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Cheau Yun Chen

National Institutes of Health

Publishes on Cancer-related Molecular Pathways, Cancer Research and Treatments, Nitric Oxide and Endothelin Effects. 4 papers and 435 citations.

4Publications
435Total Citations

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Interactions between p53 and MDM2 in a mammalian cell cycle checkpoint pathway.
Cheau Yun Chen, Jon Oliner, Qimin Zhan et al.|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|1994
Cited by 279Open Access

Normal p53 function is required for optimal arrest of cells in the G1 phase of the cell cycle following certain types of DNA damage. Loss of this cell cycle checkpoint may contribute to tumor development by increasing the number of genetic abnormalities in daughter cells following DNA damage. The MDM2 protein is an endogenous gene product that binds to the p53 protein and is able to block p53-mediated transactivation of cotransfected reporter constructs; thus, interactions between MDM2 and p53 in this checkpoint pathway following ionizing irradiation were examined. Though increases in p53 protein by DNA damage were not abrogated by MDM2 overexpression, increased levels of MDM2, resulting either from endogenous gene amplification or from transfection of an exogenous expression vector, were associated with a reduction in the ability of cells to arrest in G1 following irradiation. In addition, expression of endogenous MDM2 was enhanced by ionizing irradiation at the level of transcription in a p53-dependent fashion. These observations demonstrate that MDM2 overexpression can inhibit p53 function in a known physiologic pathway and are consistent with the hypothesis that MDM2 may function in a "feedback loop" mechanism with p53, possibly acting to limit the length or severity of the p53-mediated arrest following DNA damage.

Characterization of human Gadd45, a p53-regulated protein.
France Carrier, Melvyn Smith, I Bae et al.|Journal of Biological Chemistry|1994
Cited by 127Open Access

GADD45 (growth arrest and DNA damage) is a DNA-damage-inducible gene regulated in part by the tumor suppressor p53. A role in negative growth control has recently been suggested based on significant (more than 75%) reduction of colony formation following over expression of Gadd45. To better understand the role of Gadd45, we have developed specific rabbit and murine antibodies raised against the human recombinant protein. Using these antibodies, we have found that in ML-1 cells Gadd45 is predominantly a nuclear protein. MyD118, a protein induced by terminal differentiation sharing 57% homology with Gadd45, does not cross-react with any of the antibodies produced. As expected, the induction of Gadd45 protein by ionizing radiation (IR) was also found to be dependent on a wild type p53 phenotype. Interestingly, WI-L2-NS, a human lymphoid cell line, showed very high basal levels of Gadd45 mRNA and protein in addition to a high constitutive level of a mutated p53 protein. In this cell line, the high levels of GADD45 did not inhibit cellular growth in spite of the fact that no mutations were found in GADD45 sequence. These results indicate that some cell line(s) can tolerate high levels of Gadd45 and abrogate its growth suppression function.

Isotope partitioning for NAD-malic enzyme from Ascaris suum confirms a steady-state random kinetic mechanism
Cited by 15

Isotope partitioning studies beginning with E.[14C]NAD, E.[14C]malate, E.[14C]NAD.Mg2+, and E.Mg.[14C]malate suggest a steady-state random mechanism for the NAD-malic enzyme. Isotope trapping beginning with E.[14C]NAD and with varying concentrations of Mg2+ and malate in the chase solution indicates that Mg2+ is added in rapid equilibrium and must be added prior to malate for productive ternary complex formation. Equal percentage trapping from E.[14C]NAD.Mg and E.Mg.[14C]malate indicates the mechanism is steady-state random with equal off-rates for NAD and malate from E.NAD.Mg.malate. The off-rates for both do not change significantly in the ternary E.Mg.malate and E.NAD.Mg complexes, nor does the off-rate change for NAD from E.NAD. No trapping of malate was obtained from E.[14C]malate, suggesting that this complex is nonproductive. A quantitative analysis of the data allows an estimation of values for a number of the rate constants along the reaction pathway.

Isotope trapping and positional isotope exchange with rat and chicken liver phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinases
Cited by 14

Isotope-trapping studies of the enzyme.MgGTP complex were carried out with rat liver cytosolic and chicken liver mitochondrial phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinases. For the rat liver enzyme, MgGTP was partially trapped from both E.MgGTP and E.MgGTP.OAA complexes, consistent with a steady-state random mechanism. For the chicken liver enzyme, MgGTP was 100% trapped from the E.MgGTP.OAA complex, consistent with a steady-state ordered mechanism. The rate constants for the interaction of MgGTP with the free enzymes are approximately 10(7) M-1 S-1, somewhat lower than the diffusion limit for association. The dissociation rate for the enzyme.MgGTP complexes is 26-92 s-1, reflecting a tightly bound complex with high commitment to catalysis in the presence of oxaloacetate. Positional isotope-exchange studies were also carried out with phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinases from rat and chicken. No exchange if the beta gamma-18O in [beta gamma-18O, gamma-18O3]GTP to form [beta-18O, gamma-18O3]GTP was detected in the absence of oxaloacetate. In the presence of oxaloacetate, no positional isotope exchange of [beta gamma-18O, gamma-18O3]GTP was detected during initial rate conditions. The results indicate that at least one of the products dissociates rapidly from the E.MgGDP.PEP.CO2 complex relative to the net rate of MgGTP formation from the E.MgGDP.PEP.CO2 complex. A rapid equilibrium between the central complexes in which the beta-phosphoryl of GDP is restricted with respect to torsional rotation cannot be excluded but is unlikely on the basis of the relative rates of catalysis and torsional rotation. The addition of Mn2+, an activator of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase, did not influence the positional isotope-exchange results.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)