA and protein were expressed in low-passage (young) and high-passage (old) cells but both DNA binding activity in vitro and transcriptional activity of p53 in vivo were increased severalfold in high-passage cells. While the basis of increased p53 activity is presently unclear, it is not correlated with differential phosphorylation or changes in p53-mouse double minute 2 gene product interactions. These results provide evidence for the activation of a protein involved in the control of cell cycle checkpoints during cellular aging, in the absence of increased expression.
Resumo:
The human squamous cell carcinoma cell line SCC83-01-82 (SCC) contains mutations in both the H-ras and p53 genes, but it exhibits a nontumorigenic phenotype in nude mice. This cell line can be converted into a cell line with a tumorigenic phenotype, SCC83-01-82CA (CA), by treatment with the mutagen methyl methanesulfonate (MMS). This indicates that additional genetic events leading to expression of a cooperating tumor susceptibility gene(s) may be required for tumorigenicity. To identify the cooperating gene(s), an expression cDNA library was made from tumorigenic Ca cells. The library DNA was transfected into nontumorigenic SCC cells and the transfected SCC cells were then injected into nude mice for the selection of a tumorigenic phenotype. Tumors developed in 3 of the 18 mice after injection. Several new cell lines were established from these transfected cell-induced tumors and designated as CATR cells. Tumor histology and karyotype analysis of these cells indicated that they were of human epithelial cell origin. All the CATR cells have the library vector sequence integrated in their genome. Cell line CATR1 expressed a single message from the integrated library representing a 1.3-kb cDNA insert that was absent from untransfected SCC cells or MMS-converted CA cells. This 1.3-kb cDNA insert was cloned by PCR amplification of reverse-transcribed CATR1 total RNA and was designated CATR1.3. The nucleotide sequence of CATR1.3 encodes a peptide of 79 amino acids, has a long 3' untranslated region, and represents an unknown gene product that was associated with the tumorigenic conversion due to the transfected expression library.
Resumo:
Homozygous deletions have been central to the discovery of several tumor-suppressor genes, but their finding has often been either serendipitous or the result of a directed search. A recently described technique [Lisitsyn, N., Lisitsyn, N. & Wigler, M. (1993) Science 259, 946-951] held out the potential to efficiently discover such events in an unbiased manner. Here we present the application of the representational difference analysis (RDA) to the study of cancer. We cloned two DNA fragments that identified a homozygous deletion in a human pancreatic adenocarcinoma, mapping to a 1-centimorgan region at chromosome 13q12.3 flanked by the markers D13S171 and D13S260. Interestingly, this lies within the 6-centimorgan region recently identified as the BRCA2 locus of heritable breast cancer susceptibility. This suggests that the same gene may be involved in multiple tumor types and that its function is that of a tumor suppressor rather than that of a dominant oncogene.
Resumo:
Deletion of the short arm of human chromosome 1 is the most common cytogenetic abnormality observed in neuroblastoma. To characterize the region of consistent deletion, we performed loss of heterozygosity (LOH) studies on 122 neuroblastoma tumor samples with 30 distal chromosome 1p polymorphisms. LOH was detected in 32 of the 122 tumors (26%). A single region of LOH, marked distally by D1Z2 and proximally by D1S228, was detected in all tumors demonstrating loss. Also, cells from a patient with a constitutional deletion of 1p36, and from a neuroblastoma cell line with a small 1p36 deletion, were analyzed by fluorescence in situ hybridization. Cells from both sources had interstitial deletions of 1p36.2-36.3 which overlapped the consensus region of LOH defined by the tumors. Interstitial deletion in the constitutional case was confirmed by allelic loss studies using the panel of polymorphic markers. Four proposed candidate genes--DAN, ID3 (heir-1), CDC2L1 (p58), and TNFR2--were shown to lie outside of the consensus region of allelic loss, as defined by the above deletions. These results more precisely define the location of a neuroblastoma suppressor gene within 1p36.2-36.3, eliminating 33 centimorgans of proximal 1p36 from consideration. Furthermore, a consensus region of loss, which excludes the four leading candidate genes, was found in all tumors with 1p36 LOH.
Resumo:
mac25, the subject of this report, was selected by the differential display of mRNA method in a search for genes overexpressed in senescent human mammary epithelial cells. mac25 had previously been cloned as a discrete gene, preferentially expressed in normal, leptomeningial cells compared with meningioma tumors. mac25 is another member of the insulin growth factor-binding protein (IGFBP) family. Insulin-like growth factors are potent mitogens for mammary epithelial cells, and the IGFBPs have been shown to modulate this mitogenic activity. We report here that mac25, unlike most IGFBPs, is down-regulated at the transcription level in mammary carcinoma cell lines, suggesting a tumor-suppressor role. The gene was mapped to chromosome 4q12. We found that mac25 accumulates in senescent cells and is up-regulated in normal, growing mammary epithelial cells by all-trans-retinoic acid or the synthetic retinoid fenretinide. These findings suggest that mac25 may be a downstream effector of retinoid chemoprevention in breast epithelial cells and that its tumor-suppressive role may involve a senescence pathway.
Resumo:
O câncer de mama é o tipo de câncer mais comumente detectado em mulheres de todo o mundo. Na maioria das pacientes, a causa de morte se deve, principalmente, à doença metastática que pode se desenvolver a partir do tumor primário. O processo metastático envolve uma complexa cascata de eventos, incluindo a quebra organizada dos componentes da matriz extracelular por metaloproteinases de matriz (MMPs). A atividade das MMPs é precisamente regulada por inibidores específicos, os inibidores teciduais das MMPs (TIMPs). Dado seu papel na progressão tumoral, níveis elevados de MMPs têm sido associados com prognóstico desfavorável para pacientes com câncer. Por outro lado, sendo os TIMPs proteínas multifuncionais, níveis elevados de TlMP-1 e de TIMP-2 correlacionam com agressividade do tumor e prognóstico ruim em diferentes tipos de câncer, incluindo o câncer de mama. O gene supressor de metástase RECK codifica uma glicoproteína de membrana capaz de inibir a invasão e a metástase tumoral através da regulação negativa da atividade de MMPs envolvidas em carcinogênese: MMP-2, MMP-9 e MMP-14 (MT1-MMP). A fim de analisar o papel das MMPs e de seus inibidores (TIMPs e RECK) na progressão tumoral do câncer de mama, o perfil de expressão destes genes foi detectado, através de ensaios de Real-Time PCR, em um painel de cinco linhagens celulares de carcinoma de mama humano com diferentes potenciais invasivos e metastáticos e em 72 amostras teciduais de tumores primários de mama e 30 amostras teciduais de borda normal adjacente ao tumor. O perfil de expressão protéica de RECK foi avaliado em 236 amostras de tumores primários de mama através de ensaios de Tissue Microarray. Além disso, a atividade proteolítica das MMPs foi detectada em ensaios de Zimografia. Os resultados obtidos indicam que a progressão do câncer de mama humano está relacionada com um aumento dos níveis de expressão das MMPs e de seus inibidores específicos. O aumento dos níveis de expressão dos TIMPs parece estar relacionado ao seu papel como proteína multifuncional que pode estar funcionando de maneira a promover, mais do que suprimir, a progressão tumoral. Níveis elevados da expressão protéica de RECK estão associados com pior prognóstico. No entanto, para pacientes em estádios clínicos avançados, altos níveis de expressão de RECK podem estar correlacionados com melhor prognóstico, dependendo do balanço MMP/inibidor. Os níveis de expressão das MMPs apresentaram correlação positiva em relação aos níveis de expressão de seus inibidores específicos, sugerindo a existência de fatores e vias de sinalização comuns envolvidas na regulação coordenada destes genes. Além disso, a síntese do inibidor pode estar relacionada a uma resposta celular ao aumento da expressão e atividade de proteases. O balanço transcricional enzima/inibidor favorece a enzima nas amostras tumorais e, de modo contrário, o inibidor específico nas amostras de borda normal, sugerindo o balanço como o principal fator na determinação da degradação da MEC em processos invasivos e metastáticos. Os resultados obtidos podem contribuir para um melhor entendimento da complexidade dos mecanismos envolvidos na metástase do câncer de mama.
Resumo:
A vascularização tem um papel central na progressão tumoral e representa um alvo terapêutico de grande interesse. A inibição da angiogênese tem potencial de retardar a progressão tumoral e inibir metástase. Em decorrência disto, terapias anti-angiogênicas têm demonstrado ser promissora no controle do crescimento tumoral. Segundo a literatura, interferon-? (IFN?, ativador do sistema imune inato e adaptativo) e p19Arf (supressor de tumor e parceiro funcional de p53), quando estudados individualmente, alteram a vasculatura tumoral. Nosso grupo construiu e utilizou vetores adenovirais recombinantes portadores dos cDNAs de INFbeta e p19Arf e observou que a transferência desta combinação de genes induziu morte celular e diminuiu progressão tumoral, resultados foram observados em modelos murinos de melanoma B16 de terapia genica in situ, vacina profilática e vacina terapêutica. Neste trabalho, exploramos a ideia que a combinação dos vetores adenovirais portadores de INFbeta e p19Arf proporcionam efeitos anti-angiogênicos através de seu impacto em células endoteliais. Para averiguarmos essa hipótese, células endoteliais murinas (tEnd) foram transduzidas com os vetores adenovirais, revelando que o vetor Ad-p19 confere inibição da proliferação, formação de tubos, migração e induz aumento na expressão de genes relacionados a via de p53 e morte celular. O vetor Ad-IFNbeta sozinho ou adicionado em combinação com Ad-p19, não teve impacto significante nestes ensaios. Alternativamente, a influencia indireta, ou parácrina, nas células tEnd cultivadas juntamente com as células B16 transduzidas com os vetores adenovirais também foi investigada. Quando as células B16 foram transduzidas com Ad-IFNbeta ou a co-transdução Ad-IFNbeta+Ad-p19 em co-cultura com a linhagem tEnd, houve inibição da proliferação. Não observamos efeito inibitório na tEnd da co-cultura quando as células da B16 foram transduzidas somente com Ad-p19. Seguindo o ensaio de co-cultura, produzimos meio condicionado da B16 transduzida com os vetores e aplicamos esses meios nas células tEnd. Observamos que Ad-IFN, sozinho ou em combinação com Ad-19, diminuiu a viabilidade, proliferação e levou a morte das células tEnd. Neste trabalho, constamos que inibição de células endoteliais pode ser realizada por transdução direta com Ad-19 ou quando estas células são expostas ao ambiente modulado por células tumorais transduzidas com o vetor Ad-IFNbeta. Mesmo que a transferência gênica de ambos IFNbeta e p19Arf não demonstrou ser uma abordagem superior à aplicação dos genes isolados, observamos que nossa abordagem pode ter um impacto importante na inibição da angiogênese pelas células endoteliais