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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)
The mitogen activated protein kinases (MAPKs) are conserved proteins that regulate cell growth, division and death. Although activated in the cytosol, the MAPKs translocate to the nucleus upon activation and phosphorylate a large number of nuclear proteins. Investigating how Ras transmits extracellular growth signals, the MAPK pathway has emerged as the crucial route between
membrane-bound
Ras and the nucleus. The MAPK pathway represents a cascade of phosphorylation events including three pivotal kinases, namely Raf, MEK (MAP kinase kinase), and
ERK
(MAP kinase). These kinases present new opportunities for the development of novel anti-cancer drugs designed to be target-specific and probably less toxic than conventional chemotherapeutic agents. A number of drugs inhibiting Ras, Raf or MEK are currently under clinical investigation. This review addresses the rationale for targeting the MAP kinase pathway and the current status of various pharmacological approaches.
...
PMID:The Ras-Raf-MEK-ERK pathway in the treatment of cancer. 1256 95
Reactive oxygen species such as hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) have taken center stage as bona fide second messengers in various signaling pathways. Here, we report the synthesis, metabolic fate, and effectiveness in modulating such pathways of a Tat-catalase conjugate. Incubation of L2 cells with Tat-catalase greatly increased cell-associated enzymatic activity, reaching close to a plateau by 30 min. The cell-associated catalase activity and antibody-detectable Tat-derivatives declined over time after changing medium, although still remaining at significantly higher levels than baseline even at 4h. While most cell-associated Tat-catalase was apparently tightly attached to the cell surface, a small fraction entered the cells as the proteasome inhibitor MG-132 slightly prevented the disappearance of the enzyme. Tat-catalase, either
membrane-bound
or intracellular, but not native catalase, inhibited serum-induced
Elk
phosphorylation and anisomycin- and/or MG-132-induced
ERK
phosphorylation, suggesting the involvement of H(2)O(2). Thus, Tat-catalase should be a useful tool to dissect H(2)O(2)-dependent events in signaling pathways.
...
PMID:Bio-effectiveness of Tat-catalase conjugate: a potential tool for the identification of H2O2-dependent cellular signal transduction pathways. 1264
In 1997 we wrote a review entitled "A thousand and one roles for the Drosophila epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor (DER/
EGFR
)." We are not there yet in terms of the number of developmental roles assigned to this receptor in Drosophila. Nevertheless, DER has certainly emerged as one of the key players in development, since it is used repeatedly to direct cell fate choices, cell division, cell survival, and migration. A battery of activating ligands and an inhibitory ligand achieves this versatility. For the ligands that are produced as
membrane-bound
precursors, trafficking and processing are the key regulatory steps, determining the eventual temporal and spatial pattern of receptor activation. In most cases DER is activated at a short range, in the cells adjacent to the ones producing the active ligand. This activation dictates a binary choice. In some instances DER is also activated over a longer range, and multiple cell fate choices may be induced, according to its level of activation. A battery of negative feedback loops assures the limited range of DER induction. The distinct responses to DER activation in the different tissues depend upon combinatorial interactions with other signaling pathways and tissue-specific factors, at the level of target-gene regulation.
...
PMID:Signaling by the Drosophila epidermal growth factor receptor pathway during development. 1264 73
The phosphatidylinositol 3'-kinase/Akt pathway is activated frequently in human cancer, and has been implicated in tumor proliferation, cell survival, and resistance to apoptotic stimuli. Akt forms a complex with heat shock protein (Hsp) 90 and Cdc37, and inhibitors of Hsp90 cause Akt degradation. 17-allylamino-17-demethoxygeldanamycin (17-AGG) is an Hsp90 inhibitor currently in Phase I clinical trial. 17-AAG inhibits Akt activation and expression in tumors, and has antitumor activity in breast cancer xenografts. The combination of 17-AAG and Taxol is synergistic, and 17-AAG sensitizes tumor cells to Taxol-induced apoptosis in a schedule-dependent manner. Transfection of
membrane-bound
p110 PI3k prevented 17-AAG inactivation of Akt and abrogated the enhancement of Taxol-induced apoptosis caused by the drug. 17-AAG and Taxol could be administered together at their maximally tolerated doses to tumor-bearing mice. Doses of 17-AAG that induce
HER2
degradation and cause Akt inactivation but have no single agent activity were effective in sensitizing tumors to Taxol. Enhancement was schedule-dependent and maximal when Taxol and 17-AAG were administered on the same day. These results suggest that Hsp90 inhibitors can effectively suppress Akt activity in animal models of human cancer at nontoxic doses, thus sensitizing tumor cells to proapoptotic stimuli.
...
PMID:Inhibition of heat shock protein 90 function down-regulates Akt kinase and sensitizes tumors to Taxol. 1272 31
The Eph family of receptor tyrosine kinases and their
membrane-bound
ligands, the ephrins, are thought to play a role in the regulation of cell adhesion and migration during development by mediating cell-to-cell signalling events. The transmembrane ephrinB protein is a bidirectional signalling molecule that sends a forward signal through the activation of its cognate receptor tyrosine kinase residing on another cell. The reverse signal is transduced into the ephrinB-expressing cell via tyrosine phosphorylation of its conserved C-terminal cytoplasmic domain. Previous work from our laboratory has implicated the activated
FGFR1
(fibroblast growth factor receptor 1) as a regulator of a de-adhesion signal that results from overexpression of ephrinB1. In the present study, we report the isolation of Xenopus Grb4 (growth-factor-receptor-bound protein 4), an ephrinB1-interacting protein, and we show that when expressed in Xenopus oocytes, ephrinB1 interacts with Grb4 in the presence of an activated
FGFR1
. Amino acid substitutions were generated in Grb4, and the resulting mutants were expressed along with ephrinB1 and an activated FGFR in Xenopus oocytes. Co-immunoprecipitation analysis shows that the FLVR motif within the Src homology 2 domain of Xenopus Grb4 is vital for this phosphorylation-dependent interaction with ephrinB1. More importantly, using deletion and substitution analysis we identify the tyrosine residue at position 298 of ephrinB1 as being required for the physical interaction with Grb4, whereas Tyr-305 and Tyr-310 are dispensable. Moreover, we show that the region between amino acids 301 and 304 of ephrinB1 is also required for this critical tyrosine-phosphorylation-dependent event.
...
PMID:Tyr-298 in ephrinB1 is critical for an interaction with the Grb4 adaptor protein. 1453 44
Apoptosis plays an essential role in atherosclerosis. Oxidized low-density lipoproteins (oxLDL) and activated T lymphocytes are present in atherosclerotic lesions, and we have previously reported that oxLDL induce apoptosis of activated T lymphocytes. We now show that this is preceded by an increase of Fas and FasL expression. Fas and FasL overexpression was dependent on reactive oxygen species (ROS) production as well as
ERK
and JNK activation. In addition, oxLDL triggered an early production of soluble FasL by T lymphocytes. Blocking anti-Fas antibody or Fas-Fc protein, but also antioxidant molecules and inhibitors of
ERK
and JNK, decreased oxLDL-mediated apoptosis. Moreover, PHA-activated murine lymphocytes lacking a functional Fas receptor were partially resistant to oxLDL. Finally, Jurkat T cells deficient for FADD, an adaptor protein required for Fas signaling, resisted oxLDL-induced apoptosis. OxLDL triggered caspase 8 and 3 activation as well as ceramide production in PHA-activated lymphocytes and in Jurkat cells. Caspase activation was completely impaired in FADD-deficient cells, but ceramide production was not affected. Altogether, our results highlight the putative role of both
membrane-bound
and soluble FasL in oxLDL-induced Fas and FADD-dependent apoptosis of T lymphocytes and suggest an involvement of ROS,
ERK
, and JNK in this process.
...
PMID:Expression of membrane-bound and soluble FasL in Fas- and FADD-dependent T lymphocyte apoptosis induced by mildly oxidized LDL. 1463 Jul 9
The MUC4 mucin is a high molecular weight
membrane-bound
glycoprotein. It is aberrantly expressed in pancreatic tumors and tumor cell lines with no detectable expression in the normal pancreas. A progressive increase of MUC4 expression has also been observed in pancreatic intraepithelial neoplasia, suggesting its association with disease development. Here, we investigated the consequences of silencing MUC4 expression in an aggressive and highly metastatic pancreatic tumor cell line CD18/HPAF that expresses high levels of MUC4. The expression of MUC4 was down-regulated by the stable integration of a plasmid-construct expressing antisense-MUC4 RNA. A decrease in MUC4 expression, confirmed by Western blot and immunofluorescence analyses, resulted in diminished growth and clonogenic ability of antisense-MUC4-transfected (EIAS19) cells compared with parental, empty vector (ZEO) and sense transfected (ES6) control cells. In addition, EIAS19 cells displayed a significant decrease in tumor growth and metastatic properties when transplanted orthotopically into the immunodeficient mice. In vitro biological assays for motility, adhesion, and aggregation demonstrated a 3-fold decrease in motility of EIAS19 cells compared with control cells, whereas these cells adhered more and showed an increase in cellular aggregation. Interestingly, MUC4 down-regulation also correlated with the reduced expression of its putative interacting partner,
HER2
/neu, in antisense-MUC4-transfected cells. In conclusion, the present work demonstrates, for the first time, a direct association of the MUC4 mucin with the metastatic pancreatic cancer phenotype and provides experimental evidence for a functional role of MUC4 in altered growth and behavioral properties of the tumor cell.
...
PMID:Inhibition of MUC4 expression suppresses pancreatic tumor cell growth and metastasis. 1474 77
The difference in time course of Ras and mitogen activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascade by different growth factors is considered to be the cause of different cellular responses. We have developed the computer simulation of Ras-MAPK signal transduction pathway containing newly identified negative feedback system, Sprouty, and adaptor molecules. Unexpectedly, negative feedback system did not profoundly affect time course of MAPK activation. We propose the key role of fibroblast growth factor receptor substrate 2 (FRS2) in NGF/FGF pathway for sustained MAPK activation. More Grb2-SOS complexes were recruited to the plasma membrane by binding to
membrane-bound
FRS2 in FGF pathway than in EGF pathway and caused sustained activation of
ERK
. The EGF pathway with high concentration of EGF receptor also induced sustained MAPK activation, which is consistent with the results in the PC12 cell overexpressing the EGF receptors. The simulated time courses of FRS2 knock-out cells were consistent with those of the reported experimental results.
...
PMID:Model analysis of difference between EGF pathway and FGF pathway. 1475 Dec 48
Keratinocytes actively participate in immune response and inflammation by secreting cytokines and chemokines. Membrane-bound peptidases serve as negative loop in controlling concentration of peptide signalling molecules. Recently, they have also been proposed as additional mechanism of cell-to-cell interaction and as signalling molecules. In this study, we examined expression of two
membrane-bound
peptidases: aminopeptidase N (APN; EC 3.4.11.2; CD13) and neutral endopeptidase (
NEP
; EC 3.4.24.11; CD10) on nonstimulated cultured human keratinocytes obtained from healthy skin. Membrane expression of CD13 and CD10 was analysed by FACS and fluorescent microscope. Functional properties of CD13 and CD10 were examined by testing their enzymatic activity towards selective substrates. The data were compared to those obtained on cultured nonstimulated human skin fibroblasts expressing both CD13/APN and CD10/
NEP
. Approximately one-third (i.e. 31.7+/-2.8%; n=3) of cultured keratinocyte express CD13 as compared to fibroblasts which are 100% CD13(+) (n=3). Density of CD13 on keratinocytes is several times lower than on fibroblasts. Membrane CD13 expression on keratinocytes was associated with significant enzyme activity, which on the basis of substrate (L-Ala-betaNA) and inhibitor (bestatin, actinonin) selectivity could be ascribed to aminopeptidase N. Kinetic parameter V(max) revealed lower APN activity expressed on keratinocytes than on fibroblasts (V(max)=1.49+/-0.08 microM/60 min/5 x 10(4) cells for keratinocytes, n=3 versus V(max)=4.09+/-0.76 microM/60 min/5 x 10(4) cells for fibroblasts, n=3). Likewise, K(m) value of APN on keratinocytes was lower as compared to fibroblasts (K(m)=0.307+/-0.090 mM for keratinocytes, n=3 versus K(m)=0.766+/-0.065 mM for fibroblasts, n=3). CD13 demonstrated on cultured keratinocytes, is at least partly due to its constitutive expression since it was also found on freshly prepared epidermal skin cells. Inhibitors of APN, actinonin, bestatin and substance-P, as well as the APN blocking antibody WM-15, decreased keratinocytes growth. In contrast to membrane CD13 associated with APN enzyme activity, neither membrane CD10, nor its enzyme (
NEP
) activity could be found on the same keratinocyte samples. In conclusion, functional CD13, associated with APN activity, was found on about one third of cultured, non-stimulated keratinocytes, whereas no CD10/
NEP
was found on the same keratinocyte samples. Role of APN in regulation of keratinocyte growth is suggested, as its inhibition resulted in decreased keratinocyte growth.
...
PMID:Expression of CD13/aminopeptidase N and CD10/neutral endopeptidase on cultured human keratinocytes. 1475 68
TATA binding protein (TBP) is a central transcription factor used by all three cellular RNA polymerases. Changes in the levels of TBP have been shown to have selective effects on gene activity. Overexpression of TBP has been recently shown to contribute to cellular transformation, and elevated levels of TBP occur in a clinically significant proportion of human colon tumors relative to matched normal tissue. To understand the mechanisms by which TBP is regulated, we have analyzed whether activation of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), a
membrane-bound
tyrosine receptor kinase that is activated in a large number of human cancers, can serve to regulate cellular TBP. We show that treatment of mouse epidermal cells with EGF produces an increase in TBP levels, which can be blocked with an EGFR-specific inhibitor. In contrast, TBP levels remain unchanged after EGF treatment of EGFR null cells. EGF-mediated increases in TBP are regulated at the transcriptional level, as transient expression of the human TBP promoter is induced with EGF. This regulatory event is dependent upon the downstream activation of Ras and requires the activation of p38, JNK, and
ERK
mitogen-activated protein kinases. The consequence of elevated TBP on gene expression was further determined. Transcription by RNA polymerase (Pol) I and III was induced by EGF. Directly overexpressing TBP also stimulated transcription from these promoters. Thus, we have identified a new and important target of EGFR signaling, TBP, that contributes to EGF-mediated stimulation of RNA Pol I- and III-dependent gene activity. Since the cellular levels of the products of these genes, tRNAs and rRNAs, determine the translational capacity of cells, this event may be an important contributor to the transforming function of EGF.
...
PMID:Epidermal growth factor enhances cellular TATA binding protein levels and induces RNA polymerase I- and III-dependent gene activity. 1516 79
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