6 results match your criteria: "The Ordway Research Institute[Affiliation]"

Background: Castration resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) develops as a consequence of hormone therapies used to deplete androgens in advanced prostate cancer patients. CRPC cells are able to grow in a low androgen environment and this is associated with anomalous activity of their endogenous androgen receptor (AR) despite the low systemic androgen levels in the patients. Therefore, the reactivated tumor cell androgen signaling pathway is thought to provide a target for control of CRPC.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Hedgehog signaling is thought to play a role in several human cancers including prostate cancer. Although prostate cancer cells express many of the gene products involved in hedgehog signaling, these cells are refractory to the canonical signaling effects of exogenous hedgehog ligands or to activated Smoothened, the hedgehog-regulated mediator of Gli transcriptional activation. Here, we show that the expression of hedgehog ligands and some hedgehog target genes are regulated by androgen in the human prostate cancer cell line, LNCaP and its more metastatic variants (C4-2 and C4-2B).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Resveratrol, a naturally occurring stilbene, induced apoptosis in human breast cancer MCF-7 cells. The mechanism of this effect was dependent on mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK, ERK1/2) activation and was associated with serine phosphorylation and acetylation of p53. Treatment of MCF-7 cells with resveratrol in the presence of 17beta-oestradiol (E(2)) further enhanced MAPK activation, but E(2) blocked resveratrol-induced apoptosis, as measured by nucleosome ELISA and DNA fragmentation assays.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Epidermal growth factor (EGF) and TGFalpha share the same plasma membrane receptor. In the present studies in HeLa cells, both EGF and TGFalpha caused MAPK (ERK1/2) activation and expression of the immediate-early gene c-fos. Thyroid hormone (T(4)) nongenomically enhanced EGF- and TGFalpha-induced MAPK activation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Transmembrane movement of exogenous long-chain fatty acids: proteins, enzymes, and vectorial esterification.

Microbiol Mol Biol Rev

September 2003

The Ordway Research Institute and Center for Cardiovascular Sciences, The Albany Medical College, Albany, New York 12208, USA.

The processes that govern the regulated transport of long-chain fatty acids across the plasma membrane are quite distinct compared to counterparts involved in the transport of hydrophilic solutes such as sugars and amino acids. These differences stem from the unique physical and chemical properties of long-chain fatty acids. To date, several distinct classes of proteins have been shown to participate in the transport of exogenous long-chain fatty acids across the membrane.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Oxidative and calcium stress regulate DSCR1 (Adapt78/MCIP1) protein.

Free Radic Biol Med

September 2003

The Research Service, Stratton Veterans Affairs Medical Center, the Ordway Research Institute and the Wadsworth Center, New York State Department of Health, Albany, NY 12208, USA.

DSCR1 (adapt78) is a stress-inducible gene and cytoprotectant. Its protein product, DSCR1 (Adapt78), also referred to as MCIP1, inhibits intracellular calcineurin, a phosphatase that mediates many cellular responses to calcium. Exposure of human U251 and HeLa cells to hydrogen peroxide led to a rapid hyperphosphorylation of DSCR1 (Adapt78).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF