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1.
BackgroundEllagic acid (EA) possesses prominent inhibitory activities against various cancers, including hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Our recent study demonstrated EA's activities in reducing HCC cell proliferation and tumor formation. However, the mechanisms of EA to exert its anticancer activities and its primary targets in cancer cells have not been systematically explored.MethodsCell proliferation assay and flow cytometric analysis were used to examine the effects of EA treatment on viability and apoptosis, respectively, of HepG2 cells. RNA-seq studies and associated pathway analyses by Gene Ontology (GO) and Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) were employed to determine EA's primary targets. Differentially expressed genes (DEG) in EA-treated HepG2 cells were verified by RT-qPCR and Western blot. Integrative analyses of the RNA-seq dataset with a TCGA dataset derived from HCC patients were conducted to verify EA-targeted genes and signaling pathways. Interaction network analysis of the DEGs, shRNA-mediated knockdown, cell viability assay, and colony formation assay were used to validate EA's primary targets.ResultsEA reduced cell viability, caused DNA damage, and induced cell cycle arrest at G1 phase of HepG2 cells. We identified 5765 DEGs encoding proteins with over 2.0-fold changes in EA-treated HepG2 cells by DESeq2. These DEGs showed significant enrichment in the pathways regulating DNA replication and cell cycle progression. As primary targets, p21 was significantly upregulated, while MCM2–7 were uniformly downregulated in response to EA treatment. Consistently, p21 knockdown desensitized liver cells to EA in cell viability and colony formation assays.ConclusionEA induced G1 phase arrest and promoted apoptosis of HCC cells through activating the p21 gene and downregulating the MCM2–7 genes, respectively.General significanceThe discoveries in this study provide helpful insights into developing novel strategies in the therapeutic treatment of HCC patients.  相似文献   

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BackgroundTelomeric repeat–containing RNA (TERRA) is a large non-coding RNA in mammalian cells, which forms an integral component of telomeric heterochromatin. TERRA can bind to an allosteric site of telomeric repeat factor 2 (TRF2), a key component of Shelterin that protect chromosome termini. Both TERRA and TRF2 have been recognized as promising new therapeutic targets for cancer treatment.MethodsOur methods include FRET assay, SPR, CD, microscale thermophoresis (MST), enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP), colony formation assays, Western blot, immunofluorescence, cell cycle arrest and apoptosis detection, and xCELLigence real-time cell analysis (RTCA).ResultsIn our routine screening of small molecule libraries, we found that a Quindoline derivative, CK1-14 could bind to and stabilize TERRA G-quadruplex structure, which could bind more tightly with an allosteric site of a telomeric binding protein TRF2, resulting in dissociation of TRF2 from telomeric DNA. Further in cellular studies indicated that the above effect of CK1-14 on TERRA G-quadruplex could activate DNA-damage response and cause cell cycle arrest, resulting in inhibition of U2OS cell proliferation and causing cell apoptosis.ConclusionsOur mechanistic studies indicated that interaction of CK1-14 with TERRA induces telomeric DNA-damage response in U2OS cancer cells through inhibition of TRF2. CK1-14 could be further developed as a promising lead compound targeting telomere for cancer treatment.General significanceOur present study provides the first evidence that allosteric modulation of TRF2 by TERRA G-quadruplex with a binding ligand could become a promising new strategy for cancer treatment especially for ALT tumor cells.  相似文献   

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BackgroundCaffeic acid 3,4-dihydroxyphenethyl ester (CADPE) is a natural polyphenolic ester isolated as a minor component from a water extract of the Chinese medicine Zhongjiefeng [Sarcandra glabra (Thunb.) Nakai (Chloranthaceae)] and has previously shown to have activity against solid tumors through the modulation of multiple targets or signal pathways. However, the activity and potential mechanism of CADPE against leukemia cells have not yet been characterized.PurposeTo investigate whether and how CADPE kills leukemia cells.Method(1) The activity of CADPE inhibiting the growth of different leukemia cell lines was evaluated by MTT assay; (2) Cell cycle arrest and apoptosis induced by CADPE were determined by flow cytometry with FlowJo software for quantification; (3) The protein levels were analyzed by Western blot and ubiquitin-binding c-Myc was acquired by co-immunoprecipitation.ResultsCADPE exerted potent activity against different leukemia cell lines with low toxicity in normal cells. In terms of mechanism of action, CADPE promoted ubiquitin-proteasome-dependent degradation of c-Myc through activating glycogen synthase kinase-3β (GSK3β) and downregulating deubiquitinating enzyme USP28 to trigger the interaction of c-Myc with ubiquitin ligase Fbw7, resulting in the downregulation of cell cycle regulators and anti-apoptotic proteins and consequently, cell cycle arrest and cell apoptosis.ConclusionCADPE is a novel c-Myc inhibitor with high activity and a unique mechanism for killing leukemia cells.  相似文献   

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《Phytomedicine》2015,22(4):462-468
Background: The low abundant cajanin stilbene acid (CSA) from Pigeon Pea (Cajanus cajan) has been shown to kill estrogen receptor α positive cancer cells in vitro and in vivo. Downstream effects such as cell cycle and apoptosis-related mechanisms have not been analyzed yet.Material and methods: We analyzed the activity of CSA by means of flow cytometry (cell cycle distribution, mitochondrial membrane potential, MMP), confocal laser scanning microscopy (MMP), DNA fragmentation assay (apoptosis), Western blotting (Bax and Bcl-2 expression, caspase-3 activation) as well as mRNA microarray hybridization and Ingenuity pathway analysis.Results: CSA induced G2/M arrest and apoptosis in a concentration-dependent manner from 8.88 to 14.79 µM. The MMP broke down, Bax was upregulated, Bcl-2 downregulated and caspase-3 activated. Microarray profiling revealed that CSA affected BRCA-related DNA damage response and cell cycle-regulated chromosomal replication pathways.Conclusion: CSA inhibited breast cancer cells by DNA damage and cell cycle-related signaling pathways leading to cell cycle arrest and apoptosis.  相似文献   

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Background

Gene editing is potentially a powerful technology for introducing genetic changes by using short single‐stranded DNA oligonucleotides (ssODNs). However, their efficiency is reduced by the mismatch repair system, especially MSH2, which may suppress gene editing, although findings vary depending on readout and type of oligonucleotide used. Additionally, successfully edited cells are reported to arrest at the S‐ or G2‐phase. In the present study, we evaluate whether a novel ssODN design and down‐regulation of MSH2 expression allows the isolation of replicating gene‐edited cells.

Methods

Cultured Chinese hamster ovary cells expressing mutated enhanced green fluorescent protein were targeted with ssODNs of varying design, all capable of restoring fluorescence, which allows the monitoring of correction events by flow cytometry. Converted cells were isolated by cell sorting and grown to determine colony formation efficiencies. MSH2 expression was suppressed with small interfering RNA and the cell cycle distribution of cells transfected with ssODN was quantified by flow cytometry, following propidium iodide or DRAQ5 staining.

Results

Although efficiency was higher using ssODN end‐protected with phosphorothioate, the potential of edited cells to form colonies was lower than those targeted with unmodified ssODN. We established that ssODN transfection itself perturbs the cell cycle and that MSH2 gene silencing increases correction efficiency. In both cases, however, the effect was dependent on the positioning of the protected nucleotides. Importantly, when internally protected ssODN was used in combination with MSH2 suppression, a higher proportion of G1‐phase corrected cells was observed 48–64 h after transfection.

Conclusions

Use of internally protected ssODN and downregulating cellular MSH2 activity may facilitate isolation of viable, actively replicating gene‐edited cells. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

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microRNAs (miRNAs) play a crucial role in mediation of the cellular sensitivity to ionizing radiation (IR). Previous studies revealed that miR-300 was involved in the cellular response to IR or chemotherapy drug. However, whether miR-300 could regulate the DNA damage responses induced by extrinsic genotoxic stress in human lung cancer and the underlying mechanism remain unknown. In this study, the expression of miR-300 was examined in lung cancer cells treated with IR, and the effects of miR-300 on DNA damage repair, cell cycle arrest, apoptosis and senescence induced by IR were investigated. It was found that IR induced upregulation of endogenous miR-300, and ectopic expression of miR-300 by transfected with miR-300 mimics not only greatly enhanced the cellular DNA damage repair ability but also substantially abrogated the G2 cell cycle arrest and apoptosis induced by IR. Bioinformatic analysis predicted that p53 and apaf1 were potential targets of miR-300, and the luciferase reporter assay showed that miR-300 significantly suppressed the luciferase activity through binding to the 3′-UTR of p53 or apaf1 mRNA. In addition, overexpression of miR-300 significantly reduced p53/apaf1 and/or IR-induced p53/apaf1 protein expression levels. Flow cytomertry analysis and colony formation assay showed that miR-300 desensitized lung cancer cells to IR by suppressing p53-dependent G2 cell cycle arrest, apoptosis and senescence. These data demonstrate that miR-300 regulates the cellular sensitivity to IR through targeting p53 and apaf1 in lung cancer cells.  相似文献   

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DNA repair is activated in early stages of p53-induced apoptosis   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
p53 is a complex molecule involved in apoptosis, cell cycle arrest, and DNA repair. Since apoptosis may play an important role in deletion of neoplastic cells, an understanding of the mechanism of p53-induced apoptosis may be critical for possible future therapeutic interventions. Recent evidence suggests that p53-induced apoptosis may involve members of the nucleotide excision repair (NER) family, linking these two cellular events. Our work using a temperature-sensitive p53 construct further analyzes p53-induced apoptosis in cultured murine mammary epithelial cells and also suggests that DNA repair plays a role in that process. Although p21 is induced in our system, apoptosis occurs without a detectable preceding G1 cell cycle arrest and independent of cellular alterations brought on by the temperature shift. In addition, clonogenic assays suggest that early stages of p53-induced apoptosis may be reversible upon removal of the apoptosis stimulus. As a possible explanation for this reversibility, our results show that general DNA repair activity increases early in p53-induced apoptosis. We also show that caspase-3 is activated at a timepoint when colony formation begins to drop, suggesting a possible mechanism for the point of no return in p53-induced apoptosis.  相似文献   

11.
Single- and multi-base (loop) mismatches can arise in DNA by replication errors, during recombination, and by chemical modification of DNA. Single-base and loop mismatches of several nucleotides are efficiently repaired in mammalian cells by a nick-directed, MSH2-dependent mechanism. Larger loop mismatches (> or =12 bases) are repaired by an MSH2-independent mechanism. Prior studies have shown that 12- and 14-base palindromic loops are repaired with bias toward loop retention, and that repair bias is eliminated when five single-base mismatches flank the loop mismatch. Here we show that one single-base mismatch near a 12-base palindromic loop is sufficient to eliminate loop repair bias in wild-type, but not MSH2-defective mammalian cells. We also show that palindromic loop and single-base mismatches separated by 12 bases are repaired independently at least 10% of the time in wild-type cells, and at least 30% of the time in MSH2-defective cells. Palindromic loop and single-base mismatches separated by two bases were never repaired independently. These and other data indicate that loop repair tracts are variable in length. All tracts extend at least 2 bases, some extend <12 bases, and others >12 bases, on one side of the loop. These properties distinguish palindromic loop mismatch repair from the three known excision repair pathways: base excision repair which has one to six base tracts, nucleotide excision repair which has approximately 30 base tracts, and MSH2-dependent mismatch repair, which has tracts that extend for several hundred bases.  相似文献   

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目的:探讨腺苷脱氨酶对鼠源巨噬细胞RAW264.7增殖、迁移、细胞周期、细胞凋亡的影响.方法:用不同浓度(0、0.25、1.25、2.5、5U/mL)的腺苷脱氨酶处理RAW264.7细胞后,用实时细胞分析系统检测细胞增殖能力,用流式细胞术检测腺苷脱氨酶对细胞凋亡和周期的影响,划痕修复实验检测RAW264.7细胞迁移能力...  相似文献   

16.
Ultraviolet (UV) radiation is a mutagen of major clinical importance in humans. UV-induced damage activates multiple signaling pathways, which initiate DNA repair, cell cycle arrest and apoptosis. To better understand these pathways, we studied the responses to UV-C light (254 nm) of germ cells in Caenorhabditis elegans. We found that UV activates the same cellular responses in worms as in mammalian cells. Both UV-induced apoptosis and cell cycle arrest were completely dependent on the p53 homolog CEP-1, the checkpoint proteins HUS-1 and CLK-2, and the checkpoint kinases CHK-2 and ATL-1 (the C. elegans homolog of ataxia telangiectasia and Rad3-related); ATM-1 (ataxia telangiectasia mutated-1) was also required, but only at low irradiation doses. Importantly, mutation of genes encoding nucleotide excision repair pathway components severely disrupted both apoptosis and cell cycle arrest, suggesting that these genes not only participate in repair, but also signal the presence of damage to downstream components of the UV response pathway that we delineate here. Our study suggests that whereas DNA damage response pathways are conserved in metazoans in their general outline, there is significant evolution in the relative importance of individual checkpoint genes in the response to specific types of DNA damage.  相似文献   

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ObjectivesBeclin 1 is a well-established core mammalian autophagy protein. Autophagy has been demonstrated to play roles in cellular responses to DNA damage, such as cell cycle regulation and apoptosis. In the present study, we investigated the exact mechanism by which Beclin 1 acts as a bridge between autophagy and cell cycle, when cells are exposed to ionizing radiation (IR).Materials and methodsWestern blotting and coimmunoprecipitation were performed to investigate protein expression levels and interactions. Immunofluorescence was used to monitor the localization and distribution of the indicated proteins. The levels of apoptosis and cell cycle changes were evaluated by flow cytometry. Double thymidine deoxyribonucleoside (TdR) blocking was conducted to differentiate G2 from mitotic delay. In vitro kinase assays using ATM kinase were performed to elucidate the specific phosphorylation site in Beclin 1.ResultsIn this study, we show that Beclin 1 knockdown reduces IR-induced autophagy. IR enhanced Beclin 1/PIK3CIII complex activity as demonstrated by the results of coimmunoprecipitation and immunofluorescence assays. An investigation to assess the possible relationship between autophagy and G2/M arrest showed that, similar to the autophagy inhibitor 3MA, Beclin 1 knockdown delayed IR-induced G2/M arrest. Furthermore, the interactions between Beclin 1 and several G2/M checkpoint-related proteins, namely, PLK1 and CDC25C, were observed to increase. In addition, we observed that both 3MA and Beclin 1 inhibition decreased IR-induced apoptosis. Regarding the potential mechanism associated with this phenomenon, we showed that IR induced the interaction between Beclin 1 and Tip60 as well as their redistribution. Furthermore, we demonstrated that Beclin 1 T57 may be a targeted phosphorylation site for ATM.ConclusionsIn the present study, we demonstrate the crucial and intricate roles of Beclin 1 in IR-induced autophagy, G2/M cell cycle arrest, and apoptosis. Additionally, Tip60 and ATM were identified as important molecular regulators of Beclin 1. Our findings show the precise mechanism of crosstalk between IR-induced autophagy and G2/M cell cycle arrest.  相似文献   

18.
BackgroundBy identifying the molecular mechanisms underlying sodium selenite (Na2SeO3) cytotoxicity during exposure in non-tumor cells (HaCaT cells), we will improve the current understanding of its antiproliferative effects and modulation of gene expression in the main pathways related to the cell cycle, cell death, oxidative stress, and DNA damage and repair.MethodsNon-tumor HaCaT cells were treated with Na2SeO3 to induce cytotoxicity, and the effects were investigated using an MTT assay (cell viability), real-time cell analysis (profiling the cell index), flow cytometry (membrane integrity, cell cycle disruption, and apoptosis), a comet assay (genotoxicity, i.e., DNA damage), and RT-qPCR (mRNA expression of genes).ResultsTreatment with Na2SeO3 was cytotoxic at 10 μM, producing morphological changes in cells (cytoplasmic granulations); however, it did not have a genotoxic effect. Na2SeO3 induced cell membrane damage, cell death, and cell cycle arrest in HaCaT cells. It also altered the mRNA expression levels of PUMA, ATR, and mTOR genes. However, it had no effect on the mRNA expression of caspases or PARP1, BIRC5, BECN1, and c-MYC genes, suggesting that Na2SeO3 causes PUMA-dependent apoptosis in HaCaT cells. The mRNA expression of specific genes related to oxidative stress, DNA damage and repair, and cell cycle control were unchanged by Na2SeO3.ConclusionsWe demonstrated the cytotoxic effect of Na2SeO3 in HaCaT cells by analyzing mRNA expression patterns, changes in cell morphology, and proliferation kinetics.  相似文献   

19.
Methylation damage response in hematopoietic progenitor cells   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The cellular response to methylation DNA damage was compared in multipotent CD34(+) hematopoietic stem cells and mature CD34(-) cells isolated from cord blood of the same donor. Cytofluorimetric analysis of freshly isolated cord blood cells indicated that both cell types were in the G0/G1 phase of the cell cycle. Quantitative RT-PCR identified a general trend towards high expression of several DNA repair genes in CD34(+) cells compared to their terminally differentiated CD34(-) counterparts. The overexpressed genes included members of the mismatch repair (MMR) (MSH2, MSH6, MLH1, PMS2), base excision repair (AAG, APEX), DNA damage reversal (O(6)-methylguanine DNA methyltransferase) (MGMT), and DNA double strand breaks repair pathways. These differences in gene expression were not apparent in CD34(+) and CD34(-) cells obtained following expansion of CD34(+) cells in a medium containing early acting cytokines. Early progenitor CD34(+) and early precursor CD34(-) cells form the two populations isolated under these experimental conditions, and both contain a significant proportion of cycling cells. The methylating agent N-methyl-N-nitrosourea (MNU) induced similar levels of apoptosis in these cycling CD34(+) and CD34(-) cells. Cytotoxicity required the presence of the MGMT inhibitor O(6)-benzylguanine and the timing of MNU cell death (48 and 72h) was similar in CD34(+) and CD34(-) cells. These data indicate that cycling CD34(+) and CD34(-) cells are equally sensitive to methylation damage. MGMT provides significant protection against MNU toxicity and MGMT and MMR play the expected roles in the MNU sensitivity of these cells.  相似文献   

20.
Two systems are essential in humans for genome integrity, DNA repair and apoptosis. Cells that are defective in DNA repair tend to accumulate excess DNA damage. Cells defective in apoptosis tend to survive with excess DNA damage and thus allow DNA replication past DNA damages, causing mutations leading to carcinogenesis. It has recently become apparent that key proteins which contribute to cellular survival by acting in DNA repair become executioners in the face of excess DNA damage.Five major DNA repair pathways are homologous recombinational repair (HRR), non-homologous end joining (NHEJ), nucleotide excision repair (NER), base excision repair (BER) and mismatch repair (MMR). In each of these DNA repair pathways, key proteins occur with dual functions in DNA damage sensing/repair and apoptosis. Proteins with these dual roles occur in: (1) HRR (BRCA1, ATM, ATR, WRN, BLM, Tip60 and p53); (2) NHEJ (the catalytic subunit of DNA-PK); (3) NER (XPB, XPD, p53 and p33(ING1b)); (4) BER (Ref-1/Ape, poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-1 (PARP-1) and p53); (5) MMR (MSH2, MSH6, MLH1 and PMS2). For a number of these dual-role proteins, germ line mutations causing them to be defective also predispose individuals to cancer. Such proteins include BRCA1, ATM, WRN, BLM, p53, XPB, XPD, MSH2, MSH6, MLH1 and PMS2.  相似文献   

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