We have a suspicion that you are an automated web bot software, not a real user. To keep our site fast for other users, we have slowed down this page. The slowdown will gradually disappear. If you think this is a mistake, please contact us at genome-www@soe.ucsc.edu. Also note that all data for hgGeneGraph can be obtained through our public MySQL server and all our software source code is available and can be installed locally onto your own computer. If you are unsure how to use these resources, do not hesitate to contact us.
UCSC Genome Browser Gene Interaction Graph
Gene interactions and pathways from curated databases and text-mining
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2013, PMID: 23324740

Engineering a BCR-ABL-activated caspase for the selective elimination of leukemic cells.

Kurokawa, Manabu; Ito, Takahiro; Yang, Chih-Sheng; Zhao, Chen; Macintyre, Andrew N; Rizzieri, David A; Rathmell, Jeffrey C; Deininger, Michael W; Reya, Tannishtha; Kornbluth, Sally

Increased understanding of the precise molecular mechanisms involved in cell survival and cell death signaling pathways offers the promise of harnessing these molecules to eliminate cancer cells without damaging normal cells. Tyrosine kinase oncoproteins promote the genesis of leukemias through both increased cell proliferation and inhibition of apoptotic cell death. Although tyrosine kinase inhibitors, such as the BCR-ABL inhibitor imatinib, have demonstrated remarkable efficacy in the clinic, drug-resistant leukemias emerge in some patients because of either the acquisition of point mutations or amplification of the tyrosine kinase, resulting in a poor long-term prognosis. Here, we exploit the molecular mechanisms of caspase activation and tyrosine kinase/adaptor protein signaling to forge a unique approach for selectively killing leukemic cells through the forcible induction of apoptosis. We have engineered caspase variants that can directly be activated in response to BCR-ABL. Because we harness, rather than inhibit, the activity of leukemogenic kinases to kill transformed cells, this approach selectively eliminates leukemic cells regardless of drug-resistant mutations.

Diseases/Pathways annotated by Medline MESH: Leukemia
Document information provided by NCBI PubMed

Text Mining Data

caspase → BCR-ABL: " Engineering a BCR-ABL activated caspase for the selective elimination of leukemic cells "

caspase → BCR-ABL: " Engineering a BCR-ABL activated caspase for the selective elimination of leukemic cells "

Manually curated Databases

No curated data.