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dc.contributor.authorYoo, Byong Hoon
dc.contributor.authorRosen, Kirill V.
dc.date.accessioned2012-09-05T18:24:29Z
dc.date.available2012-09-05T18:24:29Z
dc.date.issued2011-11-02
dc.identifier.citationPMID: 21903589en_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10222/15461
dc.descriptionYoo, B. H., Berezkin, A., Wang, Y., Zagryazhskaya, A., & Rosen, K. V. (January 01, 2012). Tumor suppressor protein kinase Chk2 is a mediator of anoikis of intestinal epithelial cells. International Journal of Cancer. Journal International Du Cancer, 131, 2, 357-66. The definitive version is available at<a href=" www3.interscience.wiley.com">www3.interscience.wiley.com</a>
dc.description.abstractResistance of carcinoma cells to anoikis, apoptosis that is normally induced by detachment of non-malignant epithelial cells from the extracellular matrix, is thought to be critical for carcinoma progression. Molecular mechanisms that control anoikis of non-malignant and cancer cells are understood poorly. In an effort to understand them we found that detachment of non-malignant intestinal epithelial cells triggers upregulation of Chk2, a pro-apoptotic protein kinase that has never been implicated in anoikis and has been thought to kill cells mainly under the conditions compromising genome integrity. We found that enforced downregulation of Chk2 protects intestinal epithelial cells from anoikis. Chk2 can kill cells by stabilizing p53 tumor suppressor protein or via p53-independent mechanisms, and we established that Chk2-mediated anoikis of intestinal epithelial cells is p53-independent. We further found that, unlike non-malignant intestinal epithelial cells whose anoikis is triggered by detachment-induced Chk2 upregulation, intestinal epithelial cells carrying oncogenic ras, a known inhibitor of anoikis, remain anoikis-resistant in response to enforced Chk2 upregulation. By contrast, drugs, such as topoisomerase I inhibitors, that can kill cells via Chk2-indpendent mechanisms, efficiently triggered anoikis of ras-transformed cells. Thus, oncogenic ras can prevent Chk2 from triggering anoikis even when levels of this protein kinase are elevated in cancer cells, and the use of therapeutic agents that kill cells in a Chk-2-independent, rather than Chk-2-dependent, manner could represent an efficient strategy for overcoming ras-induced anoikis resistance of these cells. We conclude that Chk-2 is an important novel component of anoikis-promoting machinery of intestinal epithelial cells.en_US
dc.description.sponsorshipCanadian Institutes of Health Researchen_US
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherInternational Journal of Canceren_US
dc.subject.otheranoikis
dc.subject.otherChk2
dc.subject.otherras
dc.subject.othercolorectal
dc.subject.otherrosen
dc.subject.otherKV
dc.titleTumor suppressor protein kinase Chk2 is a mediator of anoikis of intestinal epithelial cellsen_US
dc.typeArticleen_US
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