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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 KIT proto-oncogene encodes a tyrosine kinase receptor which plays a critical role in haemopoiesis. We have screened genomic DNA from bone marrow mononuclear cells of 46 patients with myelodysplasia (MDS) for mutations/deletions of exons 6, 13, 17, and 21 of the
KIT
gene (stem cell factor receptor) using polymerase chain reaction (PCR), polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and autoradiography to detect single-stranded conformational polymorphisms (SSCP). These exons include positions analogous to those mutated in the
FMS
gene (colony-stimulating factor-1 receptor) in myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) and mutated/deleted in the Dominant White Spotting mouse (W locus) which results in macrocytic anaemia. Two different gel running conditions were used for each exon. Polymorphisms were identified only at 4 degrees C in exon 17 (three out of 44 MDS samples and two of 21 DNA samples from normal subjects), and in the non-coding region of exon 21 (five out of 34 MDS samples and seven out of 19 normals). Direct sequencing identified a G to A base change at nucleotide 3169 within exon 21, and a C to T change at position 2415 in exon 17. No conformational changes suggestive of mutations or deletions have been found to date, although we cannot rule out low frequency clonal abnormalities undetectable by our method, which has a sensitivity in our hands of approximately 5%. Polymorphisms occur frequently in the
KIT
gene. Together with this study, a total of five have been described.
...
PMID:Two new polymorphisms but no mutations of the KIT gene in patients with myelodysplasia at positions corresponding to human FMS and murine W locus mutational hot spots. 769 8
The American Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire (FIQ) was translated into Swedish. The FIQ is a brief 10-item self-administered instrument designed to evaluate the special problems bothering fibromyalgia patients. After the translation procedure, 73 Swedish women fibromyalgia patients answered the translated FIQ. The questionnaire was fast and simple to handle both for the patients and the investigators. There was a good level of correspondence between FIQ items and related items in the Health Assessment Questionnaire, the Nottingham Health Profile and the Psychological General Well-Being Index. There were no significant differences in a test-retest analysis. The study has provided evidence that the translated and slightly modified Swedish version of the American Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire has the validity and sensitivity to be able to function as a relevant and comprehensible tool to monitor
FMS
-patients.
...
PMID:The Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire, a Swedish translation of a new tool for evaluation of the fibromyalgia patient. 774 44
Transcripts coding for transcription factors (RB, P53, FOS, MYC, MYB, ERBA, REL), growth factors (FGF1, FGF2, INT2, TGFA, TGFB, PDGF, IGF1, IGF2), interleukins, (IL1, IL2, IL3, IL4, IL6, TNF), growth-factor receptors or cytosolic protein kinases (RAF, PIM, FES,
MET
, SRC, ROS,
TRK
,
KIT
,
CSFR
, IGFR,
PDGFR
,
EGFR
, NEU) were quantified in cultured human mammary fibroblasts from normal tissues, benign tumours, carcinomas and post-radiation fibrosis lesions by slot-blot autoradiography and image analysis. The effects of a differentiating agent (cholera toxin) and of a tumour promoter (12-O-tetradecanoyl-phorbol-13-acetate) were also examined. The drugs modulated the levels of the anti-oncogene transcripts (RB, P53) and of ERBA, REL, RAF,
MET
, ROS,
TRK
,
CSFR
,
EGFR
, NEU, FGF1, INT2, IGF1, IL1, IL2, IL4 and IL6. Apart from this variation, there were multiple differences in gene expression among normal and pathological cells (concerning all but P53, TGFB and interleukin transcripts) and between sub-types defined by the presence of alpha-sm-actin (myofibroblasts) or EDB-fibronectin (RAF, ROS, FES,
KIT
, IGFR, NEU, INT2, TGFB, PDGF, IGFs, ILs). It appears, therefore, that mammary stroma progress irreversibly along with the epithelium during tumoral development, and that breast cancer is not only a multi-gene but also a multi-tissue phenotype.
...
PMID:Quantitative variation of proto-oncogene and cytokine gene expression in isolated breast fibroblasts. 776 44
Point mutations at codons 301 and 969 of the
FMS proto-oncogene
have been reported in both myelodysplasia (MDS) and acute myeloid leukaemia (AML). We report here the incidence of such mutations in patients at risk of developing secondary MDS and AML. Peripheral blood DNA from 70 patients in remission from lymphoma was screened for mutations by oligonucleotide (ONH) using mutant specific probes. Codon 969 mutations were detected in 11 of the 70 (15.7%) cases. No codon 301 mutations were detected. Five of these mutations were confirmed using an independent technique (single nucleotide primer extension analysis, SNPE) and a further mutation was detected in a single patient using single-stranded conformational polymorphism analysis (SSCP). No codon 969 mutations were detected in 62 lymphoma biopsy specimens from these patients or from three patients with detectable
FMS
mutations where pre-therapy marrow was investigated by ONH. No mutations at either codons 301 or 969 were detected by ONH in 61 normal controls. Somatic mutations at codon 969 of the
FMS
gene occur commonly following cytotoxic therapy for lymphoma and their detection indicates the presence of a clonally expanded population of abnormal cells.
...
PMID:FMS mutations in patients following cytotoxic therapy for lymphoma. 776 31
The
FMS proto-oncogene
encodes a polypeptide growth factor receptor expressed on the cell surface of monocytes and B lymphocytes within the haematological system. Mutations of the
FMS
gene at codons 301 and 969 have been detected in a number of haematological disorders. Mutations at these codons are thought to be important in the pathogenesis of leukaemia in cells expressing a mutant receptor. Following our finding that the colony stimulating factor-1 receptor (CSF-1R) was expressed on B cells, we have assessed DNA from 17 patients with B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL), 15 with acute lymphoblastic leukaemias (ALL), two samples from patients with B-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (B-NHL), and 20 haematologically normal individuals for the presence of C-terminal mutations of the
FMS
gene. Using single stranded conformational polymorphism analysis (SSCP), a single band shift was detected resulting from a nucleotide insertion at codon 965 in the DNA isolated from a patient with B-NHL. These results indicate that mutations of the
FMS
gene in this region are rare in B-cell malignancy but may contribute to the pathogenesis of leukaemias and lymphomas in a small subset of patients. However, the presence of other mutations not detected using this type of analysis cannot be excluded.
...
PMID:A C-terminal FMS mutation in a patient with B-cell malignancy. 784 11
The conclusion is that no one single mechanism can explain
FMS
and is thus in that sense a compromise.
FMS
in some patients may start in the muscle, in other patients in the brain. The combination of peripheral and central factors is the key to the pathogenesis of
FMS
as long as
FMS
is defined as a pain syndrome.
...
PMID:Chronic muscular pain: aetiology and pathogenesis. 785 Aug 76
Since the first comprehensive description of the symptoms of
FMS
by Yunus et al (1981), numerous investigations have confirmed that
FMS
is a clinical entity. However, the aetiology of the syndrome is still not fully elucidated. It seems, however, logical to place the origin of the disorder in the muscle. Muscle pain, especially at the muscle-tendon junctions, fatigue and stiffness are the first symptoms. A malfunction of energy metabolism has been detected in part of the muscle fibres. However, it has to be considered that the muscle is not an isolated entity. Its activity is controlled by segmentally arranged motor units of the ventral horn of the spinal cord in response to proprioceptive afferent signals arising in the muscle spindles or in other sensory elements including nociceptors. Together with supraspinal descending inputs, the spinal motor neurone pool is the common final pathway for segmental and suprasegmental inputs, making the motor system extremely powerful for adaptive adjustments but also vulnerable if deficits occur in either of these input levels. A second, recently discovered abnormality seen in
FMS
is a lowered serotonin level in peripheral and most likely also central structures. The underlying mechanism seems to be defective absorption of the precursor amino acid tryptophan from the gut. Serotonin is involved centrally in the regulation of the sleep pattern, and at the spinal level it acts as a 'gain setter' of motoneurone excitability and suppresses signal transmission of noxious stimuli in dorsal horn neurones. Either of these two disturbances, muscle energy depletion or serotonin deficiency, could by itself evoke many of the symptoms of
FMS
, and their combined appearance will perpetuate the disease. Depressed levels of somatomedin C, caused by a deficit of stage 4 sleep-dependent release of GH, might represent an additional factor in preventing proper development or repair of myoskeletal structures. Malabsorption of certain amino acids, possibly due to a genetic disorder of gut transport mechanisms, may constitute an additional deleterious factor. The abnormalities found in the HPA and HPT axis may be seen as an attempt of the organism to restore homeostasis. The stimulus eliciting this counter-regulatory reaction may be pain or other afferent signals which normally do not reach the central nervous system. It is doubtful whether the unspecific activation of the HPA axis in a non-inflammatory disease is beneficial.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Neuromediator and hormonal perturbations in fibromyalgia syndrome: results of chronic stress? 785 Aug 79
Peripheral blood mononuclear cells from seventeen patients with primary myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) in advanced stage were enriched for blasts and tested for (1) karyotype, (2) genomic configuration and (3) expression of IL-3, GM-CSF,
FMS
and EGR-1 genes which are all located on the long arm of chromosome 5. The expression of the M-CSF gene, that has been recently reassigned to the short arm of chromosome 1 (lp), was also investigated. Aims of the study were to (1) assess the potential role of the expression of these genes in the maintenance and expansion of the neoplastic clones and (2) search for constitutional losses or rearrangements of one allele followed by a deletion of the second allele of the same genes in the leukemic cells. The latter issue was investigated by comparing, in 8 cases, constitutive DNA from skin fibroblasts with leukemic DNA. Eleven of the 17 patients had abnormal karyotypes. The M-CSF gene was expressed in 6 cases and the
FMS
and the EGR-1 genes were expressed in 2 of the latter cases. An autocrine mechanism of growth could be hypothesized only for the 2 patients whose cells expressed both the M-CSF and
FMS
genes. No germline changes or rearrangements were observed in any of the genes studied. Thus, deregulation of genes encoding for certain hemopoietic growth factors or receptors does not seem to represent a major mechanism of MDS progression.
...
PMID:Expression and genomic configuration of GM-CSF, IL-3, M-CSF receptor (C-FMS), early growth response gene-1 (EGR-1) and M-CSF genes in primary myelodysplastic syndromes. 785 91
Patients who have received cytotoxic therapy for primary neoplastic disease are at an increased risk of developing secondary (therapy-related) acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) or myelodysplasia (MDS). RAS and
FMS
mutations have been observed in patients with AML and MDS. It has been suggested that the mutational status within these genes may be predictive of early secondary leukaemic disease. In this study we have screened 50 haematologically normal patients in complete remission from childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) for activating point mutations in the RAS and
FMS
proto-oncogenes. Such patients may be considered at risk of therapy-related disease. Codons 12, 13 and 61 were screened in RAS and codon 969 in
FMS
using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) followed by oligonucleotide hybridization (ONH). Three of the 50 patients (6%) were found to harbour N12 RAS mutations. One of these three patients (2%) had both a N12 RAS and
FMS
969 mutation. Upon sequencing the RAS mutations, substitutions of serine, cysteine and aspartic acid for glycine were identified. The
FMS
969 mutation was also confirmed, by sequencing, as a histidine substitution. RAS mutations were not detected in presentation samples indicating that these lesions have been somatically acquired presumably subsequent to cytotoxic therapy for the primary disease. Continued follow-up of these patients may indicate a role for these mutations in the development of secondary malignancies.
...
PMID:RAS and FMS mutations following cytotoxic therapy for childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia. 756 28
The co-expression of M-CSF (CSF-1) and its receptor in specimens of ovarian cancer has recently been reported. Preliminary results have already suggested a possible influence of steroids on
FMS
(M-CSF receptor) expression. Fifty-five non-pretreated FIGO stage III/IV ovarian adenocarcinomas were studied for M-CSF transcripts and protein, as well as
FMS
transcripts and protein, using standard molecular biological techniques (Northern blot, slot blot analysis) and immunocytochemistry (ICC). Steroid receptor content was measured by DCC analysis in 44/55 specimens; in addition, ER/PR (oestrogen/progesterone) ICC was performed in 32/55 specimens. All tumours were shown to contain M-CSF-specific mRNA. Likewise, M-CSF protein was detected by ICC in the stroma and over the epithelium in all specimens. However, while most tumours were shown to contain
FMS
-specific mRNA, only 64 per cent of cases showed significant expression of
FMS
protein by tumour epithelium as shown by ICC. A statistically significant positive correlation was found between M-CSF and
FMS
mRNA expression levels. A week non-significant positive correlation was noted between
FMS
mRNA expression levels and tumour grade. Carcinomas were ER-positive in 66 per cent (DCC) or 34 per cent (ICC), and PR-positive in 73 per cent (DCC) or 34 per cent (ICC). A statistically significant positive correlation between ER (DCC) and M-CSF mRNA expression levels was found. Weak non-significant correlations were present between ER (ICC) and
FMS
(ICC), as well as between PR (DCC) and
FMS
mRNA expression.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Co-expression of M-CSF transcripts and protein, FMS (M-CSF receptor) transcripts and protein, and steroid receptor content in adenocarcinomas of the ovary. 796 6
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