Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

A phase I study of escalating doses of humanized bispecific antibody (bsAb) MDX-H210 with granulocyte-colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) was conducted in patients with metastatic breast cancer that overexpressed HER2/neu. The main objectives of the study were to define the maximal tolerated dose (MTD) of MDX-H210 when combined with G-CSF, to measure the pharmacokinetics of MDX-H210 when administered with G-CSF, and to determine the toxicity, biological effects and possible therapeutic effect of MDX-H210 with G-CSF. MDX-H210 is a F(ab)' x F(ab)' humanized bispecific murine antibody that binds to both HER2/neu and the FcgammaR1 receptor (CD64), and was administered intravenously weekly for three doses followed by a 2-week break and then three more weekly doses. A total of 23 patients were treated, and doses were escalated from 1 mg/m2 to 40 mg/m2 with no MTD reached. The toxicity of the bsAb + G-CSF combination was modest, with no dose-limiting toxicity noted: 19 patients had fevers, 7 patients had diarrhea, and 3 patients had allergic reactions that did not limit therapy. The beta-elimination half-life varied from 4 h to 8 h at doses up to 20 mg/m2. Significant release of cytokines interleukin-6, G-CSF, and tumor necrosis factor alpha was observed after administration of bsAb. Circulating monocytes disappeared within 1 h of bsAb infusion, which correlated with binding of bsAb, noted by flow-cytometric analysis. Significant levels of human anti-(bispecific antibody) were measured in the plasma of most patients by the third infusion. No objective clinical responses were seen in this group of heavily pre-treated patients.
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PMID:A phase I study of a HER2/neu bispecific antibody with granulocyte-colony-stimulating factor in patients with metastatic breast cancer that overexpresses HER2/neu. 1023 84

MDX-H210 is a chemically, cross-linked, half-humanized bispecific antibody composed of F(ab') fragment from monoclonal antibody (mAb) H22 that binds to the high-affinity receptor Fc gamma RI and F(ab') of mAb 520C9 that recognizes the erbB-2 (HER2/neu) oncoprotein. In a previous trial, the murine bispecific, MDX-210 at a dose of 7 mg/m2, was well tolerated and activated monocytes and macrophages in vivo in doses as low as 0.35 mg/m2. In our multidose trial, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor, which increases and activates potential effector cells, was given on days 1-4 at 250 micrograms/m2 s.c. and MDX-H210 was given on day 4 weekly for 4 consecutive weeks. Thirteen patients were treated at dose levels of 1, 3.5, 7, 10, 15, and 20 mg/m2 without dose-limiting toxicity. Fever, chills, and rigors occurred during and up to 2 h postinfusion and correlated with the time to peak levels of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (median 88.2 pg/ml; range 15.6-887 pg/ml) and interleukin-6 (median 371 pg/ml; range 175-2,149 pg/ml). By the fourth consecutive week of treatment the side effects and cytokine levels decreased significantly. Human antibispecific antibody (HABA) levels were increased by 200- to 500-fold above pretreatment levels in 5 of 11 evaluable patients after 3 weeks of treatment. The monocyte and granulocyte population increased on days 4 and 11 (median 44%; range 18-68% and 42%; 19-71%), respectively, for monocytes and (60%; 43-75% and 74%; 54-82%) on days 4 and 11 for granulocytes. There was a significant decrease in the monocyte populations immediately after MDX-H210 administration (median decrease 73%; range 42-94%) and (52%; 12-72%) on days 4 and 11, respectively. Ten patients completed 4 weeks of treatment. One patient had a 48% reduction in an index lesions and six patients had stable disease at the time of evaluation. Three patients progressed before the fourth week. The therapy was generally well tolerated with toxicity, primarily, limited to the days of treatment.
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PMID:A pilot trial of GM-CSF and MDX-H210 in patients with erbB-2-positive advanced malignancies. 1040 39

One of the major actions of interleukin-6 (IL-6) is the transcriptional activation of acute-phase plasma proteins (APP) genes in liver cells. Signaling by the IL-6 receptor is mediated through the signal transducing subunit gp130 and involves the activation of Janus-associated kinases (JAKs), signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3), and mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase. Functional analysis of gp130 in rat hepatoma cells by using transduced chimeric G-CSFR-gp130 receptor constructs demonstrates that SHP-2, the Src homology 2 (SH2) domain-containing protein tyrosine phosphatase, acts as a negative regulator of the JAK/STAT signaling in part by downregulating JAK activity, thereby indirectly moderating the induction of STAT3-dependent APP genes. This study shows that in hepatoma cells, the recruitment and tyrosine phosphorylation of SHP-2, but not SHC, is the primary signaling event associated with the activation of MAP kinases (ERK1/2) by gp130. Overexpression of truncated SHP-2 that lacks Grb2-interacting sites, but not the full-length catalytically inactive SHP-2, reduces ERK activation by IL-6, confirming the signal-mediating role of SHP-2. Activation of ERK1/2 is correlated with induction of the immediate-early response genes. Stimulation of the c-fos, c-jun, and egr-1 genes is essentially absent in cells expressing gp130 with a Y759F mutation, which is unable to recruit SHP-2. Interestingly, both JAK/STAT and SHP-2 pathways regulate the induction of the junB gene. Moreover, disengagement of SHP-2 from gp130 signaling not only enhances APP gene induction but also further reduces cell proliferation, in part correlated with the attenuated expression of immediate-early response genes. These results suggest that IL-6 regulation of APP genes is affected by SHP-2 in two ways: SHP-2 acts as a phosphatase on the JAK/STAT pathway and serves as linker to the MAP kinase pathway, which in turn moderates APP production.
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PMID:Dual signaling role of the protein tyrosine phosphatase SHP-2 in regulating expression of acute-phase plasma proteins by interleukin-6 cytokine receptors in hepatic cells. 1040 24

The role of signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT) signaling pathways in the interleukin-6 (IL-6)-induced morphological differentiation of PC12-E2 cells was assessed using wild type and dominant negative mutants of Stat1 and Stat3, containing Tyr --> Phe (YF), Ser --> Ala (SA), and the double mutations (DM), respectively. FS3-YF or FS3-DM markedly inhibited the IL-6-induced response, but overexpression of FS3-SA caused only a modest inhibition. Expression of all Stat3 mutants had no effect on NGF-induced neurite outgrowth. Overexpression of wild type Stat1 protein inhibited IL-6 activated DNA binding complexes containing Stat3 homodimers, which may explain the partial negative effect of Stat1 on IL-6-induced neurite outgrowth. Specificity of these STAT constructs was confirmed using luciferase reporter gene assays, which showed that IL-6-activated transcription was blocked by expression of FS3-YF and FS3-DM and that FS1 enhanced the interferon gamma-activated transcription. Thus, in PC12-E2 cells, Stat3 homodimers are preferentially activated by IL-6, indicating a role for Stat3 in the regulation of cellular differentiation. Furthermore, IL-6 induced robust neurite outgrowth in PC12-E2 cells expressing dominant negative forms of RAS or SHC or in cells pretreated with the mitogen-activated protein kinase mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase inhibitor, PD98059. Thus, activation of the Stat3 signaling pathway, but not RAS/ERK dependent pathways, is essential for differentiation of PC12-E2 cells by IL-6.
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PMID:Activation of the Stat3 signaling pathway is required for differentiation by interleukin-6 in PC12-E2 cells. 1063 20

The t(4;14) translocation occurs in 25% of multiple myeloma (MM) and results in both the ectopic expression of fibroblast growth factor receptor 3 (FGFR3) from der4 and immunoglobulin heavy chain-MMSET hybrid messenger RNA transcripts from der14. The subsequent selection of activating mutations of the translocated FGFR3 by MM cells indicates an important role for this signaling pathway in tumor development and progression. To investigate the mechanism by which FGFR3 overexpression promotes MM development, interleukin-6 (IL-6)-dependent murine B9 cells were transduced with retroviruses expressing functional wild-type or constitutively activated mutant FGFR3. Overexpression of mutant FGFR3 resulted in IL-6 independence, decreased apoptosis, and an enhanced proliferative response to IL-6. In the presence of ligand, wild-type FGFR3-expressing cells also exhibited enhanced proliferation and survival in comparison to controls. B9 clones expressing either wild-type FGFR3 at high levels or mutant FGFR3 displayed increased phosphorylation of STAT3 and higher levels of bcl-x(L) expression than did parental B9 cells after cytokine withdrawal. The mechanism of the enhanced cell responsiveness to IL-6 is unknown at this time, but does not appear to be mediated by the mitogen-activated protein kinases SAPK, p38, or ERK. These findings provide a rational explanation for the mechanism by which FGFR3 contributes to both the viability and propagation of the myeloma clone and provide a basis for the development of therapies targeting this pathway.
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PMID:Ectopic expression of fibroblast growth factor receptor 3 promotes myeloma cell proliferation and prevents apoptosis. 1064 14

To date, the majority of characterized extracellular ligand-induced rapid changes in gene expression involve upregulation. Hence, rapid gene repression is either less common or less well studied. To study rapid gene repression during cytokine-initiated differentiation programs, we used the mRNA subtractive hybridization technique of representational difference analysis to isolate repressed genes. Cultures of the myeloid leukemia cell line M1 were induced to terminally differentiate by treatment with interleukin-6 (IL-6). The repressed genes identified in our subtraction products include the genes encoding the growth factor receptor Flt3/Flk2/STK-1 (CD135) and the costimulatory protein CD24 [heat-stable antigen] and the c-myb oncogene. Following 4 h of IL-6 treatment, mRNA levels of these genes are decreased by 45-65% relative to controls and after 8 h by 65-80%. Lipopolysaccharide also triggers the repression of these genes. Protein synthesis inhibitors do not block the IL-6-stimulated repression of c-myb, or c-myc, mRNA, yet they do block the repression of flt3 and CD24 mRNA, demonstrating the existence of both protein synthesis-independent and -dependent mechanisms of cytokine-triggered rapid gene repression during differentiation.
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PMID:Rapid gene repression triggered by interleukin-6 at the onset of monocyte differentiation. 1067 82

Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), a multifunctional cytokine, potently stimulates angiogenesis including tumor neovascularization. Although well established in solid tumors, the role of VEGF in bone marrow neoangiogenesis and paracrine tumor-stromal cell interactions in lymphohematopoietic malignancies has not been fully elucidated. In multiple myeloma (MM), marrow neovascularization parallels disease progression. This parallel prompted us to investigate the expression and secretion of VEGF by myeloma cells and its potential effects in myeloma-marrow stroma interactions. The biologically active splice variants VEGF165 and VEGF121 were expressed and secreted by myeloma cell lines and plasma cells isolated from the marrow of patients with MM. As shown by immunocytochemistry or RT-PCR, myeloma cells did not express or weakly expressed the VEGF receptors FLT-1 and FLK-1/KDR, indicating that autocrine stimulation is unlikely. In contrast, FLK-1/KDR was abundantly expressed by marrow stromal cells. Therefore, we studied the effects of VEGF on marrow stroma, focusing on the secretion of interleukin-6 (IL-6), a potent growth factor for myeloma cells and an inhibitor of plasma cell apoptosis. Exposure of stromal and microvascular endothelial cells to recombinant human (rh) VEGF165 or VEGF121 induced a time- and dose-dependent increase in IL-6 secretion (14- to 27-fold at 50 ng/mL after 24 hours, P <.001). Conversely, rhIL-6 stimulated VEGF expression and secretion in myeloma cell lines (40%-60%; P <.05) and to a variable degree (up to 5.3-fold; P <.005) in plasma cells purified from the marrow of patients with MM. This mutual stimulation suggests paracrine interactions between myeloma and marrow stromal cells triggered by VEGF and IL-6. (Blood. 2000;95:2630-2636)
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PMID:Vascular endothelial growth factor and interleukin-6 in paracrine tumor-stromal cell interactions in multiple myeloma. 1075 44

Cytokines are extracellular mediators that have been reported to affect neurotransmitter release and synaptic plasticity phenomena when applied in vitro. Most of these effects occur rapidly after the application of the cytokines and are presumably mediated through the activation of protein phosphorylation processes. While many cytokines have an inflammatory action, interleukin-6 (IL-6) has been found to have a neuroprotective effect against ischaemia lesions and glutamate excitotoxicity, and to increase neuronal survival in a variety of experimental conditions. In this paper, the functional effects of IL-6 on the spread of excitation visualized by dark-field/infrared videomicroscopy in rat cortical slices and on glutamate release from cortical synaptosomes were analysed and correlated with the activation of the STAT3, mitogen-activated protein kinase ERK (MAPK/ERK) and stress-activated protein kinase/cJun NH2-terminal kinase (SAPK/JNK) pathways. We have found that IL-6 depresses the spread of excitation and evoked glutamate release in the cerebral cortex, and that these effects are accompanied by a stimulation of STAT3 tyrosine phosphorylation, an inhibition of MAPK/ERK activity, a decreased phosphorylation of the presynaptic MAPK/ERK substrate synapsin I and no detectable effects on SAPK/JNK. The effects of IL-6 were effectively counteracted by treatment of the cortical slices with the tyrosine kinase inhibitor lavendustin A. The inhibitory effects of IL-6 on glutamate release and on the spread of excitation in the rat cerebral cortex indicate that the protective effect of IL-6 on neuronal survival could be mediated by a downregulation of neuronal activity, release of excitatory neurotransmitters and MAPK/ERK activity.
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PMID:Interleukin-6 inhibits neurotransmitter release and the spread of excitation in the rat cerebral cortex. 1076 53

The related cytokines, interleukin-6 (IL-6), oncostatin M (OSM), and leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF) direct the formation of specific heteromeric receptor complexes to achieve signaling. Each complex includes the common signal-transducing subunit gp130. OSM and LIF also recruit the signaling competent, but structurally distinct OSMRbeta and LIFRalpha subunits, respectively. To test the hypothesis that the particularly prominent cell regulation by OSM is due to signals contributed by OSMRbeta, we introduced stable expression of human or mouse OSMRbeta in rat hepatoma cells which have endogenous receptors for IL-6 and LIF, but not OSM. Both mouse and human OSM engaged gp130 with their respective OSMRbeta subunits, but only human OSM also acted through LIFR. Signaling by OSMRbeta-containing receptors was characterized by highest activation of STAT5 and ERK, recruitment of the insulin receptor substrate and Jun-N-terminal kinase pathways, and induction of a characteristic pattern of acute phase proteins. Since LIF together with LIFRalpha appear to form a more stable complex with gp130 than OSM with gp130 and OSMRbeta, co-activation of LIFR and OSMR resulted in a predominant LIF-like response. These results suggest that signaling by IL-6 cytokines is not identical, and that a hierarchical order of cytokine receptor action exists in which LIFR ranks as dominant member.
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PMID:Receptor subunit-specific action of oncostatin M in hepatic cells and its modulation by leukemia inhibitory factor. 1085 24

Several cytokines have short-term effects on synaptic transmission and plasticity that are thought to be mediated by the activation of intracellular protein kinases. We have studied the effects of interleukin-6 (IL-6) on the expression of paired pulse facilitation (PPF), posttetanic potentiation (PTP), and long-term potentiation (LTP) in the CA1 region of the hippocampus as well as on the activation of the signal transducer and activator of transcription-3 (STAT3), the mitogen-activated protein kinase ERK (MAPK/ERK), and the stress-activated protein kinase/c-Jun NH(2)-terminal kinase (SAPK/JNK). IL-6 induced a marked and dose-dependent decrease in the expression of PTP and LTP that could be counteracted by the simultaneous treatment with the tyrosine kinase inhibitor lavendustin A (LavA) but did not significantly affect PPF. The IL-6-induced inhibition of PTP and LTP was accompanied by a simulation of STAT3 tyrosine phosphorylation and an inhibition of MAPK/ERK dual phosphorylation, in the absence of changes in the state of activation of SAPK/JNK. Both effects of IL-6 on STAT3 and MAPK/ERK activation were effectively counteracted by LavA treatment. The results indicate the tyrosine kinases and MAPK/ERK are involved in hippocampal synaptic plasticity and may represent preferential intracellular targets for the actions of IL-6 in the adult nervous system.
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PMID:The inhibitory effects of interleukin-6 on synaptic plasticity in the rat hippocampus are associated with an inhibition of mitogen-activated protein kinase ERK. 1089 38


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