نتایج جستجو برای: Azurin-p28

تعداد نتایج: 929  

Journal: :Cancer research 2009
Brad N Taylor Rajeshwari R Mehta Tohru Yamada Fatima Lekmine Konstantin Christov Ananda M Chakrabarty Albert Green Laura Bratescu Anne Shilkaitis Craig W Beattie Tapas K Das Gupta

Azurin, a member of the cupredoxin family of copper containing redox proteins, preferentially penetrates human cancer cells and exerts cytostatic and cytotoxic (apoptotic) effects with no apparent activity on normal cells. Amino acids 50 to 77 (p28) of azurin seem responsible for cellular penetration and at least part of the antiproliferative, proapoptotic activity of azurin against a number of...

2012
Arsenio M. Fialho Prabhakar Salunkhe Sunil Manna Sidharth Mahali Ananda M. Chakrabarty

The current therapy for glioblastoma multiforme involves total surgical resection followed by combination of radiation therapy and temozolomide. Unfortunately, the efficacy for such current therapy is limited, and newer approaches are sorely needed to treat this deadly disease. We have recently described the isolation of bacterial proteins and peptides with anticancer activity. In phase I human...

2010
Ananda M Chakrabarty

Pseudomonas aeruginosa is an opportunistic extracellular pathogen for debilitated or immuno-compromised patients, capable of forming biofilms on the epithelial surfaces of various tissues in such patients. The biofilm formation allows the pathogen to evade antibiotic therapy or immune attack, ensuring its long term residence and a niche in the body. Any subsequent attack by an internal or exter...

2011
Anna Rita Bizzarri Simona Santini Emilia Coppari Monica Bucciantini Silvia Di Agostino Tohru Yamada Craig W Beattie Salvatore Cannistraro

p28 is a 28-amino acid peptide fragment of the cupredoxin azurin derived from Pseudomonas aeruginosa that preferentially penetrates cancerous cells and arrests their proliferation in vitro and in vivo. Its antitumor activity reportedly arises from post-translational stabilization of the tumor suppressor p53 normally downregulated by the binding of several ubiquitin ligases. This would require p...

2016
Chuong Nguyen Van Duy Nguyen

Azurin from Pseudomonas aeruginosa is known anticancer bacteriocin, which can specifically penetrate human cancer cells and induce apoptosis. We hypothesized that pathogenic and commensal bacteria with long term residence in human body can produce azurin-like bacteriocins as a weapon against the invasion of cancers. In our previous work, putative bacteriocins have been screened from complete ge...

2016
Arsenio M. Fialho Nuno Bernardes Ananda M Chakrabarty

Bacterial proteins and their derivative peptides have emerged as promising anticancer agents. Nowadays they represent a valuable set of candidate drugs with different origins and modes of action. Among these, monomeric cupredoxins, which are metalloproteins involved in the electron transport chain of prokaryotes, have been shown to possess potent anticancer activities. In particular, much atten...

Journal: :Molecular cancer therapeutics 2009
Tohru Yamada Rajeshwari R Mehta Fatima Lekmine Konstantin Christov Marissa L King Dibyen Majumdar Anne Shilkaitis Albert Green Laura Bratescu Craig W Beattie Tapas K Das Gupta

We report that amino acids 50 to 77 of azurin (p28) preferentially enter the human breast cancer cell lines MCF-7, ZR-75-1, and T47D through a caveolin-mediated pathway. Although p28 enters p53 wild-type MCF-7 and the isogenic p53 dominant-negative MDD2 breast cancer cell lines, p28 only induces a G(2)-M-phase cell cycle arrest and apoptosis in MCF-7 cells. p28 exerts its antiproliferative acti...

2014
Emilia Coppari Tohru Yamada Anna Rita Bizzarri Craig W Beattie Salvatore Cannistraro

p28 is an anionic, amphipathic, cell-penetrating peptide derived from the cupredoxin azurin that binds to the DNA-binding domain (DBD) of the tumor suppressor protein, p53, and induces a post-translational increase in the level of wild type and mutated p53 in a wide variety of human cancer cells. As p63 and p73, additional members of the p53 superfamily of proteins, also appear to be involved i...

Journal: :Archives of biochemistry and biophysics 2010
Chao Xu Yan Zhao Baolu Zhao

Azurin is bacterial protein, which was been reported to promote cancer cell death in vitro. The interaction of azurin and p53 is important for the cytotoxic effect of azurin towards cancer cells. In this study, it was found that nucleic acids mediated the interaction of azurin and the C-terminal domain of p53 (residues 352-393). The results provide novel insight into the interaction, and raisin...

Journal: :Biochemistry 1987
J W Petrich J W Longworth G R Fleming

We have carried out a picosecond fluorescence study of holo- and apoazurins of Pseudomonas aeruginosa (azurin Pae), Alcaligenes faecilis (azurin Afe), and Alcaligenes denitrificans (azurin Ade). Azurin Pae contains a single, buried tryptophyl residue; azurin Afe, a single surface tryptophyl residue; and azurin Ade, tryptophyl residues in both environments. From anisotropy measurements we conclu...

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