Cardiomyocyte-restricted knockout of STAT3 results in higher sensitivity to inflammation, cardiac fibrosis, and heart failure with advanced ageJörg J. Jacoby, April Kalinowski, Mu-Gen Liu et al.|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|2003 Cytokines and inflammation have been implicated in the pathogenesis of heart failure. For example, IL-6 family cytokines and the gp130 receptor play important roles in cardiac myocyte survival and hypertrophy. Signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3) is a major signaling protein that is activated through gp130. We have created mice with a cardiomyocyte-restricted deletion of STAT3. As measured by serial echocardiograms, mice with cardiac specific deletion of STAT3 are significantly more susceptible to cardiac injury after doxorubicin treatment than age-matched controls. Intriguingly, STAT3 appears to have a critical role in protection of inflammation-induced heart damage. STAT3-deficient mice treated with lipopolysaccharide demonstrated significantly more apoptosis than their WT counterparts. At the cellular level, cardiomyocytes with STAT3 deleted secrete significantly more tumor necrosis factor in response to lipopolysaccharide than those with WT STAT3. Furthermore, histologic examination of the cardiomyocyte-restricted STAT3-deficient mice reveals a dramatic increase in cardiac fibrosis in aged mice. Although no overt signs of heart failure are present in young STAT3-deficient mice, they spontaneously develop heart dysfunction with advancing age. These results indicate the crucial functions of STAT3 in cardiomyocyte resistance to inflammation and other acute injury and in pathogenesis of age-related heart failure.
The protein kinase C‐mediated MAP kinase pathway involved in the maintenance of cellular integrity in <i>Saccharomyces cerevisiae</i>Signal transduction mediated by the single yeast isozyme of protein kinase C (Pkc1p) is essential for the maintenance of cellular integrity in this model eukaryote. The past few years have seen a dramatic increase in our knowledge of the upstream regulatory factors that modulate Pkc1p activity (e.g. Tor2p, Rom1p, Rom2p, Rho1p, Slg1p, Mid2p) and of the downstream targets of the MAP kinase cascade triggered by it (e.g. Rlm1p, SBF complex). The picture that has emerged connects this pathway to a variety of other cellular processes, such as cell cycle progression (Cdc28p, Swi4p), mating (Ste20p), nutrient sensing (Ira1p), calcium homeostasis (calcineurin, Mid2p, Fks2p) and the structural dynamics of the cytoskeleton (Spa1p, Bni1p).
Methodological and practical challenges for personalized cancer therapiesIgnacio I. Wistuba, Juri G. Gelovani, Jörg J. Jacoby et al.|Nature Reviews Clinical Oncology|2011 Upregulated stromal EGFR and vascular remodeling in mouse xenograft models of angiogenesis inhibitor–resistant human lung adenocarcinomaTina Cascone, Matthew H. Herynk, Li Xu et al.|Journal of Clinical Investigation|2011 Angiogenesis is critical for tumor growth and metastasis, and several inhibitors of angiogenesis are currently in clinical use for the treatment of cancer. However, not all patients benefit from antiangiogenic therapy, and those tumors that initially respond to treatment ultimately become resistant. The mechanisms underlying this, and the relative contributions of tumor cells and stroma to resistance, are not completely understood. Here, using species-specific profiling of mouse xenograft models of human lung adenocarcinoma, we have shown that gene expression changes associated with acquired resistance to the VEGF inhibitor bevacizumab occurred predominantly in stromal and not tumor cells. In particular, components of the EGFR and FGFR pathways were upregulated in stroma, but not in tumor cells. Increased activated EGFR was detected on pericytes of xenografts that acquired resistance and on endothelium of tumors with relative primary resistance. Acquired resistance was associated with a pattern of pericyte-covered, normalized revascularization, whereas tortuous, uncovered vessels were observed in relative primary resistance. Importantly, dual targeting of the VEGF and EGFR pathways reduced pericyte coverage and increased progression-free survival. These findings demonstrated that alterations in tumor stromal pathways, including the EGFR and FGFR pathways, are associated with, and may contribute to, resistance to VEGF inhibitors and that targeting these pathways may improve therapeutic efficacy. Understanding stromal signaling may be critical for developing biomarkers for angiogenesis inhibitors and improving combination regimens.
A screen for upstream components of the yeast protein kinase C signal transduction pathway identifies the product of the SLG1 gene