The mdm2 oncogene has been shown to be amplified or overexpressed in human cancers, about 50 percent of breast cancers, 40-60 percent of osteosarcomas, 30 percent of soft tissue sarcomas, and 60 percent of gliomas. It also has been suggested that mdm2 levels are associated with poor prognosis of several human cancers. The mdm2 oncoprotein binds to the p53 tumor suppressor protein and serves as a negative regulator of p53. The p53 tumor suppressor also has an important role in cancer therapy, with p53-mediated apoptosis being a major mechanism of action for many clinically used cancer chemotherapeutic agents and radiation therapy. Therefore, the negative regulation of p53 by mdm2 may limit the magnitude of p53 activation by DNA damaging agents, thereby limiting their therapeutic effectiveness. The investigators hypothesize that, by inhibiting mdm2 expression, the mdm2 oncoprotein level will be reduced and the mdm2 negative feed-back inhibition of p53 will be diminished, resulting in a significant increase of functional p53 levels that will modulate p53-mediated therapeutic effects. The overall objective of this grant application is to investigate the functions of mdm2 oncogene in tumor growth and the potential value of mdm2 as a drug target for cancer therapy. The following Specific Aims will be examined: 1). To determine the role of mdm2 in tumor growth by inhibiting mdm2 expression in in vivo models of human cancers; 2). To determine whether mdm2 inhibition activates p53 and induces apoptosis and whether these effects result in tumor growth inhibition in vivo; 3). To determine whether there are in vivo synergistically therapeutic effects between mdm2 inhibition and DNA damaging agents; and 4). To determine whether mdm2 inhibition has specific effects on key host tissues that are often sites of toxicity induced by cancer chemotherapy. When these specific aims have been accomplished, it will be possible in future studies to investigate the role of mdm2 in tumor development in humans and, ultimately, determine the usefulness of mdm2 as a target for new drug design for human cancer therapy.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
1R01CA080698-01
Application #
2806110
Study Section
Experimental Therapeutics Subcommittee 1 (ET)
Program Officer
Forry, Suzanne L
Project Start
1999-04-07
Project End
2003-03-31
Budget Start
1999-04-07
Budget End
2000-03-31
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
1999
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Alabama Birmingham
Department
Internal Medicine/Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
004514360
City
Birmingham
State
AL
Country
United States
Zip Code
35294
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Zhang, Ruiwen; Wang, Hui; Agrawal, Sudhir (2005) Novel antisense anti-MDM2 mixed-backbone oligonucleotides: proof of principle, in vitro and in vivo activities, and mechanisms. Curr Cancer Drug Targets 5:43-9
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Zhang, Zhuo; Zhang, Ruiwen (2005) p53-independent activities of MDM2 and their relevance to cancer therapy. Curr Cancer Drug Targets 5:9-20
Zhang, Zhuo; Li, Mao; Rayburn, Elizabeth R et al. (2005) Oncogenes as novel targets for cancer therapy (part IV): regulators of the cell cycle and apoptosis. Am J Pharmacogenomics 5:397-407
Zhang, Zhuo; Li, Mao; Rayburn, Elizabeth R et al. (2005) Oncogenes as novel targets for cancer therapy (part II): Intermediate signaling molecules. Am J Pharmacogenomics 5:247-57
Rayburn, Elizabeth; Wang, Wei; Zhang, Ruiwen et al. (2005) Antisense approaches in drug discovery and development. Prog Drug Res 63:227-74
Zhang, Zhuo; Wang, Hui; Li, Mao et al. (2005) Novel MDM2 p53-independent functions identified through RNA silencing technologies. Ann N Y Acad Sci 1058:205-14
Rayburn, Elizabeth; Zhang, Ruiwen; He, Jie et al. (2005) MDM2 and human malignancies: expression, clinical pathology, prognostic markers, and implications for chemotherapy. Curr Cancer Drug Targets 5:27-41
Zhang, Zhuo; Wang, Hui; Li, Mao et al. (2005) Stabilization of E2F1 protein by MDM2 through the E2F1 ubiquitination pathway. Oncogene 24:7238-47

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