PMCC PMCC

Search tips
Search criteria

Advanced
Results 1-4 (4)
 

Clipboard (0)
None

Select a Filter Below

Journals
Year of Publication
1.  ATRA-induced upregulation of Beclin 1 prolongs the life span of differentiated acute promyelocytic leukemia cells 
Autophagy  2011;7(10):1108-1114.
Acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) results from a blockade of granulocyte differentiation at the promyelocytic stage. All-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) induces clinical remission in APL patients by enhancing the rapid differentiation of APL cells and the clearance of PML-RARα, APL's hallmark oncoprotein. In the present study, we demonstrated that both autophagy and Beclin 1, an autophagic protein, are upregulated during the course of ATRA-induced neutrophil/granulocyte differentiation of an APL-derived cell line named NB4 cells. This induction of autophagy is associated with downregulation of Bcl-2 and inhibition of mTOR activity. Small interfering RNA-mediated knockdown of BECN1 expression enhances apoptosis triggered by ATRA in NB4 cells but does not affect the differentiation process. These results provide evidence that the upregulation of Beclin 1 by ATRA constitutes an anti-apoptotic signal for maintaining the viability of mature APL cells, but has no crucial effect on the granulocytic differentiation. This finding may help to elucidate the mechanisms involved in ATRA resistance of APL patients, and in the ATRA syndrome caused by an accumulation of mature APL cells.
doi:10.4161/auto.7.10.16623
PMCID: PMC3242613  PMID: 21691148
APL; Beclin 1; apoptosis; ATRA; autophagy; differentiation
2.  The complex interplay between autophagy and NF-κB signaling pathways in cancer cells 
Tight regulation of both the NF-κB pathway and the autophagy process is necessary for maintenance of cellular homeostasis. Deregulation of both pathways is frequently observed in cancer cells and is associated with tumorigenesis and tumor cell resistance to cancer therapies. Autophagy is involved in several cellular functions regulated by NF-κB including cell survival, differentiation, senescence, inflammation, and immunity. On a molecular level, autophagy and NF-κB share common upstream signals and regulators and can control each other through positive or negative feedback loops, thus ensuring homeostatic responses. Here, we summarize and discuss the most recent discoveries that shed new light on the complex interplay between autophagy and NF-κB signaling pathways; this certainly has functional relevance in tumorigenesis and tumor responses to therapy.
PMCID: PMC3189824  PMID: 21994903
Autophagy; NF-κB; cancer; signaling pathways
3.  Regulation of autophagy by cytoplasmic p53 
Nature cell biology  2008;10(6):676-687.
Multiple cellular stressors, including activation of the tumour suppressor p53, can stimulate autophagy. Here we show that knockout, knockdown or pharmacological inhibition of p53 can induce autophagy in human, mouse and nematode cells. Enhanced autophagy improved the survival of p53-deficient cancer cells under conditions of hypoxia and nutrient depletion, allowing them to maintain high ATP levels. Inhibition of p53 led to autophagy in enucleated cells, and cytoplasmic, not nuclear, p53 was able to repress the enhanced autophagy of p53-/- cells. Many different inducers of autophagy (for example, starvation, rapamycin and toxins affecting the endoplasmic reticulum) stimulated proteasome-mediated degradation of p53 through a pathway relying on the E3 ubiquitin ligase HDM2. Inhibition of p53 degradation prevented the activation of autophagy in several cell lines, in response to several distinct stimuli. These results provide evidence of a key signalling pathway that links autophagy to the cancer-associated dysregulation of p53.
doi:10.1038/ncb1730
PMCID: PMC2676564  PMID: 18454141
4.  Identification of two human nuclear proteins that recognise the cytosine-rich strand of human telomeres in vitro 
Nucleic Acids Research  2000;28(7):1564-1575.
Most studies on the structure of DNA in telomeres have been dedicated to the double-stranded region or the guanosine-rich strand and consequently little is known about the factors that may bind to the telomere cytosine-rich (C-rich) strand. This led us to investigate whether proteins exist that can recognise C-rich sequences. We have isolated several nuclear factors from human cell extracts that specifically bind the C-rich strand of vertebrate telomeres [namely a d(CCCTAA)n repeat] with high affinity and bind double-stranded telomeric DNA with a 100× reduced affinity. A biochemical assay allowed us to characterise four proteins of apparent molecular weights 66–64, 45 and 35 kDa, respectively. To identify these polypeptides we screened a λgt11-based cDNA expression library, obtained from human HeLa cells using a radiolabelled telomeric oligonucleotide as a probe. Two clones were purified and sequenced: the first corresponded to the hnRNP K protein and the second to the ASF/SF2 splicing factor. Confirmation of the screening results was obtained with recombinant proteins, both of which bind to the human telomeric C-rich strand in vitro.
PMCID: PMC102786  PMID: 10710423

Results 1-4 (4)