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Query: EC:2.7.10.1 (
ERK
)
95,504
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An elevation in total MAP kinase activity and expression has been observed in breast cancer tissue. However, the mechanisms underlying these changes in kinase activity and regulation by growth factors are not well characterized. In these studies, the effect of the potent mammary mitogen, epidermal growth factor (EGF), on the activation of the mitogen-activated protein kinases, ERK1 and ERK2 (extracellular regulated protein kinases 1 and 2, respectively), was compared in primary cultures of normal mouse mammary epithelial cells and in a hormone-responsive mouse mammary tumor. In normal epithelium, EGF stimulated an early rise in
ERK
activity at 4 min followed by a rapid decline, whereas a sustained (1 h) elevation of
ERK
activity was observed in the tumor cells. The time course of
ERK
activity in both cell types coincided with the phosphorylation state of the EGF receptor, suggesting that altered regulation of EGF receptor phosphorylation or EGF receptor turnover produces an enhanced
ERK
response to EGF in tumor cells. The MEK inhibitor, PD 098059 inhibited EGF-stimulated proliferation and
ERK
activity in a parallel, dose-dependent manner showing that
ERK
activation is at least permissive for the proliferative response to EGF. In addition, tumor cells showed a 4-fold elevation in basal (or ligand-independent) activity over normal cells without an increase in total enzyme level, and a preferential activation of ERK1 by EGF. These EGF-dependent and -independent changes in
ERK
regulation in the hormone-responsive mammary tumor underscore how multiple alterations in the regulation of this pathway may play a role in mammary tumorigenesis.
Carcinogenesis
1999 Jul
PMID:Altered MAP kinase (ERK1,2) regulation in primary cultures of mammary tumor cells: elevated basal activity and sustained response to EGF. 1038 90
Children exposed to radioactive iodine as a consequence of the Chernobyl reactor accident have an increased risk of papillary thyroid carcinomas (PTC). The predominant molecular lesions in these tumors are rearrangements of the
RET
receptor tyrosine kinase (tk). Here we report on two novel types of
RET
rearrangement, PTC6 and 7, and describe the fusion products and the ret fused gene (rfg) proteins. Like the other rfg proteins identified so far they are ubiquitously expressed, not membrane-bound and contain coiled coil domains required for constitutive activation of the ret tk domain. In the PTC6 rearrangement the ret tk domain is fused to the aminoterminal part of the human transcription intermediary factor htif 1. In the PTC7 rearrangement the ret tk domain is fused to a novel protein that is strongly related to htif1. Like htif1 it contains a RBCC motif (ring finger, B boxes, coiled coil domain) located in the aminoterminal part and a phd finger and a bromodomain in the carboxyterminal part. Htif1 and related proteins are transcription coactivators for nuclear receptors, thus participating in controlling cellular development, differentiation and homeostasis. This is the first report on their involvement in human thyroid
carcinogenesis
.
...
PMID:The transcription coactivator HTIF1 and a related protein are fused to the RET receptor tyrosine kinase in childhood papillary thyroid carcinomas. 1043 47
Alkyl-substituted polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons may be metabolized to highly reactive benzylic sulfuric acid esters via benzylic hydroxylation and subsequent sulfonation. We have studied the benzylic hydroxylation of 1-methylpyrene (MP), a hepatocarcinogen in rodents, and 1-ethylpyrene (EP), whose benzylic hydroxylation would produce a secondary alcohol (alpha-
HEP
), in contrast to the primary alcohol (alpha-HMP) formed from MP. The hydrocarbons were incubated with hepatic microsomal preparations from humans and rats, as well as with V79-derived cell lines engineered for the expression of individual cytochrome P450 (CYP) forms from human (1A1, 1A2, 1B1, 2A6, 2E1, 3A4) and rat (1A1, 1A2, 2B1). All microsomal systems and CYP-expressing cell lines used, but not CYP-deficient V79 cells, showed biotransformation of both hydrocarbons. Formation of the benzylic alcohol was detected in each case. alpha-HMP and its oxidation product, 1-pyrenylcarboxylic acid (COOH-P), accounted for a major part of the total amount of the metabolites formed from MP in the presence of human liver microsomes (38-64%) and cells expressing human 3A4, 2E1 or 1B1 (80-85%). Likewise, cells expressing human 1A1 showed a higher contribution of alpha-HMP and COOH-P to the total metabolites (45%) than cells expressing the orthologous enzyme of the rat (3%). EP was metabolized at a higher rate and with modified regioselectivity compared with MP, although omega-hydroxylation of the side chain was not detected with the cell lines and only accounted for a small percent of the biotransformation by the microsomal preparations. The highest contributions of alpha-
HEP
to the total metabolites from EP were detected with the cells expressing human 1A1, 1B1 and 3A4 (38-51%). alpha-
HEP
accounted for 16% of the metabolites formed in the presence of human hepatic microsomes. Thus, benzylic hydroxylation is a major initial step in the metabolism of MP and EP. This pathway appears to be even more important in humans than in rats. Previously, we had shown that the second step of the activation, the sulfonation of alpha-HMP and alpha-
HEP
, is also efficiently catalysed by various forms of human sulfotransferases.
Carcinogenesis
1999 Sep
PMID:Benzylic hydroxylation of 1-methylpyrene and 1-ethylpyrene by human and rat cytochromes P450 individually expressed in V79 Chinese hamster cells. 1046 24
Metallothionein (MT) is a low molecular weight, cysteine-rich, zinc-binding protein that may have a function in cellular repair processes, growth and differentiation. Using a monoclonal antibody (E9) to metallothionein, we investigated the immunohistochemical expression of MT in routinely fixed and paraffin-embedded tissue from 98 cases of female breast carcinomas. The MT expression was studied in comparison with the expression of the basement membrane (BM) antigens (type IV collagen, laminin), fibronectin, cathepsin D, adhesion molecule CD44, p53 protein, the pRb, c-erbB-2 oncoprotein,
EGFR
, stromelysin-1, proliferation indices (Ki-67, PCNA), steroid receptor content as well as with other conventional clinicopathological parameters of breast cancer. Strong MT expression was observed in the majority of tumour cells in 18.4% of tumours, focal MT positivity in 13.3% and almost complete lack of MT expression in 68.4% of cases (mean value 33.36 +/- 26.36). The MT expression in carcinoma cells was strongly associated with the DCIS component of the tumour (p < 0.0001). High values of MT were correlated with low steroid receptor status (p = 0.08 for ER receptor and p = 0.019 for PgR receptor content). MT positive cases were correlated with stromelysin-1 expression (p = 0.059) and cathepsin D (p = 0.058). These findings suggest that MT expression is characteristic of the early phase of breast
carcinogenesis
, possibly regulated by hormones, and could be a new potential prognostic marker in breast cancer.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical localization of metallothionein in human breast cancer in comparison with cathepsin D, stromelysin-1, CD44, extracellular matrix components, P53, Rb, C-erbB-2, EGFR, steroid receptor content and proliferation. 1047 Jan 61
Furan cholangiocarcinogenesis in rat liver is proving to be a unique and useful animal model for investigating important aspects of the cellular and molecular pathogenesis of cholangiocarcinoma potentially relevant to the human disease. We now describe the first culture model of rat cholangiocarcinoma cells derived from a transplantable cholangiocarcinoma originally induced in the liver of a furan-treated rat. An epithelial cell isolate highly enriched in viable cholangiocarcinoma cells was consistently obtained from transplantable cholangiocarcinoma tissue utilizing a similar procedure to that recently developed by us to establish a new rat hyperplastic bile ductular epithelial cell culture model characterized by the appearance of polarized bile ducts in vitro. Primary cholangiocarcinoma cell cultures could be readily established with these isolated cells and, in addition, we established from one such culture a novel rat cholangiocarcinoma cell line designated C611B. Cultured C611B cholangiocarcinoma cells retained a number of important characteristic features of the carcinoma cells of the parent tumor, including marked expression of the tyrosine kinase growth factor receptor proteins c-Met and c-
Neu
. Under basal culture conditions, the C611B cell line exhibited a cell doubling time of approximately 24 h and was aneuploid, with a predominant chromosomal count of 43. Moreover, C611B cells on collagen gels were 100% tumorigenic when transplanted into inguinal fat pads of syngeneic rats. All tumors formed at the transplantation site were cytokeratin 19-positive, mucin-producing tubular adenocarcinomas whose histological and phenotypic features closely resembled those of the furan-induced parent transplantable rat cholangiocarcinoma. Based on our findings, we believe that this novel rat cholangiocarcinoma cell culture model can serve as a valuable resource for investigating aberrant growth properties and tumor progression in biliary cancer.
Carcinogenesis
1999 Dec
PMID:Establishment of a novel rat cholangiocarcinoma cell culture model. 1059 Feb 29
Carcinogenesis
involves inactivation or subversion of the normal controls of proliferation, differentiation, and apoptosis. However, these controls are robust, redundant, and interlinked at the gene expression levels, regulation of mRNA lifetimes, transcription, and recycling of proteins. One of the central systems of control of proliferation, differentiation and apoptosis is retinoid signaling. The hRAR alpha nuclear receptor occupies a central position with respect to induction of gene transcription in that when bound to appropriate retinoid ligands, its homodimers and heterodimers with hRXR alpha regulate the transcription of a number of retinoid-responsive genes. These include genes in other signaling pathways, so that the whole forms a complex network. In this study we showed that simple, cause-effect interpretations in terms of hRAR alpha gene transcription being the central regulatory event would not describe the retinoid-responsive gene network. A set of cultured bladder-derived cells representing different stages of bladder tumorigenesis formed a model system. It consisted of 2 immortalized bladder cell lines (HUC-BC and HUC-PC), one squamous cell carcinoma cell line (SCaBER), one papilloma line (RT4), and 4 transitional cell carcinomas (TCC-Sup, 5637, T24, J82) of varying stages and grades. This set of cells were used to model the range of behaviors of bladder cancers. Relative gene expression before (constitutive) and after treatment with 10 microM all-trans-retinoic acid (aTRA) was measured for androgen and estrogen receptor; a set of genes involved with retinoid metabolism and action, hRAR alpha nd beta, hRXR alpha and beta CRBP, CRABP I and II; and for signaling genes that are known to be sensitive to retinoic acid,
EGFR
, cytokine MK, ICAM I and transglutaminase. The phenotype for inhibition of proliferation and for apoptotic response to both aTRA and the synthetic retinoid 4-HPR was determined. Transfection with a CAT-containing plasmid containing an aTRA-sensitive promoter was used to determine if the common retinoic acid responsive element (RARE)-dependent pathway for retinoid regulation of gene expression was active. Each of the genes selected is known from previous studies to react to aTRA in a certain way, either by up- or down-regulation of the message and protein. A complex data set not readily interpretable by simple cause and effect was observed. While all cell lines expressed high levels of the mRNAs for hRXR alpha and beta that were not altered by treatment with exogenous aTRA, constitutive and stimulated responses of the other genes varied widely among the cell lines. For example, CRABP I was not expressed by J82, T24, 5637 and RT4, but was expressed at low levels that did not change in SCaBER and at moderate levels that decreased, increased, or decreased sharply in HUC-BC, TCC-Sup and HUC-PC, respectively. The expression of hRAR alpha, which governs the expression of many retinoid-sensitive genes, was expressed at moderate to high levels in all cell lines, but in some it was sharply upregulated (TCC-Sup, HUC-PC and J82), remained constant (5637 and HUC-BC), or was down-regulated (SCaBER, T24 and RT4). The phenotypes for inhibition of proliferation showed no obvious relationship to the expression of any single gene, but cell lines that were inhibited by aTRA (HUC-BC and TCC-Sup) were not sensitive to 4-HPR, and vice versa. One line (RT4) was insensitive to either retinoid. Transfection showed very little retinoid-stimulated transfection of the CAT reporter gene with RT4 or HUC-PC. About 2-fold enhancement transactivation was observed with SCaBER, HUC-BC, J82 and T24 cells and 3-8 fold with 5637, TCC-Sup cells. In HUC-BC, a G to T point mutation was found at position 606 of the hRAR alpha gene. This mutation would substitute tyrosine for asparagine in a highly conserved domain. These data indicate that retinoid signaling is probably a frequent target of inactivation in bladder
carcinogenesis
. (ABSTRAC
...
PMID:Complexity, retinoid-responsive gene networks, and bladder carcinogenesis. 1059 47
Rearrangements of
NTRK1
proto-oncogene were detected in 'spontaneous' papillary thyroid carcinomas with a frequency varying from 5 to 25% in different studies. These rearrangements result in the formation of chimaeric genes composed of the tyrosine kinase domain of
NTRK1
fused to 5' sequences of different genes. To investigate if the
NTRK1
gene plays a role in radiation-induced thyroid
carcinogenesis
, we looked for the presence of
NTRK1
-activating rearrangements in 32 human thyroid tumours (16 follicular adenomas, 14 papillary carcinomas and two lymph-node metastases of papillary thyroid carcinomas) from patients who had received external radiation, using the reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction, Southern blot and direct sequencing techniques. These data were compared with those obtained in a series of 28 'spontaneous' benign and malignant thyroid tumours, collected from patients without a history of radiation exposure and four in vitro culture cell lines derived from 'spontaneous' thyroid cancers. Our results concerning the radiation-associated tumours showed that only rearrangements between
NTRK1
and TPM3 genes (
TRK
oncogene) were detected in 2/14 papillary carcinomas and in one lymph-node metastasis of one of these papillary thyroid carcinomas. All the radiation-associated adenomas were negative. In the 'spontaneous' tumours, only one of the 14 papillary carcinomas and one of the four in vitro culture cell lines, derived from a papillary carcinoma, presented a
NTRK1
rearrangement also with the TPM3 gene. Twenty-five of this series of radiation-associated tumours were previously studied for the ras and
RET
/PTC oncogenes. In conclusion, our data: (a) show that the overall frequency of
NTRK1
rearrangements is similar between radiation-associated (2/31: 6%) and 'spontaneous' epithelial thyroid tumours (2/32: 6%). The frequency, if we consider exclusively the papillary carcinomas, is in both cases 12%; (b) show that the
TRK
oncogene plays a role in the development of a minority of radiation-associated papillary thyroid carcinomas but not in adenomas; and (c) confirm that
RET
/PTC rearrangements are the major genetic alteration associated with ionizing radiation-induced thyroid tumorigenesis.
...
PMID:Search for NTRK1 proto-oncogene rearrangements in human thyroid tumours originated after therapeutic radiation. 1064 82
Ionizing radiation is a well known risk factor of thyroid cancer development, but the mechanism of radiation induced
carcinogenesis
is not clear. The
RET
/PTC oncogene, an activated form of the RET proto-oncogene, is frequently observed in papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC);
RET
/PTC1, -2 and -3 are known to be the three major forms. High frequencies of
RET
/PTC rearrangements have been observed in radiation-associated PTC, such as those appearing post-Chernobyl or post-radiotherapy, but the rearrangement types differ between these two populations. We investigated whether a specific type of
RET
/PTC rearrangement was induced by X-rays in vivo and in vitro. In human normal thyroid tissues transplanted in scid mice, the
RET
/PTC1 rearrangement was predominantly detected throughout the observation period (up to 60 days) after X-ray exposure of 50 Gy. On the other hand,
RET
/PTC3 was detected only 7 days after X-irradiation, and no transcript of RET/PTC2 was detected. These results are supported by the results of an in vitro study. The
RET
/PTC1 rearrangement was preferentially induced in a dose-dependent manner by X-rays within a high dose range (10, 50 and 100 Gy) in four cell lines. On the other hand,
RET
/PTC3 was induced at a much lower frequency, and no induction of RET/PTC2 was observed. These results suggest that the preferential induction of the
RET
/PTC1 rearrangement may play an important role in the early steps of thyroid
carcinogenesis
induced by acute X-irradiation.
...
PMID:Preferential induction of RET/PTC1 rearrangement by X-ray irradiation. 1065 92
Previous studies in mice have shown that chronic administration of recombinant interleukin-12 (IL-12) hampers the progression of both chemical- and oncogene-dependent
carcinogenesis
. This suggests that a new preventive strategy may be envisaged for individuals with a genetic risk of cancer or carrying preneoplastic lesions. Starting at progressive stages of mammary
carcinogenesis
, female BALB/c and FVB mice carrying the activated rat
HER2
/neu oncogene (BALB-neuT) or the proto-oncogene (FVB-neuN) under the mouse mammary tumor virus promoter received multiple 5-day courses of different doses of IL-12. The times of tumor appearance, multiplicity, and histopathological features of the neoplastic lesions were evaluated. In both BALB-neuT and FVB-neuN mice, 5-day i.p. courses of 50/100 ng of IL-12/day inhibited mammary
carcinogenesis
when they coincided with the progression of early preneoplastic lesions. Inhibition appears to depend primarily on the ability of IL-12 to interfere with early tumor angiogenesis. Later treatments are much less effective, and daily doses of 10 and 2 ng are useless. The efficacy of early IL-12 courses suggests that they could be used to prevent mammary tumors in individuals at risk, whereas their lower efficacy in later stages of
carcinogenesis
and the dose range required pose some constraints on their use in the management of overt preneoplastic lesions. Precise understanding of tumor progression means that effective treatments can be commenced relatively late in the life of individuals at risk and that no lifetime administration is required.
...
PMID:Ability of systemic interleukin-12 to hamper progressive stages of mammary carcinogenesis in HER2/neu transgenic mice. 1066 88
The hepatocyte growth factor (HGF)/c-
MET
signaling system plays an important role in the
carcinogenesis
of various organs. We investigated the expression of HGF and its receptor c-
MET
by immunohistochemistry (IHC) in 69 cases of synovial sarcoma and compared the findings with clinicopathologic parameters, proliferating activities evaluated by MIB-1 labeling index (MIB-1 LI), and patients' prognosis. Furthermore, mRNA analysis of HGF, c-
MET
, and SYT-SSX fusion gene was performed by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) in 22 concordant frozen materials. Twenty-one of 69 (30.4%) tumors showed positive reaction for c-
MET
, whereas 22 tumors (31.9%) were positive for HGF. In 10 cases, co-expression of HGF and c-
MET
was observed; however, there was no significant correlation between HGF and c-
MET
expression. HGF expression was correlated with female patients, large tumors (more than 5 cm), the presence of rhabdoid cells, low frequency of mast cells (<20/10 HPF), high nuclear grade (grade III), and high American Joint Committee (AJC) stage (III and IV). Conversely, c-
MET
expression was only correlated with large tumors. However, the coexpression of HGF and c-
MET
was significantly correlated with large tumor size, the existence of rhabdoid cells, and high AJC stage. Both the expression of HGF and the co-expression of HGF and c-
MET
showed a significantly high MIB-1 LI and were correlated with poor prognosis according to univariate analysis. Multivariate Cox analysis showed that high AJC stage, the expression of HGF, and a high MIB-1 LI (12.0>) independently had a negative impact on overall survival. In 22 frozen material cases evaluated by both IHC and RT-PCR, a statistically significant correlation was found between the 2 techniques. SYT-SSX fusion transcripts were detected in all 22 cases. Three tumors had SYT-SSX2 fusion transcripts, whereas 19 had SYT-SSX1 phenotype. Our results suggest that HGF/c-
MET
paracrine signaling may contribute to tumorigenesis and progression in synovial sarcoma.
...
PMID:Expression of hepatocyte growth factor (HGF)/scatter factor and its receptor c-MET correlates with poor prognosis in synovial sarcoma. 1068 32
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