Deregulated expression of cell cycle-associated proteins in solid pseudopapillary tumor of the pancreas. (49/335)

Solid pseudopapillary tumor of the pancreas was studied in a 20-year-old woman and a 54-year-old woman. In the younger patient, the tumor had metastasized to the liver 8 years after distal pancreatectomy. In both neoplasms, the distinct histologic pattern of solid, pseudopapillary, and degenerative cystic areas was present. Analysis by means of immunohistochemistry revealed a diffuse expression for vimentin, neuron-specific enolase, and a focal positivity for al-antitrypsin, whereas epithelial markers were negative in the tumor of the older patient and only focally expressed in the tumor of the younger patient. Immunohistochemical analysis of cell cycle-associated proteins provided an overexpression of cyclin D1 and cyclin D3 in both tumors, although to varying degrees. In addition, the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors p21, and to a lesser extent p27, were up-regulated just as mdm2. There was no accumulation of p53 protein, and Ki67-positive cells were extremely scarce. Analysis of the liver metastases showed an immunoreactive profile similar to that of the primary tumor. The results show a deregulation of the cell cycle with overexpression of cell cycle-activating proteins D1 and D3 and a probably counterbalancing upregulation of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors p21 and p27. The findings may explain the low pool of Ki67-reactive tumor cells and the generally good clinical outcome of these tumors. Whether a more profound dysbalance of the cell cycle regulation is responsible for the development of metastatic disease remains to be clarified.  (+info)

Cyclin D3 expression in non-Hodgkin lymphoma. Correlation with other cell cycle regulators and clinical features. (50/335)

Cyclin D3 is the most widely expressed D-type cyclin and can be rate limiting for G1/S transition. To study the expression of cyclin D3 in non-Hodgkin lymphoma, samples from 198 previously untreated patients with lymphoma from a prospectively collected, population-based lymphoma registry were analyzed immunohistochemically for cyclin D3 expression. In 43 lymphomas (21.7%), cyclin D3 was overexpressed. T-cell lymphomas more frequently overexpressed cyclin D3 than B-cell lymphomas. Furthermore, cyclin D3-overexpressing indolent lymphomas were associated with higher proliferation rate, higher p21Waf1 expression, lower p27Kip1 expression, and altered p53. Cyclin D3 overexpression identified a subgroup of patients with indolent B-cell lymphoma with adverse clinical features: patients were older, more frequently had "B" symptoms and extranodal involvement, and were more frequently in the high-intermediate or high-risk International Prognostic Index groups. At univariate analysis of indolent lymphomas, cyclin D3 overexpression was associated significantly with poor overall survival and poor relapse-free survival. The statistical significance was retained on multivariate analysis of overall survival and relapse-free survival. Our results suggest that cyclin D3 is expressed differentially among lymphoma subtypes and that overexpression might identify a subpopulation of patients with indolent lymphoma with adverse clinical features and poor outcome.  (+info)

Cutting edge: differential signaling requirements for activation of assembled cyclin D3-cdk4 complexes in B-1 and B-2 lymphocyte subsets. (51/335)

B-1 lymphocytes represent a distinct B cell subset with unusual mitogenic responses. PMA alone promotes proliferation in B-1 cells, but not in splenic B-2 cells. Although cyclin D2-cyclin-dependent kinase 4 (cdk4) complexes mediate early retinoblastoma gene product (pRb) phosphorylation in B-1 cells, the transient nature of their accumulation cannot account for the continued increase in pRb phosphorylation, which is maximal at 24 h. We show herein that PMA promotes the accumulation of functional cyclin D3-cdk4 complexes in B-1 cells following loss of cyclin D2. PMA also induces accumulation of cyclin D3-cdk4 complexes in B-2 cells; however, these complexes do not phosphorylate pRb. Thus, PMA is sufficient to induce synthesis and assembly of cyclin D3-cdk4 complexes in B-1 and B-2 cells; however, PMA triggers cyclin D3-cdk4 activation only in B-1 cells. These results reveal a novel regulatory step that controls activation of cyclin D3-cdk4 complexes whose function segregates differentially in B cell subsets.  (+info)

Cdk6-cyclin D3 complex evades inhibition by inhibitor proteins and uniquely controls cell's proliferation competence. (52/335)

Mammalian cells require a cyclin D-dependent kinase for the cell cycle start, yet many mesenchymal cells express three seemingly redundant D cyclins and similarly, seemingly redundant Cdk4 and Cdk6 as their kinase partners. We have found that the Cdk6-cyclin D3 complex is unique among the D cyclin and kinase combinations in the ability to promote the cell cycle start. In an anchorage-minus G(1)-arrested rat fibroblast, only Cdk6-D3 retains kinase activity due mainly to its ability to evade inhibition by p27(KIP1) and p21(CIP1) with a resemblance to viral cyclin-bound Cdk6. Rodent fibroblasts engineered to overexpress both Cdk6 and cyclin D3 highly resist serum starvation- or cell-cell contact-imposed G(1)-arrest. In BALB/c 3T3 cells, D3 is constitutively expressed, but Cdk6 is markedly induced with concomitant activation upon stimulation with a growth-promoting factor. These results suggest a role for the Cdk6-D3 complex in regulating cell's proliferation ability in response to external stimuli.  (+info)

PTEN induces G(1) cell cycle arrest and decreases cyclin D3 levels in endometrial carcinoma cells. (53/335)

Inactivating mutations in the PTEN tumor suppressor gene occur in approximately 30-50% of endometrial carcinomas. PTEN is a phosphatase that negatively regulates the phosphoinositide 3-kinase signaling pathway, including the downstream effector AKT. To evaluate the role of PTEN in endometrial growth regulation, we expressed wild-type or mutant PTEN in endometrial carcinoma cell lines. As expected, expression of exogenous PTEN decreased levels of activated AKT in all cell lines examined. However, PTEN induced a G(1) cell cycle arrest specifically in endometrial carcinoma cells that lack endogenous wild-type PTEN. Growth of cells containing wild-type PTEN was unaffected by exogenous PTEN expression. Growth arrest required a functional phosphatase domain but not the PDZ interaction motif of PTEN. Overall levels of CIP/KIP and INK4 family members, the known inhibitory regulators of the G(1) phase of the cell cycle, were unchanged. However, PTEN induced a specific reduction of cyclin D3 levels and an associated increase in the amount of the inhibitor p27(KIP1) complexed with CDK2. Enforced expression of cyclin D3 abrogated the PTEN-induced cell cycle arrest. Although PTEN signaling directly regulates p27(KIP1) levels in some settings, in endometrial carcinoma cells, PTEN expression indirectly regulated p27(KIP1) activity by modulating levels of cyclin D3. These data support multiple mechanisms of PTEN-induced cell cycle arrest.  (+info)

Cyclin D3 at 6p21 is dysregulated by recurrent chromosomal translocations to immunoglobulin loci in multiple myeloma. (54/335)

Reciprocal chromosomal translocations, which are mediated by errors in immunoglobulin heavy chain (IgH) switch recombination or somatic hypermutation as plasma cells are generated in germinal centers, are present in most multiple myeloma (MM) tumors. These translocations dysregulate an oncogene that is repositioned in proximity to a strong IgH enhancer. There is a promiscuous array of nonrandom chromosomal partners (and oncogenes), with the 3 most frequent partners (11q13 [cyclin D1]; 4p16 [FGFR3 and MMSET]; 16q23 [c-maf]) involved in nearly half of MM tumors. It is now shown that a novel t(6;14)(p21;q32) translocation is present in 1 of 30 MM cell lines and that this cell line uniquely overexpresses cyclin D3. The cloned breakpoint juxtaposes gamma 4 switch sequences with 6p21 sequences that are located about 65 kb centromeric to the cyclin D3 gene. By metaphase chromosome analysis, the t(6;14) (p21;q32) translocation was identified in 6 of 150 (4%) primary MM tumors. Overexpression of cyclin D3 messenger RNA (mRNA) was identified by microarray RNA expression analysis in 3 of 53 additional primary MM tumors, each of which was found to have a t(6;14) translocation breakpoint by interphase fluorescence in situ hybridization analysis. One tumor has a t(6;22)(p21;q11) translocation, so that cyclin D3 is bracketed by the IgL and IgH breakpoints. These results provide the first clear evidence for primary dysregulation of cyclin D3 during tumorigenesis. It is suggested that the initial oncogenic event for most MM tumors is a primary immunoglobulin translocation that dysregulates cyclin D1, cyclin D3, and other oncogenes to provide a proliferative stimulus to postgerminal center plasma cells.  (+info)

Protein kinase A regulates expression of p27(kip1) and cyclin D3 to suppress proliferation of leukemic T cell lines. (55/335)

Peripheral homeostasis and tolerance requires the suppression or removal of excessive or harmful T lymphocytes. This can occur either by apoptosis through active antigen-induced death or cytokine withdrawal. Alternatively, T cell activation can be suppressed by agents that activate the cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) signaling pathway, such as prostaglandin E2. Stimulation of PKA inhibits lymphocyte proliferation and immune effector functions. Here we have investigated the mechanism by which activation of PKA induces inhibition of proliferation in human leukemic T cell lines. Using a variety of agents that stimulate PKA, we can arrest Jurkat and H9 leukemic T cells in the G(1) phase of the cell cycle, whereas cell viability is hardly affected. This G(1) arrest is associated with an inhibition of cyclin D/Cdk and cyclin E/Cdk kinase activity. Interestingly, expression of cyclin D3 is rapidly reduced by PKA activation, whereas expression of the Cdk inhibitor p27(kip1) is induced. Ectopic expression of cyclin D3 can override the growth suppression induced by PKA activation to some extent, indicating that growth inhibition of leukemic T cells by PKA activation is partially dependent on down-regulation of cyclin D3 expression. Taken together our data suggest that immunosuppression by protein kinase A involves regulation of both cyclin D3 and p27(kip1) expression.  (+info)

Signaling through extracellular signal-regulated kinase is required for spermatogonial proliferative response to stem cell factor. (56/335)

In vitro addition of stem cell factor (SCF) to c-kit-expressing A(1)-A(4) spermatogonia from prepuberal mice stimulates their progression into the mitotic cell cycle and significantly reduces apoptosis in these cells. SCF addition results in a transient activation of extracellular signal-regulated kinases (Erk)1/2 as well as of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)-dependent Akt kinase. These events are followed by a rapid re-distribution of cyclin D3, which becomes predominantly nuclear, whereas its total cellular amount does not change. Nuclear accumulation of cyclin D3 is coupled to transient activation of the associated kinase activity, assayed using the retinoblastoma protein (Rb) as a substrate. These events were followed by a transient accumulation of cyclin E, stimulation of the associated histone H1-kinase activity, a delayed accumulation of cyclin A2, and Rb hyper-phosphorylation. All the events associated with SCF-induced cell cycle progression are inhibited by the addition of either a PI3K inhibitor or a mitogen-activated protein-kinase kinase (MEK) inhibitor, indicating that both MEK and PI3K are essential for c-kit-mediated proliferative response. On the contrary, the anti-apoptotic effect of SCF is not influenced by the separate addition of either MEK or PI3K inhibitors. Thus, SCF effects on mitogenesis and survival in c-kit expressing spermatogonia rely on different signal transduction pathways.  (+info)