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Logical network of genotoxic stress-induced NF-kappaB signal transduction predicts putative target structures for therapeutic intervention strategies
Author(s) -
Michael Naumann
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
advances and applications in bioinformatics and chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.223
H-Index - 15
ISSN - 1178-6949
DOI - 10.2147/aabc.s8211
Subject(s) - signal transduction , cancer research , dna damage , apoptosis , biology , transcription factor , microbiology and biotechnology , nf κb , death domain , cancer cell , transduction (biophysics) , cellular stress response , cancer , computational biology , programmed cell death , dna , gene , genetics , fight or flight response , biochemistry
Genotoxic stress is induced by a broad range of DNA-damaging agents and could lead to a variety of human diseases including cancer. DNA damage is also therapeutically induced for cancer treatment with the aim to eliminate tumor cells. However, the effectiveness of radio- and chemotherapy is strongly hampered by tumor cell resistance. A major reason for radio- and chemotherapeutic resistances is the simultaneous activation of cell survival pathways resulting in the activation of the transcription factor nuclear factor-kappa B (NF-κB). Here, we present a Boolean network model of the NF-κB signal transduction induced by genotoxic stress in epithelial cells. For the representation and analysis of the model, we used the formalism of logical interaction hypergraphs. Model reconstruction was based on a careful meta-analysis of published data. By calculating minimal intervention sets, we identified p53-induced protein with a death domain (PIDD), receptor-interacting protein 1 (RIP1), and protein inhibitor of activated STAT y (PIASy) as putative therapeutic targets to abrogate NF-κB activation resulting in apoptosis. Targeting these structures therapeutically may potentiate the effectiveness of radio-and chemotherapy. Thus, the presented model allows a better understanding of the signal transduction in tumor cells and provides candidates as new therapeutic target structures.

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