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p53 is the most commonly mutated or deleted known gene in human cancer. The consequences of its disruption are profound, either in the germlines of patients with Li-Fraumeni Syndrome, or in mice with targeted gene knockouts. Abundant evidence suggests that p53 exerts regulation of cell cycle progression as well as apoptotic cell death, both in response to identical environmental or metabolic stressors...
Acute renal failure (ARF) can be defined as a sudden loss of renal function and is a common and serious clinical problem. There are many causes of ARF but the most common cause results from injury to the renal tubular epi-thelial cells (RTECs). RTECs can be injured by schemia or by cytotoxic agents and, once injured, can die by necrosis or apotosis. In general, necrosis occurs in response to any severe...
Infection with the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) leads to progressive immunodeficiency and onset of opportunistic infections and neoplasms. The loss of immune competence is associated with declines in both the functionality and the number of CD4+ lymphocytes. Multiple mechanisms have been proposed to explain death and dysfunction of CD4+ T-cells. The mechanisms of HIV-1-mediated cell...
Programmed cell death (apoptosis) plays a role in the pathophysiology of many diseases and in the outcome of treatment. Apoptosis is the likely mechanism behind the cytoreductive effects of standard chemotherapeutic and radiation treatments, rejection of organ transplants, cellular damage in collagen vascular disorders, and delayed cell death due to hypoxic-ischemic injury in myocardial infarction...
Historically, the vitamin K1-dependent proteins have been associated primarily with blood coagulation and secondarily with bone formation. Recent identification of K1-dependent proteins as specific ligands for the receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) that can stimulate cell replication and transformation and participate in cell survival highlighted a previously unrecognized and potentially important role...
Lymphocyte development, selection and education represent tightly controlled immune processes that normally prevent autoimmunity. Lymphocyte development requires cellular selection through apoptosis to remove potentially autoreactive cells. Dysregulated apoptosis, both interrupted as well as accetuated apoptosis, are now demonstrated as central defects in diverse human and murine autoimmune disease...
CD4+ T cells die in individuals infected with HIV, either as a result of direct HIV infection or as uninfected “innocent bystanders”. Possible mechanisms for bystander killing include generation of viral products such as Tat or gp120 and expression of death receptor ligands, such as FasL, that engage functional death receptors on uninfected cells. This review covers the sometimes conflicting in vitro...
Most anticancer agents effect DNA damage which initiate the cell death pathways of necrosis and apoptosis, but cancer cells of lesser sensitivity are only sublethally injured, and recover. The two death pathways and their interelationships in the presence of endogenous inhibitors of apoptosis and genetic deletions that facilitates only sublethal damage, are reviewed. Both ATP and pyrimidine levels...
The Myc family of oncoproteins promote cell growth and are frequently overexpressed in human tumors. However, Myc can also trigger cell death by apoptosis. This is at least in part mediated via the ARF-p53 pathway. Myc activation leads to a selection for inactivation of ARF or p53, allowing cell survival and tumor progression. Restoration of p53-dependent apoptosis by various means is an attractive...
Apoptosis is the primary means by which most radio- and chemotherapy modalities kill cancer cells, and abnormalities in the apoptotic pathways may contribute to disease pathogenesis of cancer. Multiple Myeloma (MM) is a hematological malignancy which will affect 14,000 new individuals in the United States in 2001 and remains irreversibly fatal despite all available therapies. The current review focuses...
Degeneration and death of neurons is the fundamental process responsible for the clinical manifestations of many different neurological disorders of aging, incuding Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease and stroke. The death of neurons in such disorders involves apoptotic biochemical cascades involving upstream effectors (Par-4, p53 and pro-apoptotic Bcl-2 family members), mitochondrial alterations...
The most recently identified members of the p53 family, p63 and p73, share certain structural and functional similarities with p53. Both p63 and p73 can bind to canonical p53-DNA-binding sites, transactivate the promoters of known p53 target genes and induce apoptosis. Despite these similarities there are many important differences. In contrast to p53, p63 and p73 give rise to multiple distinct protein...
MSP is a serum protein belonging to the plasminogen-related kringle domain protein family. In addition to macrophages, epithelial cells are also MSP targets. MSP is a multifunctional factor regulating cell adhesion and motility, growth and survival. MSP mediates its biological activities by activating a transmembrane receptor tyrosine kinase called RON in humans or SKT in mice. MSP can protect epithelial...
The p53 protein has recently been reported to be capable of mediating apoptosis through a pathway that is not dependent on its transactivation function. We report here that the PIASy member of the protein inhibitor of activated STAT family inhibited p53's transactivation function without compromising its ability to induce apoptosis of the H1299 nonsmall cell lung carcinoma cell line. The p53 protein...
Innate and acquired resistance to chemotherapy and radiation therapy has been a major obstacle for clinical oncology. One potential adjunct to such conventional treatments is direct induction of cell death by activation of death receptor-mediated apoptosis. TRAIL (tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-related apoptosis inducing ligand), a recently identified member of the growing TNF superfamily, binds to its...
Insulin-like growth factor binding protein (IGFBP)-3, the major carrier of insulin-like growth factors (IGFs) in the circulation, was first isolated and characterised over a decade ago. More recently, IGFBP-3 has been assigned a role as a putative death-promoting factor, a function that appears, under certain circumstances, to be independent of its IGF-binding ability. This review examines the current...
Members of the E2F family of transcription factors play an important role in regulating the cell cycle, and their activity is often perturbed during the development of human malignancies. More recent work has shown that E2F-1 regulates apoptosis as well as proliferation, in part by stabilizing the p53 tumor suppressor, an important mediator of apoptosis. This has led to the suggestion that E2F-1 may...
Low extracellular zinc concentrations have been associated with the induction of apoptosis. To assess the relationship between intracellular zinc concentration and the rate of apoptosis, cells were grown in media containing 0.5, 25, or 50 μM zinc and analyzed by flow cytometry or fluorescence microscopy. Cells grown in 0.5 μM zinc medium over 48 h showed a successive decrease in intracellular zinc...
The marine sponge metabolites mycalamide A (myca-lamide) and pateamine are extremely cytotoxic. While mycalamide has been shown to inhibit protein synthesis, the mechanism by which these compounds induce cell death is unknown. Using DNA laddering, Annexin-V staining, and morphological analysis, we demonstrate that both metabolites induce apoptosis in several different cell lines. Furthermore, both...
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