首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Previous studies have shown that hyperoxia inhibits proliferation and increases the expression of the tumor suppressor p53 and its downstream target, the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21(CIP1/WAF1), which inhibits proliferation in the G1 phase of the cell cycle. To determine whether growth arrest was mediated through activation of the p21-dependent G1 checkpoint, the kinetics of cell cycle movement during exposure to 95% O2 were assessed in the Mv1Lu and A549 pulmonary adenocarcinoma cell lines. Cell counts, 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine incorporation, and cell cycle analyses revealed that growth arrest of both cell lines occurred in S phase, with A549 cells also showing evidence of a G1 arrest. Hyperoxia increased p21 in A549 but not in Mv1Lu cells, consistent with the activation of the p21-dependent G1 checkpoint. The ability of p21 to exert the G1 arrest was confirmed by showing that hyperoxia inhibited proliferation of HCT 116 colon carcinoma cells predominantly in G1, whereas an isogenic line lacking p21 arrested in S phase. The cell cycle arrest in S phase appears to be a p21-independent process caused by a gradual reduction in the rate of DNA strand elongation. Our data reveal that hyperoxia inhibits proliferation in G1 and S phase and demonstrate that p53 and p21 retain their ability to affect G1 checkpoint control during exposure to elevated O2 levels.  相似文献   

2.
The tumor suppressor protein p53 activates growth arrest and proapoptotic genes in response to DNA damage. It is known that negative feedback by p21(Cip1/Waf1/Sdi1) represses p53-dependent transactivation of PUMA. The current study investigates PUMA feedback on p53 during oxidative stress from hyperoxia and the subsequent effects on cell survival mediated through p21 and Bcl-X(L). Deletion of PUMA in HCT116 colon carcinoma cells increased levels of p53 and p21, resulting in a larger G(1) population during hyperoxia. P21-dependent increase in Bcl-X(L) levels protected PUMA-deficient cells against hyperoxic cell death. Bax and Bak were both able to promote hyperoxic cell death. Bcl-X(L) protection against hyperoxic death was lost in cells lacking Bax, not PUMA, suggesting that Bcl-X(L) acts to inhibit Bax-dependent death. These results indicate that PUMA exerts a negative feedback on p53 and p21, leading to p21-dependent growth suppressive and survival changes. Enhanced survival was associated with increased Bcl-X(L) to block Bax activated cell death during oxidative stress.  相似文献   

3.
Caffeine and human DNA metabolism: the magic and the mystery   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
The ability of caffeine to reverse cell cycle checkpoint function and enhance genotoxicity after DNA damage was examined in telomerase-expressing human fibroblasts. Caffeine reversed the ATM-dependent S and G2 checkpoint responses to DNA damage induced by ionizing radiation (IR), as well as the ATR- and Chk1-dependent S checkpoint response to ultraviolet radiation (UVC). Remarkably, under conditions in which IR-induced G2 delay was reversed by caffeine, IR-induced G1 arrest was not. Incubation in caffeine did not increase the percentage of cells entering the S phase 6-8h after irradiation; ATM-dependent phosphorylation of p53 and transactivation of p21(Cip1/Waf1) post-IR were resistant to caffeine. Caffeine alone induced a concentration- and time-dependent inhibition of DNA synthesis. It inhibited the entry of human fibroblasts into S phase by 70-80% regardless of the presence or absence of wildtype ATM or p53. Caffeine also enhanced the inhibition of cell proliferation induced by UVC in XP variant fibroblasts. This effect was reversed by expression of DNA polymerase eta, indicating that translesion synthesis of UVC-induced pyrimidine dimers by DNA pol eta protects human fibroblasts against UVC genotoxic effects even when other DNA repair functions are compromised by caffeine.  相似文献   

4.
Targeting DNA repair with poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitors has shown a broad range of anti-tumor activity in patients with advanced malignancies with and without BRCA deficiency. It remains unclear what role p53 plays in response to PARP inhibition in BRCA-proficient cancer cells treated with DNA damaging agents. Using gene expression microarray analysis, we find that DNA damage response (DDR) pathways elicited by veliparib (ABT-888), a PARP inhibitor, plus topotecan comprise the G1/S checkpoint, ATM, and p53 signaling pathways in p53-wildtype cancer cell lines and BRCA1, BRCA2 and ATR pathway in p53-mutant lines. In contrast, topotecan alone induces the G1/S checkpoint pathway in p53-wildtype lines and not in p53-mutant cells. These responses are coupled with G2/G1 checkpoint effectors p21CDKN1A upregulation, and Chk1 and Chk2 activation. The drug combination enhances G2 cell cycle arrest, apoptosis and a marked increase in cell death relative to topotecan alone in p53-wildtype and p53-mutant or -null cells. We also show that the checkpoint kinase inhibitor UCN-01 abolishes the G2 arrest induced by the veliparib and topotecan combination and further increases cell death in both p53-wildtype and -mutant cells. Collectively, PARP inhibition by veliparib enhances DDR and cell death in BRCA-proficient cancer cells in a p53-dependent and -independent fashion. Abrogating the cell-cycle arrest induced by PARP inhibition plus chemotherapeutics may be a strategy in the treatment of BRCA-proficient cancer.  相似文献   

5.
Prolonged exposure to hyperoxia inhibits cell proliferation in G1 via increased expression of p21. While p21 inhibits proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA)-dependent DNA synthesis, it can also directly lower PCNA abundance; however, it is unclear whether loss of PCNA contributes to growth arrest. Here, we investigate how PCNA loss affects ability of p21 to exert G1 growth arrest of lung epithelial cells exposed to hyperoxia. In A549 cells that express p21 and growth arrest in G1 during hyperoxia, small interfering RNA (siRNA) knockdown of p21 led to G1 checkpoint bypass, increased cell death, and restoration of PCNA expression. Conditional overexpression of the PCNA binding domain of p21 in H1299 cells that do not normally express p21, or exposure to hyperoxia, caused a time-dependent loss of PCNA. Titrating PCNA levels using siRNA to approximate the low amount observed in cells expressing p21 resulted in S phase arrest. While lowering PCNA by itself caused S phase arrest, the combination of hyperoxia and siRNA against PCNA dramatically reduced PCNA abundance resulting in G1 arrest. G1 growth arrest was markedly enhanced upon the addition of p21 to these cells. Our findings suggest a model in which reducing expression of the abundant protein PCNA allows the less abundant protein p21 to be more effective at suppressing the processivity functions of remaining PCNA, thereby fully exerting the G1 checkpoint. Given that high p21 expression is often associated with lower PCNA abundance, our findings are suggestive of a global growth inhibitory mechanism involving p21-mediated PCNA suppression.  相似文献   

6.
In contrast to extracellular signals, the mechanisms utilized to transduce nuclear apoptotic signals are not well understood. Characterizing these mechanisms is important for predicting how tumors will respond to genotoxic radiation or chemotherapy. The retinoblastoma (Rb) tumor suppressor protein can regulate apoptosis triggered by DNA damage through an unknown mechanism. The nuclear death domain-containing protein p84N5 can induce apoptosis that is inhibited by association with Rb. The pattern of caspase and NF-kappaB activation during p84N5-induced apoptosis is similar to p53-independent cellular responses to DNA damage. One hallmark of this response is the activation of a G(2)/M cell cycle checkpoint. In this report, we characterize the effects of p84N5 on the cell cycle. Expression of p84N5 induces changes in cell cycle distribution and kinetics that are consistent with the activation of a G(2)/M cell cycle checkpoint. Like the radiation-induced checkpoint, caffeine blocks p84N5-induced G(2)/M arrest but not subsequent apoptotic cell death. The p84N5-induced checkpoint is functional in ataxia telangiectasia-mutated kinase-deficient cells. We conclude that p84N5 induces an ataxia telangiectasia-mutated kinase (ATM)-independent, caffeine-sensitive G(2)/M cell cycle arrest prior to the onset of apoptosis. This conclusion is consistent with the hypotheses that p84N5 functions in an Rb-regulated cellular response that is similar to that triggered by DNA damage.  相似文献   

7.
Most cell lines that lack functional p53 protein are arrested in the G2 phase of the cell cycle due to DNA damage. When the G2 checkpoint is abrogated, these cells are forced into mitotic catastrophe. A549 lung adenocarcinoma cells, in which p53 was eliminated with the HPV16 E6 gene, exhibited efficient arrest in the G2 phase when treated with adriamycin. Administration of caffeine to G2-arrested cells induced a drastic change in cell phenotype, the nature of which depended on the status of p53. Flow cytometric and microscopic observations revealed that cells that either contained or lacked p53 resumed their cell cycles and entered mitosis upon caffeine treatment. However, transit to the M phase was slower in p53-negative cells than in p53-positive cells. Consistent with these observations, CDK1 activity was maintained at high levels, along with stable cyclin B1, in p53-negative cells. The addition of butyrolactone I, which is an inhibitor of CDK1 and CDK2, to the p53-negative cells reduced the floating round cell population and induced the disappearance of cyclin B1. These results suggest a relationship between the p53 pathway and the ubiquitin-mediated degradation of mitotic cyclins and possible cross-talk between the G2-DNA damage checkpoint and the mitotic checkpoint.  相似文献   

8.
9.
10.
11.
Although oxygen is required for normal aerobic respiration, hyperoxia (95% O(2)/5% CO(2)) damages DNA, inhibits proliferation in G1, S and G2 phases of the cell cycle, and induces necrosis. The current study examines whether growth arrest in G1 protects pulmonary epithelial cells from oxidative DNA damage and cell death. Mv1Lu pulmonary adenocarcinoma cells were chosen for studies because hyperoxia inhibits their proliferation in S and G2 phase, while they can be induced to arrest in G1 by altering culture conditions. Hyperoxia inhibited proliferation, increased intracellular redox, and rapidly reduced clonogenic survival. In contrast, Mv1Lu cells treated with transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta1, deprived of serum or grown to confluency, arrested and remained predominantly in G1 even during exposure. Growth arrest in G1 significantly enhanced clonogenic survival by 10-50-fold. Enhanced survival was not due to reduction in the intracellular redox-state of the cells, but instead was associated with reduced DNA strand breaks and p53 expression. Our findings suggest that the protective effects of G1 is mediated not simply by a reduction in intracellular ROS, but rather through an enhanced ability to limit or rapidly recognize and repair damaged DNA.  相似文献   

12.
Little is known about cell-cycle checkpoint activation by oxidative stress in mammalian cells. The effects of hyperoxia on cell-cycle progression were investigated in asynchronous human T47D-H3 cells, which contain mutated p53 and fail to arrest at G1/S in response to DNA damage. Hyperoxic exposure (95% O(2), 40-64 h) induced an S-phase arrest associated with acute inhibition of Cdk2 activity and DNA synthesis. In contrast, exit from G2/M was not inhibited in these cells. After 40 h of hyperoxia, these effects were partially reversible during recovery under normoxic conditions. The inhibition of Cdk2 activity was not due to degradation of Cdk2, cyclin E or A, nor impairment of Cdk2 complex formation with cyclin A or E and p21(Cip1). The loss of Cdk2 activity occurred in the absence of induction and recruitment of cdk inhibitor p21(Cip1) or p27(Kip1) in cyclin A/Cdk2 or cyclin E/Cdk2 complexes. In contrast, Cdk2 inhibition was associated with increased Cdk2-Tyr15 phosphorylation, increased E2F-1 recruitment, and decreased PCNA contents in Cdk2 complexes. The latter results indicate a p21(Cip1)/p27(Kip1)-independent mechanism of S-phase checkpoint activation in the hyperoxic T47D cell model investigated.  相似文献   

13.
Cell cycle arrest is a major cellular response to DNA damage preceding the decision to repair or die. Many malignant cells have non-functional p53 rendering them more “aggressive” in nature. Arrest in p53-negative cells occurs at the G2M cell cycle checkpoint. Failure of DNA damaged cells to arrest at G2 results in entry into mitosis and potential death through aberrant mitosis and/or apoptosis. The pivotal kinase regulating the G2M checkpoint is Cdk1/cyclin B whose activity is controlled by phosphorylation. The p53-negative myeloid leukemia cell lines K562 and HL-60 were used to determine Cdk1 phosphorylation status during etoposide treatment. Cdk1 tyrosine 15 phosphorylation was associated with G2M arrest, but not with cell death. Cdk1 tyrosine 15 phosphorylation also led to suppression of nuclear cyclin B-associated Cdk1 kinase activity. However cell death, associated with broader tyrosine phosphorylation of Cdk1 was not attributed to tyrosine 15 alone. This broader phosphoryl isoform of Cdk1 was associated with cyclin A and not cyclin B. Alternative phosphorylations sites were predicted as tyrosines 4, 99 and 237 by computer analysis. No similar pattern was found on Cdk2. These findings suggest novel Cdk1 phosphorylation sites, which appear to be associated with p53-independent cell death following etoposide treatment.  相似文献   

14.
Little is known about cell-cycle checkpoint activation by oxidative stress in mammalian cells. The effects of hyperoxia on cell-cycle progression were investigated in asynchronous human T47D-H3 cells, which contain mutated p53 and fail to arrest at G1/S in response to DNA damage. Hyperoxic exposure (95% O2, 40–64 h) induced an S-phase arrest associated with acute inhibition of Cdk2 activity and DNA synthesis. In contrast, exit from G2/M was not inhibited in these cells. After 40 h of hyperoxia, these effects were partially reversible during recovery under normoxic conditions. The inhibition of Cdk2 activity was not due to degradation of Cdk2, cyclin E or A, nor impairment of Cdk2 complex formation with cyclin A or E and p21Cip1. The loss of Cdk2 activity occurred in the absence of induction and recruitment of cdk inhibitor p21Cip1 or p27Kip1 in cyclin A/Cdk2 or cyclin E/Cdk2 complexes. In contrast, Cdk2 inhibition was associated with increased Cdk2-Tyr15 phosphorylation, increased E2F-1 recruitment, and decreased PCNA contents in Cdk2 complexes. The latter results indicate a p21Cip1/p27Kip1-independent mechanism of S-phase checkpoint activation in the hyperoxic T47D cell model investigated.  相似文献   

15.
This study investigates molecular mechanisms underlying cell cycle arrest when cells are exposed to high levels of oxygen (hyperoxia). Hyperoxia has previously been shown to increase expression of the cell cycle regulators p53 and p21. In the current study, we found that p53-deficient human lung adenocarcinoma H1299 cells failed to induce p21 or growth arrest in G(1) when exposed to 95% oxygen. Instead, cells arrested in S and G(2). Stable expression of p53 restored induction of p21 and G(1) arrest without affecting mRNA expression of the other Cip or INK4 G(1) kinase inhibitors. To confirm the role of p21 in G(1) arrest, we created H1299 cells with tetracycline-inducible expression of enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP), EGFP fused to p21 (EGFp21), or EGFP fused to p27 (EGFp27), a related cell cycle inhibitor. The amino terminus of p21 and p27 bind cyclin-dependent kinases (Cdk), whereas the carboxy terminus of p21 binds the sliding clamp proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA). EGFp21 or EGFp27, but not EGFP by itself, restored G(1) arrest during hyperoxia. When separately overexpressed, the amino-terminal Cdk and carboxy-terminal PCNA binding domains of p21 each prevented cells from exiting G(1) during exposure. These findings demonstrate that exposure in vitro to hyperoxia exerts G(1) arrest through p53-dependent induction of p21 that suppresses Cdk and PCNA activity. Because PCNA also participates in DNA repair, these results raise the possibility that p21 also affects repair of oxidized DNA.  相似文献   

16.
Natural (intrinsic) resistance of many tumor types to DNA damaging agents is closely associated with their capacity to undergo robust cell cycle arrest in G2/M. G2 arrest is regulated by the DNA damage checkpoint and by survival signaling, with a potential role of PI3K/Akt in checkpoint function. In this work, we wanted to clarify if inhibition of multiple checkpoint/survival pathways may confer better efficacy in the potentiation of genotoxic agents compared to inhibition of either pathway alone. We compared the influence of UCN-01, which affects both the DNA damage checkpoint and PI3K/Akt-mediated survival signaling, with the PI3K inhibitors wortmannin and LY294002 in p53-deficient M1 acute myeloid leukemia cells treated with the DNA damaging agent cisplatin. Our results show that direct inhibition of PI3K/Akt in G2-arrested cells by wortmannin or LY294002 strongly enhanced the cytotoxicity of cisplatin without influencing the G2 checkpoint. Unexpectedly, dual inhibition of both survival and checkpoint signaling by UCN-01, also increased the cytotoxicity of cisplatin, but to a lesser degree than wortmannin or LY294002. The differences in cytotoxicity were accompanied by differences in cell death pathways: direct inhibition of PI3K/Akt was accompanied by rapid apoptotic cell death during G2, whereas cells underwent mitotic transit and cell division followed by cell death during G1 when both checkpoint and survival signaling were inhibited. Our results elucidate a novel function for PI3K/Akt as a survival factor during DNA damage-induced G2 arrest and could have important pharmacological consequences for the application of response modulators in p53-deficient tumors with strong survival signaling.  相似文献   

17.
The p53 tumor suppressor gene product is known to act as part of a cell cycle checkpoint in G1 following DNA damage. In order to investigate a proposed novel role for p53 as a checkpoint at mitosis following disruption of the mitotic spindle, we have used time-lapse videomicroscopy to show that both p53+/+ and p53−/− murine fibroblasts treated with the spindle drug nocodazole undergo transient arrest at mitosis for the same length of time. Thus, p53 does not participate in checkpoint function at mitosis. However, p53 does play a critical role in nocodazole-treated cells which have exited mitotic arrest without undergoing cytokinesis and have thereby adapted. We have determined that in nocodazole-treated, adapted cells, p53 is required during a specific time window to prevent cells from reentering the cell cycle and initiating another round of DNA synthesis. Despite having 4N DNA content, adapted cells are similar to G1 cells in that they have upregulated cyclin E expression and hypophosphorylated Rb protein. The mechanism of the p53-dependent arrest in nocodazole-treated adapted cells requires the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21, as p21−/− fibroblasts fail to arrest in response to nocodazole treatment and become polyploid. Moreover, p21 is required to a similar extent to maintain cell cycle arrest after either nocodazole treatment or irradiation. Thus, the p53-dependent checkpoint following spindle disruption functionally overlaps with the p53-dependent checkpoint following DNA damage.  相似文献   

18.
The hematopoietic zinc finger protein, Hzf, is induced in response to genotoxic and oncogenic stress. The Hzf protein is encoded by a p53-responsive gene, and its overexpression, either in cells retaining or lacking functional 53, halts their proliferation. Enforced expression of Hzf led to the appearance of tetraploid cells with supernumerary centrosomes and, ultimately, to cell death. Eliminating Hzf mRNA expression by use of short hairpin (sh) RNAs had no overt effect on unstressed cells but inhibited the maintenance of G2 phase arrest following ionizing radiation (IR), thereby sensitizing cells to DNA damage. Canonical p53-responsive gene products such as p21Cip1 and Mdm2 were induced by IR in cells treated with Hzf shRNA. However, the reduction in the level of Hzf protein was accompanied by increased polyubiquitination and turnover of p21Cip1, an inhibitor of cyclin-dependent kinases whose expression contributes to maintaining the duration of the G2 checkpoint in cells that have sustained DNA damage. Thus, two p53-inducible gene products, Hzf and p21Cip1, act concomitantly to enforce the G(2) checkpoint.  相似文献   

19.
Our previous studies have shown that cells conditionally deficient in Tsg101 arrested at the G(1)/S cell cycle checkpoint and died. We created a series of Tsg101 conditional knock-out cell lines that lack p53, p21(Cip1), or p19(Arf) to determine the involvement of the Mdm2-p53 circuit as a regulator for G(1)/S progression and cell death. In this new report we show that the cell cycle arrest in Tsg101-deficient cells is p53-dependent, but a null mutation of the p53 gene is unable to maintain cell survival. The deletion of the Cdkn1a gene in Tsg101 conditional knock-out cells resulted in G(1)/S progression, suggesting that the p53-dependent G(1) arrest in the Tsg101 knock-out is mediated by p21(Cip1). The Cre-mediated excision of Tsg101 in immortalized fibroblasts that lack p19(Arf) seemed not to alter the ability of Mdm2 to sequester p53, and the p21-mediated G(1) arrest was not restored. Based on these findings, we propose that the p21-dependent cell cycle arrest in Tsg101-deficient cells is an indirect consequence of cellular stress and not caused by a direct effect of Tsg101 on Mdm2 function as previously suggested. Finally, the deletion of Tsg101 from primary tumor cells that express mutant p53 and that lack p21(Cip1) expression results in cell death, suggesting that additional transforming mutations during tumorigenesis do not affect the important role of Tsg101 for cell survival.  相似文献   

20.
The cytolethal distending toxins (CDTs) induce cell cycle arrest by a mechanism still not well characterized. We demonstrate that the effect of the Haemophilus ducreyi CDT (HdCDT) is cell type-specific: B cell lines underwent apoptosis, epithelial cells and keratinocytes arrested exclusively in G(2), whereas normal fibroblasts arrested both in G(1) and G(2). We studied normal keratinocytes and fibroblasts, which are relevant for understanding the pathogenicity of H. ducreyi. The response to HdCDT resembles the checkpoint response activated by ionizing radiation. Both responses were characterized by an early induction of the p53 gene and the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21 in fibroblasts, and activation of the chk2 kinase in epithelial cells. In the Ataxia Telangiectasia-mutated gene (ATM)-deficient lymphoblastoid cell lines, intoxication was significantly delayed compared with ATM wild type cells, and was associated with a slower kinetic of p53 stabilization, suggesting that the early response to HdCDT is ATM-dependent. Activation of ATM-dependent pathways was further confirmed by the ability of caffeine to partially override the HdCDT-mediated cell cycle arrest. Our data shed new light on the mechanism of action of this novel family of bacterial toxins, limiting the target candidates to DNA or molecules directly involved in activation of checkpoint responses.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号