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Durand Sylvain - - 2012
The bacteriophage T4-encoded RegB endoribonuclease is produced during the early stage of phage development and targets mostly (but not exclusively) the Shine-Dalgarno sequences of early genes. In this work, we show that the degradation of RegB-cleaved mRNAs depends on a functional T4 polynucleotide kinase/phosphatase (PNK). The 5'-OH produced by RegB ...
Furusawa Hiroyuki - - 2012
Formation and decomposition of the enzyme-substrate (ES) complex during phosphorylation by T4 polynucleotide kinase (T4 PNK) of dsDNAs were monitored using a highly sensitive quartz crystal microbalance (QCM) to determine kinetic parameters, which were characterised in comparison with those of other enzymes such as DNA polymerase and exo- and endo-nucleases.
Nyfeler Beat - - 2012
Autophagy is a catabolic pathway that degrades bulk cytosol in lysosomal compartments enabling amino acids and fatty acids to be recycled. One of the key regulators of autophagy is the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR), a conserved serine/threonine kinase which suppresses the initiation of the autophagic process when nutrients, growth ...
Paleček Jiří - - 2011
A practical synthesis of the Rho-Kinase inhibitor Y-27632 and two new fluoro derivatives was achieved in seven steps and with a good overall yield of 45% starting from commercially available (R)-1-phenylethylamine. Compared to Y-27632 the new fluoro derivatives showed reduced or no effect on hPSC vitality and expansion after dissociation ...
Hampton Philip J - - 2011
Certain environmental factors including drugs exacerbate or precipitate psoriasis. Lithium is the commonest cause of drug-induced psoriasis but underlying mechanisms are currently unknown. Lithium inhibits glycogen synthase kinase 3 (GSK-3). As lithium does not exacerbate other T cell mediated chronic inflammatory diseases, we investigated whether lithium may be acting directly ...
Hellwig Sabine - - 2012
The c-Fes protein-tyrosine kinase is the normal cellular ortholog of several avian and feline retroviral oncoproteins. Unlike its transforming viral counterparts, c-Fes tyrosine kinase activity is tightly regulated in vivo through a mechanism involving coiled-coil oligomerization domains and other unique structural features found in its long N-terminal region. This review ...
Tareen Semih U - - 2011
Retroviral capsids can be recognized and degraded by a host protein, Trim5α. A recent study in Nature (Pertel et al., 2011) shows that, upon sensing of the retrovirus capsid lattice, Trim5α generates free ubiquitin chains that activate the TAK1 kinase and downstream innate immune response genes.
Wang Xuening - - 2011
Metabolites and derivatives of vitamin D are well-known inducers of monocytic differentiation, but the mechanistic basis for their action is not fully elucidated. Here we show that the product of protooncogene Cot1 represses the monocytic phenotype in human acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cells induced to differentiate by 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D(3) (1,25D), ...
Mincheva Stefka - - 2011
In vivo and in vitro motoneuron survival depends on the support of neurotrophic factors. These factors activate signaling pathways related to cell survival or inactivate proteins involved in neuronal death. In the present work, we analyzed the involvement of the nuclear factor-κB (NF-κB) pathway in mediating mouse spinal cord motoneuron ...
Ackermann Julien - - 2011
The AP-1 family transcription factor ATF2 is essential for development and tissue maintenance in mammals. In particular, ATF2 is highly expressed and activated in the brain and previous studies using mouse knockouts have confirmed its requirement in the cerebellum as well as in vestibular sense organs. Here we present the ...
Vaillancourt France - - 2011
Thymoquinone (TQ) is the major active compound derived from the medicinal Nigella sativa. A few studies have shown that TQ exhibits anti-inflammatory activities in experimental models of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) through mechanisms that are not fully understood. The aim of this work was to evaluate the in vitro and in ...
Lin Hui-Hsuan - - 2011
Protocatechuic acid (PCA) is plentiful in edible fruits and vegetables and is thus one anti-oxidative component of normal human diets. However, the molecular mechanisms involved in the chemopreventive activity of PCA are poorly understood. Here, we investigated the mechanism(s) underlying the anti-metastatic potential of PCA. We used AGS cells in ...
Moreno-López Bernardo - - 2011
Synapse elimination is the main factor responsible for the cognitive decline accompanying many of the neuropathological conditions affecting humans. Synaptic stripping of motoneurons is also a common hallmark of several motor pathologies. Therefore, knowledge of the molecular basis underlying this plastic process is of central interest for the development of ...
Györffy Balazs - - 2010
The small GTP-binding proteins HRAS, KRAS and NRAS belong to a family of oncoproteins associated with many types of human cancer. Signal transduction processes initiated at receptor tyrosine kinases converge on RAS proteins which serve as molecular switches linking upstream signals with the transcriptional machinery. RAS proteins interact with a ...
Carriere Audrey - - 2011
The Ras/mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway regulates a variety of cellular processes by activating specific transcriptional and translational programs. Ras/MAPK signaling promotes mRNA translation and protein synthesis, but the exact molecular mechanisms underlying this regulation remain poorly understood. Increasing evidence suggests that the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) plays an ...
Pérez-Cadahía Beatriz - - 2011
Activated by the RAS-MAPK signaling pathway, MSK1 is recruited to immediate-early gene (IEG) regulatory regions, where it phosphorylates histone H3 at Ser-10 or Ser-28. Chromatin remodelers and modifiers are then recruited by 14-3-3 proteins, readers of phosphoserine marks, leading to the occupancy of IEG promoters by the initiation-engaged form of ...
Kleefstra Tjitske - - 2011
Various syndromes of the Ras-mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway, including the Noonan, Cardio-Facio-Cutaneous, LEOPARD and Costello syndromes, share the common features of craniofacial dysmorphisms, heart defect and short stature. In a subgroup of patients, severe muscle hypotonia, central nervous system involvement and failure to thrive occur as well. In this ...
Al-Khodor Souhaila - - 2010
Intracellular proliferation of Francisella tularensis is essential for manifestation of the fatal disease tularaemia, and is classified as a category A bioterrorism agent. The F. tularensis-containing phagosome (FCP) matures into a late endosome-like phagosome with limited fusion to lysosomes, followed by rapid bacterial escape into the cytosol. The Francisella pathogenicity ...
Almudi Isabel - - 2010
Modulation of signalling pathways can trigger different cellular responses, including differences in cell fate. This modulation can be achieved by controlling the pathway activity with great precision to ensure robustness and reproducibility of the specification of cell fate. The development of the photoreceptor R7 in the Drosophila melanogaster retina has ...
Tartaglia Marco - - 2010
RAS GTPases control a major signaling network implicated in several cellular functions, including cell fate determination, proliferation, survival, differentiation, migration, and senescence. Within this network, signal flow through the RAF-MEK-ERK pathway-the first identified mitogen-associated protein kinase (MAPK) cascade-mediates early and late developmental processes controlling morphology determination, organogenesis, synaptic plasticity, and ...
Sheng Nengyin - - 2010
The proper function of the bone morphogenic protein (BMP) pathway during embryonic development and organ maintenance requires its communication with other signaling pathways. Unlike the well-documented regulation of the BMP pathway by FGF/MAPK and Wnt/GSK3 signals, cross-talk between BMP/Smad and retinoic acid (RA)/RA receptor (RAR) pathways is poorly understood. Here, ...
Mukhopadhyay Anandaroop - - 2011
Germline mutations in the RAS-mitogen-activated protein kinase (RAS/MAPK) pathway are associated with genodermatoses, characterized by cutaneous, cardiac, and craniofacial defects, and cancer predisposition. Whereas activating mutations in HRAS are associated with the vast majority of patients with Costello syndrome, mutations in its paralog, KRAS, are rare. To better understand the ...
Kitajima S - - 2011
The reversion-inducing cysteine-rich protein with Kazal motifs (RECK) gene had been isolated as an antagonist to RAS signaling; however, the mechanism of its action is not clear. In this study, the effect of loss of RECK function was assessed in various ways and cell systems. Successive cell cultivation of mouse ...
Liu Andrew M F - - 2010
Many G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are known to modulate cell growth and differentiation by stimulating the extracellular signal-regulated protein kinases (ERKs). In growth factor signaling, ERKs are typically stimulated through an elaborate network of modules consisting of adaptors, protein kinases, and the small GTPase Ras. The mechanism by which G ...
Coste Isabelle - - 2010
Accumulating evidence points to inflammation as a promoter of carcinogenesis. MyD88 is an adaptor molecule in TLR and IL-1R signaling that was recently implicated in tumorigenesis through proinflammatory mechanisms. Here we have shown that MyD88 is also required in a cell-autonomous fashion for RAS-mediated carcinogenesis in mice in vivo and ...
Santibanez Juan F - - 2010
Endoglin is a coreceptor for transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β) that acts as a suppressor of malignancy during mouse skin carcinogenesis. Because in this model system H-Ras activation drives tumor initiation and progression, we have assessed the effects of endoglin on the expression of H-Ras in transformed keratinocytes. We found that ...
Xiao Hongyan - - 2010
Selective enhancement of tumor response to radiation therapy is a highly attractive objective, but it has not been met clinically. Gain-of-function Ras (gf) signaling via hyperactivation of receptor tyrosine kinases, such as the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), or via oncogenic mutation of Ras is shown to confer radioresistance and ...
Calvisi Diego F - - 2011
Aberrant activation of the RAS pathway is ubiquitous in human hepatocarcinogenesis, but the molecular mechanisms leading to RAS induction in the absence of RAS mutations remain under-investigated. We defined the role of Ras GTPase activating proteins (GAPs) in the constitutive activity of Ras signaling during human hepatocarcinogenesis. The mutation status ...
Kim Hae-Rim - - 2010
BACKGROUND/AIMS: This study was undertaken to identify the intracellular signaling pathway involved in induction of macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF) in human rheumatoid arthritis (RA) synovial fibroblasts. METHODS: Human RA synovial fibroblasts were treated with concanavalin A (ConA), various cytokines, and inhibitors of signal transduction molecules. The production of MIF ...
Alvarez-Moya B - - 2010
Fine tuning of Ras activity is widely known as a mechanism to induce different cellular responses. Recently, we have shown that calmodulin (CaM) binds to K-Ras and that K-Ras phosphorylation inhibits its interaction with CaM. In this study we report that CaM inhibits K-Ras phosphorylation at Ser181 by protein kinase ...
Zhao Xu Dong - - 2010
Previous studies have demonstrated that mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) is involved in the pathogenesis of cerebral vasospasm after aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH). Ras, an upstream regulator of MAPK, may be activated following SAH. The aim of this study was to investigate the role of Ras in cerebral vasospasm in a ...
Hydbring Per - - 2010
Intrinsic tumor-suppressor pathways protect healthy cells from transformation by activated oncogenes like MYC or RAS through induction of apoptosis or cellular senescence, respectively. However, when expressed together, MYC and RAS evade these barriers and initiate tumorigenesis. Although Ras suppresses Myc-induced apoptosis, the role of Myc in this cooperation has remained ...
Rubio Ignacio - - 2010
Ras transmits manifold signals from the TCR at various crossroads in the life of a T cell. For example, selection programs in the thymus or the acquisition of a state of hypo-responsiveness known as anergy are just some of the T cell features known to be controlled by TCR-sparked signals ...
Nogueira C - - 2010
Mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) and AKT pathways are frequently co-activated in melanoma through overexpression of receptor tyrosine kinases, mutations in their signaling surrogates, such as RAS and BRAF, or loss of negative regulators such as PTEN. As RAS can be a positive upstream regulator of PI3-K, it has been proposed ...
Bhanot Haymanti - - 2010
Methuosis is a unique form of nonapoptotic cell death triggered by alterations in the trafficking of clathrin-independent endosomes, ultimately leading to extreme vacuolization and rupture of the cell. Methuosis can be induced in glioblastoma cells by expression of constitutively active Ras. This study identifies the small GTPases, Rac1 and Arf6, ...
Amin M Asif - - 2010
Interleukin 18 (IL-18) is a novel mediator of angiogenesis in rheumatoid arthritis (RA). To examine the role of IL-18 in RA angiogenesis and the signalling mechanisms involved. Human dermal microvascular endothelial cell (HMVEC) chemotaxis, capillary morphogenesis assays and Matrigel plug angiogenesis assays were performed in vivo using IL-18 with or ...
Kim Yuri - - 2010
The principal objective of this study was to evaluate the chemopreventive and therapeutic effects of a combination of all-trans-retinoic acid (RA) and knockdown of delta-like 1 homologue (Drosophila) (DLK1) on neuroblastoma, the most common malignant disease in children. As unfavorable neuroblastoma is poorly differentiated, neuroblastoma cell was induced differentiation by ...
Kraniak Janice M - - 2010
Plexiform neurofibromas commonly found in patients with Neurofibromatosis type I (NF1) have a 5% risk of being transformed into malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumors (MPNST). Germline mutations in the NF1 gene coding for neurofibromin, which is a Ras GTPase activating protein (RasGAP) and a negative regulator of Ras, result in ...
Cai Huaqing - - 2010
In chemotactic cells, G protein-coupled receptors activate Ras proteins, but it is unclear how Ras-associated pathways link extracellular signaling to cell migration. We show that, in Dictyostelium discoideum, activated forms of RasC prolong the time course of TORC2 (target of rapamycin [Tor] complex 2)-mediated activation of a myristoylated protein kinase ...
Yan Hua - - 2010
The Ras signaling pathway allows cells to translate external cues into diverse biological responses. Depending on context and the threshold reached, Ras signaling can promote growth, proliferation, differentiation, or cell survival. Failure to maintain precise control of Ras can have adverse physiological consequences. Indeed, excess Ras signaling disrupts developmental patterning ...
Xu Lizhong - - 2010
Ras proteins play a central role in transducing signals that control cell proliferation, differentiation, motility, and survival. The location-specific signaling activity of Ras has been previously shown to be regulated by ubiquitination [1]. However, the molecular machinery that controls Ras ubiquitination has not been defined. Here we demonstrate through biochemical ...
Man Jiang-Hong - - 2010
Activating mutations in Ras proteins are present in about 30% of human cancers. Despite tremendous progress in the study of Ras oncogenes, many aspects of the molecular mechanisms underlying Ras-induced tumorigenesis remain unknown. Through proteomics analysis, we previously found that the protein Gankyrin, a known oncoprotein in hepatocellular carcinoma, was ...
Oinuma Izumi - - 2010
Plexins are receptors for axonal guidance molecules semaphorins. We recently reported that the semaphorin 4D (Sema4D) receptor, Plexin-B1, suppresses PI3K signaling through the R-Ras GTPase-activating protein (GAP) activity, inducing growth cone collapse. Phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate level is critically regulated by PI3K and PTEN (phosphatase and tensin homologue deleted chromosome ten). Here ...
Yasuda Tadashi - - 2010
This study was aimed to examine the inhibitory mechanism of high molecular weight hyaluronan (HA) on nitric oxide (NO) production by NH2-terminal heparin-binding fibronectin fragment (FN-f) in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) chondrocytes. When the RA cartilage explants or the isolated RA chondrocytes in monolayer were incubated with FN-f, the fragment stimulated ...
Urbanelli Lorena - - 2010
The involvement of Ras and three major Ras effectors, Raf, phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) and Ral guanine nucleotide exchange factor in the regulation of lysosomal proteases cathepsin L and B in human fibroblasts was compared. We found that cathepsin L cell content was increased by active Ras overexpression through Raf- and ...
Krens Lisanne L - - 2010
KRAS has an important role in colorectal carcinogenesis and mutant KRAS leads to a permanently activated k-ras protein. To exert its biological activity, k-ras requires post-translational modification by prenylation. K-ras modulation has become a promising concept for new therapies, mostly by interference with the mevalonate pathway and subsequently by the ...
Yasui Hironobu - - 2010
It has previously been suggested that the spin trap agent alpha-phenyl-N-tert-butylnitrone (PBN) induces neurite outgrowth through activation of the Ras-ERK pathway in PC12 cells. However, the chemical properties of PBN contributing to its biological function and the detailed mechanism for the activation of Ras by PBN remain unknown. This study ...
Boufaied Nadia - - 2010
TLN-4601 is a structurally novel farnesylated dibenzodiazepinone discovered through DECIPHER, Thallion's proprietary drug discovery platform. The compound was shown to have a broad cytotoxic activity (low micromol/l) when tested in the NCI 60 tumor cell line panel and has shown in-vivo antitumor activity in several xenograft models. Related to its ...
Métrich Mélanie - - 2010
Epac (Exchange protein directly activated by cAMP) is a sensor for cAMP and represents a novel mechanism for governing cAMP signalling. Epac is a guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF) for the Ras family of small GTPases, Rap. Previous studies demonstrated that, in response to a prolonged beta-adrenergic stimulation Epac induced ...
Chen I-Yin - - 2010
Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS-CoV) was identified to be the causative agent of SARS with atypical pneumonia. Angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) is the major receptor for SARS-CoV. It is not clear whether ACE2 conveys signals from the cell surface to the nucleus and regulates expression of cellular genes upon ...
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