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Exposure of human fibroblasts to doses of ionizing radiation sufficient to cause a permanent growth arrest repressed the expression of genes induced late during G(0)/G(1)-phase traverse, including both cyclin A and cyclin E. In addition, radiation prevented the cell cycle-dependent activation of cyclin D1-associated kinase activity and the subsequent phosphorylation of the RB tumor suppressor protein. Exposure to radiation did not alter the cellular levels of cyclin D1 protein, nor did it alter the formation of cyclin D1-CDK4 complexes. Surprisingly, the repression of cyclin D1-associated kinase activity in damaged mitogen-stimulated quiescent cells could not be accounted for by a relative increase in the association of CDKN1A (also known as p21(Cip1)) with cyclin D1 complexes, nor was cyclin D1 activity targeted by increased levels of CDKN1A in irradiated, logarithmically growing cultures under conditions where cyclin A activity was acutely repressed. Therefore, a radiation-induced permanent growth arrest is mediated by pathways that are distinct from those that cause cell cycle delay in damaged cells involving repression of cyclin-dependent kinase activity by CDKN1A.  相似文献   

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Cyclin D3 regulates proliferation and apoptosis of leukemic T cell lines   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Activation of the T cell receptor in leukemic T cell lines or T cell hybridomas causes growth inhibition. A similar growth inhibition is seen when protein kinase C is activated through addition of phorbol myristate acetate. This inhibition is due to an arrest of cell cycle progression in G(1) combined with an induction of apoptosis. Here we have investigated the mechanism by which these stimuli induce inhibition of proliferation in Jurkat and H9 leukemic T cell lines. We show that expression of cyclin D3 is reduced by each of these stimuli, resulting in a concomitant reduction in cyclin D-associated kinase activity. This reduction in cyclin D3-expression is crucial to the observed G(1) arrest, since ectopic expression of cyclin D3 can abrogate the G(1) arrest seen with each of these stimuli. Moreover, ectopic expression of cyclin D3 also prevents the induction of programmed cell death by phorbol myristate acetate and T-cell receptor activation, leading us to conclude that cyclin D3 not only plays a crucial role in progression through the G(1) phase, but is also involved in regulating apoptosis of T cells.  相似文献   

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Glucocorticoids (GC) induce cell cycle arrest and apoptosis in lymphoblastic leukemia cells. To investigate cell cycle effects of GC in the absence of obscuring apoptotic events, we used human CCRF-CEM leukemia cells protected from cell death by transgenic bcl-2. GC treatment arrested these cells in the G1 phase of the cell cycle due to repression of cyclin D3 and c-myc. Cyclin E and Cdk2 protein levels remained high, but the kinase complex was inactive due to increased levels of bound p27(Kip1). Conditional expression of cyclin D3 and/or c-myc was sufficient to prevent GC-induced G1 arrest and p27(Kip1) accumulation but, importantly, did not interfere with the induction of apoptosis. The combined data suggest that repression of both, c-myc and cyclin D3, is necessary to arrest human leukemia cells in the G1 phase of the cell division cycle, but that neither one is required for GC-induced apoptosis.  相似文献   

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Mukherji A  Janbandhu VC  Kumar V 《FEBS letters》2008,582(7):1111-1116
Chemotherapeutic agents are well known to induce growth arrest of cancerous cells by inducing DNA damage/replicational stress and engaging cellular apoptotic machinery. Our studies on hydroxyurea (HU) recognized cyclin D1 destabilization as the initiator of growth arrest at G(1)/S-phase independent of other cell cycle regulators. Cyclin D1 degradation was associated with its phosphorylation at Thr286 by glycogen synthase kinase-3beta and inactivation of Akt kinase. Overexpression of the cyclin D1(T286A) mutant, or constitutively active Akt, conferred stability to cyclin D1 and helped bypass cell cycle arrest. Thus, growth arrest by HU seems to involve destabilization of cyclin D1 in addition to its well-established role as ribonucleotide reductase inhibitor.  相似文献   

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Ordered cell cycle progression requires the expression and activation of several cyclins and cyclin-dependent kinases (Cdks). Hyperosmotic stress causes growth arrest possibly via proteasome-mediated degradation of cyclin D1. We studied the effect of hyposmotic conditions on three colonic (Caco2, HRT18, HT29) and two pancreatic (AsPC-1 and PaCa-2) cell lines. Hyposmosis caused reversible cell growth arrest of the five cell lines in a cell cycle-independent fashion, although some cell lines accumulated at the G(1)/S interface. Growth arrest was followed by apoptosis or by formation of multinucleated giant cells, which is consistent with cell cycle catastrophe. Hyposmosis dramatically decreased Cdc2, Cdk2, Cdk4, cyclin B1, and cyclin D3 expression in a time-dependent fashion, in association with an overall decrease in cellular protein synthesis. However, some protein levels remained unaltered, including cyclin E and keratin 8. Selective proteasome inhibition prevented Cdk and cyclin degradation and reversed hyposmotic stress-induced growth arrest, whereas calpain and lysosome enzyme inhibitors had no measurable effect on cell cycle protein degradation. Therefore, hyposmotic stress inhibits cell growth and, depending on the cell type, causes cell cycle catastrophe with or without apoptosis. The growth arrest is due to decreased protein synthesis and proteasome activation, with subsequent degradation of several cyclins and Cdks.  相似文献   

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WW domain-containing oxidoreductase (WWOX) has been reported to be a tumor suppressor in multiple cancers, including prostate cancer. WWOX can induce apoptotic responses to inhibit tumor progression, and the other mechanisms of WWOX in tumor suppression have also been reported recently. In this study, we found significant down-regulation of WWOX in prostate cancer specimens and prostate cancer cell lines compared with the normal controls. In addition, an ectopically increased WWOX expression repressed tumor progression both in vitro and in vivo. Interestingly, overexpression of WWOX in 22Rv1 cells led to cell cycle arrest in the G1 phase but did not affect sub-G1 in flow cytometry. GFP-WWOX overexpressed 22Rv1 cells were shown to inhibit cell cycle progression into mitosis under nocodazole treatment in flow cytometry, immunoblotting and GFP fluorescence. Further, cyclin D1 but not apoptosis correlated genes were down-regulated by WWOX both in vitro and in vivo. Restoration of cyclin D1 in the WWOX-overexpressed 22Rv1 cells could abolish the WWOX-mediated tumor repression. In addition, WWOX impair c-Jun-mediated cyclin D1 promoter activity. These results suggest that WWOX inhibits prostate cancer progression through negatively regulating cyclin D1 in cell cycle lead to G1 arrest. In summary, our data reveal a novel mechanism of WWOX in tumor suppression.  相似文献   

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WW domain-containing oxidoreductase (WWOX) has been reported to be a tumor suppressor in multiple cancers, including prostate cancer. WWOX can induce apoptotic responses to inhibit tumor progression, and the other mechanisms of WWOX in tumor suppression have also been reported recently. In this study, we found significant down-regulation of WWOX in prostate cancer specimens and prostate cancer cell lines compared with the normal controls. In addition, an ectopically increased WWOX expression repressed tumor progression both in vitro and in vivo. Interestingly, overexpression of WWOX in 22Rv1 cells led to cell cycle arrest in the G1 phase but did not affect sub-G1 in flow cytometry. GFP-WWOX overexpressed 22Rv1 cells were shown to inhibit cell cycle progression into mitosis under nocodazole treatment in flow cytometry, immunoblotting and GFP fluorescence. Further, cyclin D1 but not apoptosis correlated genes were down-regulated by WWOX both in vitro and in vivo. Restoration of cyclin D1 in the WWOX-overexpressed 22Rv1 cells could abolish the WWOX-mediated tumor repression. In addition, WWOX impair c-Jun-mediated cyclin D1 promoter activity. These results suggest that WWOX inhibits prostate cancer progression through negatively regulating cyclin D1 in cell cycle lead to G1 arrest. In summary, our data reveal a novel mechanism of WWOX in tumor suppression.  相似文献   

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Overexpression of cyclin D1 protein is observed in the majority of breast cancers, suggesting that dysregulated expression of cyclin D1 might be a critical event in breast cancer carcinogenesis. We investigated whether retroviral-mediated expression of cyclin D1 might affect all-trans-retinoic acid (ATRA)-mediated growth inhibition and differentiation of normal cultured human mammary epithelial cells (HMECs). HMECs treated with 1.0 microM ATRA undergo irreversible growth inhibition starting at 24 h and complete G0/G1-phase arrest by Day 3. Cyclin D1 protein levels are observed to decrease in association with the initiation of growth arrest starting at 24 h and then increase by approximately 35% on Day 3. Concomitant with this observed increase in cyclin D1, HMECs undergo morphologic changes consistent with progression to a more differentiated phenotype, including an increase in cell size, increased cell spreading, increased tonofilaments, and accumulation of cytoplasmic vesicles containing lipid. Dysregulated expression of cyclin D1 in HMECs results in inhibition of G0/G1-phase arrest mediated by ATRA. In addition, HMECs expressing exogenous cyclin D1 are resistant to differentiation by ATRA. Our results suggest that coordinated expression of cyclin D1 may be critical for normal mammary epithelial cell homeostasis, and dysregulated expression of cyclin D1 might result in retinoid resistance and promote mammary carcinogenesis.  相似文献   

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DNA damaging agents such as ultraviolet (UV) induce cell cycle arrest followed by apoptosis in cells where irreparable damage has occurred. Here we show that during early phase G1 arrest which occurs in UV-irradiated human U343 glioblastoma cells, there are (1) decreases in cyclin D1 and cdk4 levels which parallel a loss of S-phase promoting cyclin D1/cdk4 complexes, and (2) increases in p53 and p21 protein levels. We also show that the late phase UV-induced apoptosis of U343 cells occurs after cell cycle re-entry and parallels the reappearance of cyclin D1 and cdk4 and cyclin D1/cdk4 complexes. These findings suggest that cyclin D1 can abrogate UV-induced G1 arrest and that the p53-mediated apoptosis that occurs in these cells is dependent on cyclin D1 levels. We examined these possibilities using U343 cells that ectopically express cyclin D1 and found that indeed cyclin D1 can overcome the cell cycle arrest caused by UV. Moreover, the appearance of p53 protein and the induction of apoptosis in UV-irradiated cells was found to be dependent on the level of ectopically expressed cyclin D1. These findings, therefore, indicate that expression of cyclin D1 following DNA damage is essential for cell cycle re-entry and p53-mediated apoptosis.  相似文献   

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The conditional kinase DeltaMEKK3:ER allows activation of JNK, p38 and ERK1/2 without overt cellular stress or damage and has proved useful in understanding how these pathways regulate apoptosis and cell cycle progression. We have previously shown that activation of DeltaMEKK3:ER causes a sustained G(1) cell cycle arrest which requires p21(CIP1), with ERK1/2 and p38 cooperating to promote p21(CIP1) expression. In cells lacking p21(CIP1), DeltaMEKK3:ER causes only a transient delay in cell cycle re-entry. We now show that this delay in cell cycle re-entry is due to a reduction in cyclin D1 levels. Activation of DeltaMEKK3:ER promotes the proteasome-dependent turnover of cyclin D1; this requires phosphorylation of threonine 286 (T(286)) and expression of cyclin D1T(286)A rescues the delay in G(1)/S progression. DeltaMEKK3:ER-dependent phosphorylation of T(286) does not appear to be mediated by GSK3beta but requires activation of the ERK1/2 and p38 pathways. ERK1/2 can physically associate with cyclin D1 but activation of ERK1/2 alone is not sufficient for phosphorylation of T(286). Rather, cyclin D1 phosphorylation appears to require coincident activation of ERK1/2 and p38. Thus activation of DeltaMEKK3:ER promotes a sustained G(1) cell cycle arrest by a bipartite mechanism involving the rapid destruction of cyclin D1 and the slower more prolonged expression of p21(CIP1). This has parallels with the bipartite response to ionizing radiation and p53-independent mechanisms of G(1) cell cycle arrest in simple organisms such as yeast.  相似文献   

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