Publications by authors named "J Tullai"

Article Synopsis
  • Malignant tumors can avoid the immune system's attacks by luring in regulatory T cells (Treg), and the IKZF2 (Helios) transcription factor is essential for Treg cell stability and function.
  • The study introduces NVP-DKY709, a new drug that specifically targets and degrades IKZF2 while leaving other related factors (IKZF1/3) intact, enhancing the immune response against tumors.
  • In tests, NVP-DKY709 not only improved the activity of T-effector cells and reduced tumor growth in mice but is also being explored for its potential as a cancer treatment in clinical trials.
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Englerin A is a structurally unique natural product reported to selectively inhibit growth of renal cell carcinoma cell lines. A large scale phenotypic cell profiling experiment (CLiP) of englerin A on ¬over 500 well characterized cancer cell lines showed that englerin A inhibits growth of a subset of tumor cell lines from many lineages, not just renal cell carcinomas. Expression of the TRPC4 cation channel was the cell line feature that best correlated with sensitivity to englerin A, suggesting the hypothesis that TRPC4 is the efficacy target for englerin A.

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Glycogen synthase kinase-3 (GSK-3) plays a central role in cell survival and proliferation, in part by the regulation of transcription. Unlike most protein kinases, GSK-3 is active in quiescent cells in the absence of growth factor signaling. In a recent series of studies, we employed a systems-level approach to understanding the transcription network regulated by GSK-3 in a quiescent cell model.

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Background: The protein kinase GSK-3 is constitutively active in quiescent cells in the absence of growth factor signaling. Previously, we identified a set of genes that required GSK-3 to maintain their repression during quiescence. Computational analysis of the upstream sequences of these genes predicted transcription factor binding sites for CREB, NFκB and AP-1.

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GSK-3 is active in the absence of growth factor stimulation and generally acts to induce apoptosis or inhibit cell proliferation. We previously identified a subset of growth factor-inducible genes that can also be induced in quiescent T98G cells solely by inhibition of GSK-3 in the absence of growth factor stimulation. Computational predictions verified by chromatin immunoprecipitation assays identified NF-kappaB binding sites in the upstream regions of 75% of the genes regulated by GSK-3.

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